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Category Clearwater Episode Further Afield Great Places Location St Pete Tampa

Episode 34 – Get Your Game On! Tampa Bay Club Sports [replay]

Episode 15 - Get Your Game On! Tampa Bay Club Sports

Alexa,
play Great Things Tampa Bay

Show Notes

Get our there and get active!  In Episode 15 we cover Tampa Bay Club Sports, one of the best ways to burn some calories while having some great fun playing your favorite sports (and some not sports such as Golf or Cornhole).

Transcript at the bottom of this page!

Tampa Bay Club Sport

WWW.TampaBayClubSport.Com

Sports Offered:

  • Soccer
  • Football
  • Softball
  • Volleyball
  • Kickball
  • Basketball
  • Tennis
  • Bowling, Golf, Cornhole, Bar Games

Locations all around the Tampa Bay Area!

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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 15, Get Your Game On!

I’d like to thank you for giving us your time. I know there’s lots of things vying for your attention and I appreciate you choosing to spend your time listening to me in this podcast. I promise I will do everything I can to bring you something awesome. Also wanna let you know that we now have express feeds. 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 Feeds,” up at the top there.

So, you know, one of the annoying things about getting older, growing up, and all that good stuff, is that, you know, there’s not really anyone around to play games with anymore. Yeah, I’m sure you keep track of one or two, friends over the years, but, you know, the days of going through the neighborhood and be able to throw together a pick-up football, basketball, or soccer game, are many years in the past. Everyone’s just got way too much stuff to do.

Thankfully, we got a little place here, locally, it’s called Tampa Bay Club Sport and it’s a great place for adults, young and old, to get together and play some sports. Those of you that actually know me know that I wasn’t really too big into sports in my younger days, definitely something I’ve grown into as I’ve gotten older. Honestly, I wish that I would have done it a lot sooner, it’s very rewarding and fulfilling. So, if you’re someone who’s just kind of sitting around…honestly, I spent years in front a computer and if you’re doing the same, you know, get out there. Even if you don’t really know what you’re doing, it’s worth it to get out there just to have a little fun and meet some new people.

So, Club Sport was founded in 1995, specifically as an outlet for young adults to play sports. I mean you’re pretty good up through college with being able to throw people together, but once you get past 25, it starts getting really tough, you know, jobs, sleep, kids, career, all that stuff sort of gets in the way.

Tampa Bay Club Sports has locations all around the Bay Area, from Brandon, over on the other side of Tampa, they have some in Tampa. Coquina Key, they don’t have some in the extended area, they have some affiliated clubs down in Sarasota and the like. But, yeah, they more than likely have something close to you. And they cover a wide range of skill levels from recreation, up to intermediate, to competitive. And it can get pretty competitive out there, I can tell you.

Nice thing about it, they do charge a fee, of course, for all this. They paint lines and stuff, it’s not gonna be a pro-level field or anything like that, but they do pay the referees, so you do have someone out there making calls and all that good stuff, which is awesome. They have a ton of sports available. They have soccer, which is my favorite. I currently play every Wednesday, over here in St. Petersburg, at Puryear Park, which is awesome. They also have softball, volleyball, kickball, which my wife played for a couple years there. They also have football, which I’m guessing is of the flag variety, I have not actually signed up for that yet, but I can’t imagine that they would have tackle football. Basketball, tennis, golf, cornhole, which is questionable sports, bowling, and, finally, a Bar Games League, which is Flip Cup…I don’t know if they have Flip Cup, but I know I saw pictures of beer pong. So those last few are definitely more of a game than a sport, but there you go. And, yeah, I know some of you all are probably kinda mad saying that, you know, golf’s a sport, but, yeah, let’s get real. And I say that as someone who loves golf.

So, you don’t actually need a full team to play, so you don’t need to get together, you know, 10 people to play soccer or anything like that. If you just wanna play solo, just give them a call, they will sign you up as a free agent and place you on a team. The team that I’m on, we actually all were free agents, and we started just after the last World Cup. We’re still around, which is pretty good, real good bunch of people. So those on the Moist Towelettes Soccer Team, that are giving us a listen, it’s a lot of fun playing with you guys. So, their website is www.tampabayclubsports.com, and you can go there and it’ll display all the leagues and give you all the options, and all that good stuff. Or, if you just rather just call them, their phone number is 877-820-2582.

Segment 2, “Tell ’em Twain.” Mark Twain is one of the most quoted Americans of all time. I saw this one the other day. Thought it was rather appropriate for our new modern age of yellow journalism, and it goes a little something like this, “If you don’t read the newspaper, you’re uninformed. If you read the newspaper, you’re misinformed.”

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 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/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-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 Tampa Bay.

I also need your feedback. I need you to tell me where we should be going, and what we should be eating, and who we should be talking to. So, please go to our website, greatthingstb.com. Or, you can hit either the “Contact Us” link at the top or the “Get Social Links,” also at the top. If you wanna be a cool guy or a cool girl, you can call our voicemail number, which is 727-440-4455, and leave us a message. I’d love to hear from you.

So, thanks for listening, and I’ll see you next time. And, oh, by the way, if you don’t want to miss the next episode, please subscribe to us on iTunes or Google Play, that’ll guarantee that you get the next episode delivered straight to your mobile device of choice.

Thank you so much and I’ll talk to you next time.

Categories
Category Clearwater Episode Great People Great Places Location St Pete Tampa

Episode 33 – Tampa Bay Club Sport Interview

Episode 33 - Piccolo Italia Bistro, Music by Stone Marmot

Alexa,
play Great Things Tampa Bay

Show Notes

Sports are a big part of the Tampa Bay area, from kids to adults!  Today I interview Ian Elston with Tampa Bay Club Sports.

No matter what sport or “sport” (looking at you,  cornhole!) you love to play, TBCS probably runs a league for it close to you no matter what part of the bay you’re on. We also chat about the Rec Dec, a local spot TBCS is working on opening on Gandy.

Music today by AEGEA!

This episode brought to you by Happiest Doulas!  Save 5% off with promo code HAPPY5 at HappiestDoulas.com!

 

Transcript at Bottom of Page!

Tampa Bay Club Sports

Tampa Bay Club Sports

  • Soccer
  • Softball
  • Volleyball
  • Kickball
  • FootBall

The Rec Dec

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Transcript

Ian: We have giant tricycle races with adults on ’em. The rubber ducky launch you have, it’s like a giant human slingshot that you hurl rubber duckies down a football field with, and, the last round, a player has to catch a rubber ducky with like a fishnet on a pole, which is kind of fun.

Kyle: A serious, serious competition, it sounds like…

Ian: That’s right.

Kyle: Hey, everybody. This is Kyle Sasser with the “Great Things Tampa Bay” podcast, and this is episode 33. And we’re doing another interview this time with Ian of Tampa Bay Club Sports. And they’re definitely doing some interesting things around the area. And basically, if you’re looking for any sort of adult sports league, Tampa Bay Club Sports is gonna be the place that you hear the most. I did a full episode on my experience with Tampa Bay Club Sports back in episode 15, but this episode we’re actually interviewing someone involved in the backroom of Club Sports. Yeah, so they’ve been working on a project over here in St. Pete called the Wreck Deck, and it’s located at 380 105th Terrace NE, which doesn’t mean a lot to many people, but it is basically kind of like the corner of Gandy and Fourth Street. And it’s behind like Barney’s Motorcycle and Marina and all that good stuff on Gandy, just across the bridge from the Tampa side. So, it’s yeah. What else is it across from….pretty close to Dairy lane, if that’s a better marker for you. And, yeah, they have been working on it for a while, which he does cover in the interview. And finally, it should be opening here soon. So, yes. I thought this would be a good time to release this episode. So, without further ado, here’s Ian and kind of the insight into the background workings of Tampa Bay Club Sport.

Hey, everybody. This is Kyle Sasser with the “Great Things Tampa Bay” podcast and I’m here with…

Ian: Ian Elston with Tampa Bay Club Sport.

Kyle: And Ian is director here at Tampa Bay Club Sports. Tell us a little bit about Club Sports. What’s sort of the overarching thing that you all do here?

Ian: So, Club Sport is all about being active and getting off your couch, going out and doing things. We provide adult sports leagues for about 45,000 adults per year around the Bay area, and that would include Pinellas, Hillsborough, as well as Sarasota, Bradenton, and Brandon. We have that, and then we also run children sports leagues for kids ages 3 to 17 here in Pinellas. Then we also do a lot of different weekend events, social happy hours for our players, people that I would consider to be members of the club, and then lastly, we work in running a lot of corporate events for companies and corporate partners around the area.

Kyle: What sort of sports do you all cover?

Ian: So, we have 9 to 10 different sports depending on what you determine a sport to be. One most popular is soccer. We have roughly 10,000 to 11,000 soccer players per year, which is a lot of fun. And we play year-round in everything we do, followed by volleyball and softball. Those are our next two most popular sports. Softball is a big one down here, and we probably have just as many leagues in softball as we do in soccer, and then all of that is followed by one of our most popular sports which is kickball. Kickball is growing in popularity every year.

Kyle: And the favorite?

Ian: Of course, man. Go back to your childhood again to play and…

Kyle: And I’ve heard some stories from players where it’s not just like the lackadaisical kickball, like, there are some serious contenders out there.

Ian: There are. You really get to see people’s inner competitor come out when it comes to any sport but, it’s pretty funny when you see it coming out in kickball.

Kyle: Yeah. Funny stuff.

Ian: On top of that, we also have golf, and tennis, as well as bowling, and cornhole, and bar games as well.

Kyle: Awesome, awesome. So what level of athleticism do you think the people should have before they sign up with you all to play in one of your leagues?

Ian: It really ranges, honestly, depending on what sport you wanna play. If you’re gonna play a more serious sport like soccer or perhaps flag football or softball, I would say that you wanna have a good basic concept of the game in some of those instances. We do offer recreational in every sport where you don’t really have to have experience in playing it. But in a sport like soccer or in softball, it really helps to know some of the basics just to help with your enjoyment of the game. If you’ve never played before, it’s okay, we have plenty of people that are more than willing to come out and, you know, give you some tips. We actually offer volleyball clinics for people that, you know, aren’t necessarily comfortable with playing sand volleyball right away in a group of four or six people, but for the most part, I would just say you wanna have a little bit of experience for your own comfort level with some of those more intense sports. When it comes to tennis, or cornhole, or bowling, or any of those, you don’t need any experience whatsoever.

Kyle: Just a personal story for me. So, I joined after the last World Cup, I got really fired up, I was gonna be the next Messi at 34 years of age. But, basically, my athletic level was at none. So, like I hadn’t run, I hadn’t done anything. The only time I’d played soccer was like when I was 8 years old. And there’s a lot of learning playing soccer between that age and college, which is when most of the players out there have played. But, that said, I started off in a recreational league and it was a rough couple of weeks there to get up to speed both knowing what’s going on in the game and also just my fitness level, but extremely rapidly I got up to speed, I’d say, honestly, like four weeks, I was perfectly good to go. So, if you’ve never done anything, don’t let it hold you back because everyone out there is usually pretty nice.

Ian: That’s impressive. All these leagues are about having a good time. Everyone’s gotta get up and go to work the next day, so…

Kyle: Yeah. Like, nobody is going to the U.S. national team. They might but…

Ian: Some people think they are but…

Kyle: Yeah. Like, that’s not what it’s about. It’s about having fun out there.

Ian: That’s right.

Kyle: But, there’s always fun and issues out there, but it does get competitive and a little spicy, as I like to say. So, Ian, any good stories about adults acting like children?

Ian: Oh, my goodness. We have so many, and I think if you went through our discipline database, you could probably have yourself a very good laugh. But really, you know, it boils down to people that some of them just have a very quick wit, and when it comes to talking back to a referee, sometimes that ends in a disciplinary action if you will. For the most part, it’s very light-hearted out there. People have a good time. I think just of my favorite stories, and it’s one of those ones you kinda had to be there for, but we had a player who strongly disagreed with a call with an umpire in softball, and just his go back and forth between the referee got documented and we had to read it from a written report here. Now, I wanna say the player told the guy to go home and knit a fucking sweater at the end of it, which for whatever reason just caused everyone in the office to erupt in laughter. But, we do have our fair share of stories and, you know, I think everybody gets what it’s all about, but sometimes there is a phone call or two that need to be made to just remind everybody that, “Hey, we’re all out here for fun and a good time. We can’t be cursing. There are children around occasionally.”

Kyle: Yeah. Back it up a little bit. Back off a little bit.

Ian: Yeah. Gotta remind people what it’s all about, but, fortunately, we don’t have to remove that many people from leagues. Everybody does have to have that threat just in case someone gets too out of control, but for the most part, we keep things really laid back and fun.

Kyle: Yeah. So, I actually kept in the team that I’m on, the Moist Towelettes. Shoot-out to the Moisties. I have had to deal with a few disciplinarian issues, you know, you’re all are always great to work with, and honestly, the players are usually really understanding, typically respectful of the ref after initial outburst. I mean, they’re refs, you gotta give them a little shit.

Ian: Hey, man. They’re there to keep the peace, and if there wasn’t a good rapport between them and the players, they probably shouldn’t be reffing in the first place.

Kyle: That’s true. And that actually brings me to a point, is that you all do actually lease the fields and, you know, you have paid refs out there.

Ian: Mm-hmm. That’s right.

Kyle: So there’s actually a, you know, independent third party out there watching over things and looking over things.

Ian: As part of what we do and part of the safety precautions, we always have staff onsite, coordinators to run the league, to administer the league. There’s also always an employee of the city there typically just to make sure that field lights are turned on, and if there’s an emergency, that the city has someone in the know that’s around. And then, of course, we have our umpires and our referees there to make sure it’s a quality game experience.

Kyle: Yeah. We’ve had a couple of medical things that came up, and your staff has always been really good with coming out and doing treatment and getting all that stuff sorted out.

Ian: They go through a lot of training for that, so it’s important.

Kyle: So here is my true question because it’s a little pet peeve of mine. Is golf or beer pong actually a sport, or a cornhole for that matter?

Ian: Wow. All right. I’ll take the last one that you mentioned. So, cornhole, if you would have asked me eight years ago if cornhole was a sport, I probably would have smiled at you and said, “No.” But I gotta tell you, I’ve become one competitive cornhole player. I was a soccer player for a better part of 32 years, and then, unfortunately, a bad injury forced me to sideline it, so I picked up playing cornhole. I gotta tell you, there’s nothing more fun than being in a bar with 20 or 30 teams playing, you know, that’s basically 40 or 60 people, and everybody is just having an absolute blast. And you gotta have a beer in your hand, you play, there’s all kinds of strategic moves and throws that you make. As far as golf goes, I think it’s 100% a sport because that takes a ridiculous amount of focus to get your swing down. And what was the last one…oh, bar games. You know, I guess if you’re really gonna define a sport, it’s gotta come down to, “Can you be competitive in playing it? And can it be administered as a competition?” And I gotta tell you, I have seen some bar games that have played out better than a World Cup in the long run, they’re definitely a lot of fun.

Kyle: Some oohs and aahs?

Ian: Oh, of course, man, that and people cheering, full on cheering. I’ve seen people cheer on at giant Jenga game that went on like probably four rounds further than it should have, and an entire bar got enthralled by it. It was amazing to watch.

Kyle: Yeah. You know, I’m not trying to disparage golf or the bar stuff, like, I listen to the Bill Burr podcast as well, and his thing is like, you know, “If beer is strongly associated with performance and the sport?” You know, so I was like, “You got to play golf.” Usually, there’s beer involved or some cocktails, cornhole, obviously, flip cup, etc., etc., etc.

Ian: True, very true. Have you ever watched ESPN2 before?

Kyle: Mm-mm.

Ian: It’s kind of like watching, you know, the movie, “Dodgeball,” on The Ocho. That’s a bold strategy, cut and let’s see how it plays our form. They actually do have national cornhole championships. Nobody drinks at ’em, I mean, it was on ESPN2 like probably about six months ago, and our website got killed by people that wanted to play cornhole. So, yeah. You have your competitive side, I think, in any sport.

Kyle: That’s true. It’s not flip cup, but they even have like competitive cup stacking?

Ian: Yes.

Kyle: Like I’ve seen videos of this on YouTube. It’s…

Ian: I have.

Kyle: Yeah.

Ian: I mean, we’re always on the hunt for new events, for corporate events, and you’d be amazed how many companies, actually have requested speed stacking as an event.

Kyle: And the Rubik’s Cubes. Some kid just broke that record, I saw, like, ridiculous.

Ian: Those people amaze me. There is just no way I could ever even light a candle to what they do.

Kyle: We’ll go with their sports then.

Ian: At least in my opinion.

Kyle: There we go. What one problem do you wish that you could solve right now? When I ask that, usually, most people go like world hunger or something like that. More like, is there one thing that you wish that you could do here at Club Sports?

Ian: I always joke around, you know, when you’re coming out of college and you’re looking for a career path to follow, I always like to joke around that nobody knows what they wanna be when they grow up, and part of that journey is finding something that fulfills you. I was a corporate recruiter when I came out of college, and finding people jobs was very fulfilling for me, but it got a little bit… What’s the word when, you know, it’s just the same thing over and over, it’s like “Groundhog Day?”

Kyle: Repetitive.

Ian: Repetitive. Thank you. So, one of the things that I love about Club Sport is that it does offer people the opportunity to get together to create a melting pot of different ethnicities and people to get together. I think one thing that we’re seeing in our country right now is just a real lack of unity and a lot of divisiveness, and sports has always been something that I felt has been able to bring people together. I will say that having my hand in disciplined action, there are some people that like to use whatever sport or competition they’re in as a way to blow off steam from their workday, I’d say it’s a safe bet that if some people didn’t plan our leagues, there might be a lot of domestic issues that happen because they’re not blowing off that steam, so…

Kyle: It’d be the police handing out the red cards.

Ian: Yeah, instead of our referee and me having to make a phone call at the end of the day. But I think, for the most part, one social issue that I’d love to see addressed would be that unity in America right now, and I think adult sports, as corny as it sounds, I think they’re a great way to do that.

Kyle: Yeah. And that’s true because like we were talking before we recorded that like once you cross a certain age, you know, like you get out of college, your friends start getting married, it’s really tough to like just get out and like throw a game of anything together, it’s even hard just to get like four guys together to go play golf, or girls for that matter, to go do something. So, the nice thing that you all do is you all actually provide a structure and an environment to do that, so you can go out and meet new people, and play against them, probably argue with them a little bit, but have fun while doing so.

Ian: That’s’ really the beauty of it. Whoever created the adult sport in social industry back in the day, I don’t know that they necessarily realized all of the different benefits that would come of it, but one thing that I can tell you that I’ve seen after, I’m coming up on my 10-year reunion here pretty soon, for working for the company, is just how many new people get to be introduced to a group, how easy it can be when the right people are put on the same team or the same field for that matter. And it’s definitely a big benefit, I mean, when you’re brand new to an area, you don’t know anybody, maybe you don’t know where to go live, you don’t know where the cool stuff’s happening, it’s a great way to source a new network of people and do so in a way that, you know, doesn’t really drive a lot of pressure. When you go out and you play on a sports team, you show up, you put your boots on, or whatever equipment you need, and you go out there and you try and play and have fun, and a sidebar product of that is meeting a new group of people.

Kyle: There you go. And all you guys, all you Moisties, y’all are pretty all right my book.

Ian: You found a good group there, man. That’s an awesome name.

Kyle: Yeah. We were just a bunch of sign-ups. None of us knew each beforehand, and we just called Club Sports and we’re like, “Hey, we wanna play on this field,” and y’all threw us all together and somehow we’ve made it work for almost three years now.

Ian: I like to call that the free agent sweet story, man. When you have a team full of randoms, which we call free agents, you know, they’re signing up individually, and then they get placed on the same team, it’s really powerful, it’s special to me when it works out well like that.

Kyle: Yeah. It usually works out pretty well.

Ian: We have those little half and halfs, you know, where maybe half the team really likes playing together and the other half decides to hit the reset button and come back trying something different, but for the most part, it works out typically well.

Kyle: So don’t be afraid, just call ’em up, sign up, or go to the website. Any details you would like to divulge about the next venture coming up for you all?

Ian: The next endeavor, so Club Sport turned 21 this past year.

Kyle: So they can drink? Awesome.

Ian: That’s right. we’re finally of legal age. The company, we’re in our 22nd year now, basically, and we finally found our own commercial venue to buy and have our own space in. Some of the neat attributes of that venue are that it has enough land where we can build a small 5E5 6B6 artificial turf soccer field on property, we can build out two sand volleyball courts with lighting at night to be able to play, and then we have enough room to open up our own beer and wine bar, which is called the Wreck Deck, and it’ll be an opportunity for us to completely control the social experience that we want for our players. So, we’ll be able to host indoor cornhole leagues when it’s raining outside, when your games get rained at, you have a place to go in and we can listen to music, play board games, play a number of drinking games, you know, Pop-A-Shot, skee ball, things of that nature. So that’s coming up, and, hopefully, we’ll be open in early 2018. We’ll be able to play all kinds of different sports out there as well as manage the leagues that we love to run so much.

Kyle: And location for that?

Ian: It’s right off of Gandy across the street from Derby Lane. It’s actually at 380, 105th Terrace North East 33716. I got it memorized already.

Kyle: There you go, you got it. So, those of you all that don’t know, it’s basically down like Gandy Boulevard, it’s on the Penilla side of the bridge and across from the dock truck there behind Barney’s, right?

Ian: Behind Barney’s. Yeah.

Kyle: So, the bridge is not that big of an obstacle, Tampa people just… It’s not that far, it’s only like a mile and a half, or something. So, just get on the bridge, come on over, and have a good time early 2018.

Ian: Early 2018. It should be in full swing, if not, a little bit earlier, but I like being conservative on my opening dates.

Kyle: There you go. Smart man.

Ian: The name is called The Wreck Deck, and I believe the website is recdecstpete.com or R-E-C-D-E-C stpetecom.

Kyle: So, anyone who’s interested, just open it up here and the podcast that you’re watching, or it’ll be on the show notes on our website, or YouTube, or any of that stuff. That kind of leads into the next question, where do you all see yourselves in five years from now?

Ian: Oh, man. We’ve been working on pulling all the good benefits out of the Tampa Bay area that we can for people that are participating. And also, on the event side, I’d really love to see some of our events increase in size even more. Right now, we run about 40 or so weekend events a year not counting corporate events.

Kyle: And when say events, could you give us some examples of those?

Ian: We have charity-oriented events like Field Day, where we normally have about 400 or 500 players come out to a day of wacky games that they play, but it raises money for one of the good local charities we work with, past couple of years it’s been Big Brothers Big Sisters.

Kyle: Yeah. They’re good.

Ian: Oh, they’re awesome.

Kyle: And it’s just like sort of how you’re remembering grade school, right?

Ian: Exactly.

Kyle: Like the events that you have there or so.

Ian: Yup. Lots of relay races, dizzy bat, and then some new stuff that’s a lot of fun, we have giant tricycle races with adults on ’em, the rubber ducky launch, you have…it’s like a giant human slingshot that you hurl rubber duckies down a football field with, and, the last round, a player has to catch a rubber ducky with like a fishnet on a pole, which is kind of fun.

Kyle: Serious. Serious competition sounds like.

Ian: That’s right. You got that stuff, and then you got like the cherry pie hunt, you know, where you got people shoving their face in a team full of whipped cream and trying to dig out cherries, so…

Kyle: Fun stuff, fun stuff.

Ian: Yeah. So that’s side, and then our other side are our typical sports tournaments. So, we’ve got your softball, your soccer, volleyball tournaments where you compete against people from all over the Bay area in a one or two-day format. And then we’ve got something unique in extreme mud wars, nine mud-field pits that you go head-to-head against other teams in, which is a lot of fun. It also raises money for charity. And then we have our social events. So, you have players’ parties, your championship parties where champs get to drink free.

Kyle: Yeah. We have not made it to one of those and, but soon we will get our Tervis cup.

Ian: That’s right, we’ll get you there, we’ll get you there one way or another. And then we have pop crawls and socials like that. And then we have our outdoor events. I think you and I were talking about this before we started recording, but we pulled out just under two tons of trash from Weedon Island in one of our cleanup events that we had, and that involved a big sand bar party with Tampa Bay Fun Boat and Miller Lite and Leinenkugel’s who were a part of it. So, it was fun. We got to clean up nature around St. Pete and then go out on a party barge and go hit the sandbar and have a good day with fun and games.

Kyle: Always good times with that. So, the next five years you’re looking to maybe do a few more of those special event sort of things.

Ian: Definitely to build them up. We have a great following for social events, we have done New Year’s Eve parties for the last several years, but I love to get those events bigger and larger and offer more opportunities for our participants to have fun. Additionally, we’d love to get into, you know, possibly doing food festivals and things of that nature just to kinda round out our portfolio on events.

Kyle: There’s a ton of stuff that goes on around here.

Kyle: Oh, yes. Tampa, St. Pete, there’s something to do every weekend, I swear.

Ian: It really is. And that’s kind of the beauty of the area, though. I mean, St. Pete and Hillsborough, Tampa Bay, in general, has been blowing up for the past 10 to 12 years. It didn’t always used to be like that.

Kyle: Oh, no, no. I remember I used to be real sleepy, especially over in St. Petersburg.

Ian: That’s right. It used to be referred to as “God’s Waiting Room” back in the day.

Kyle: Yeah. I used to work over here just over Roosevelt like ’99 to 2000 and there is not much.

Ian: Now, I mean, downtown is just blowing up, and you’ve got the EDGE District and you’ve got what I refer to as West Central that’s doing really well.

Kyle: Yeah. Like I knew a lot of you Tampa people don’t make it over here that often. St. Petersburg is basically built with like restaurants, shops, and other cool stuff like that all way from the downtown waterfront three or four miles down Central Avenue like all the way down to 19 basically. So it’s like you could spend a whole day just going in and out of those shops. It’s really impressive.

Ian: Have you done the artwork tour to look at all the murals down there and?

Kyle: Does PedalPub count?

Ian: That’s right. PedalPub totally counts. I actually get to do one of those next Sunday, I can’t wait.

Ian: Sweet. Yeah, that guy is killing it too. He’s on my radar, he’s gonna be on our future interview. He’s doing crazy good. I interviewed The Dog Bar owner a few weeks ago. He said they have 12 to 14 peddle pups through there every weekend, like every Saturday.

Ian: They’re insanely busy. I mean, we did one for someone’s birthday that’s a long-time player for us, and we had an absolute blast balancing between breweries and we did end up at The Dog Bar, that was one of our last spots to go and…

Kyle: It’s a good spot.

Ian: Yeah. It’s a really, really, cool location. I mean, they have that and they have Salty’s out in Gulfport. It was actually Dog Bar and Charlotte too, so he’s got both of those locations.

Kyle: There are some things rocking and rolling down there.

Ian: Yeah. St. Pete’s blowing up, it’s turned into a really cool town.

Kyle: And Ian is a native, so he would definitely know.

Ian: I was born and raised here so it’s been interesting to see it go through its growth phases.

Kyle: What success do you feel, personally, is your favorite or has had the most impacts on your life?

Ian: You know, with Club Sport, it’s kinda hard. I can’t claim any of Club Sport’s success as my own, but we have had some really cool partnerships that have come about that have enabled us to do some neat things. We’re a part of a national industry association, and with that comes collaboration with over 70 different sports and social clubs throughout the United States. It’s called the SSIA or the Sport and Social Industry Association, and I’m most proud of getting to work with those fine people in the other clubs around the United States. And we kind of look out for each other, when there’s opportunities we make each other aware. It’s just a really great way to leverage our teamwork concept but around good knowledge sharing and good collaboration to do things better, and, hopefully, bring more value to your end participant in the long run. So, our participation in that is something that I’m most proud of, I would say.

Kyle: Any particular failures that you’re proud of that might have led to success down the road or something that blew up so spectacularly that is just a great story?

Ian: So, I will say, another one of our cool partnerships that kind of led to… And I’ll only speak of our personal failures because I can’t really speak to the rest of our employees here in the company, but we ran Corporate SportsFest for a good 9 to 10 years. And when I say we ran it, Dave Bollmann who owns that event, he subcontracted us to run tug of war, cornhole, and volleyball. And it’s a really, really cool event out on St. Pete beach where they get 5,000+ corporate people. And Dave said, “Hey, you guys do such a great job of running this, how would you feel about, you know, franchising it and taking it to another market?” And we, of course, you know, jumped on that opportunity, but I was mainly in charge of it and it was pretty spectacular failure on my part, unfortunately. It just had to do with coming in and setting a date at the wrong time. When you work with corporations, you know, they have a certain budget period in order to earmark dollars for an event or for participation in an event, and the timing just wasn’t right. We ended up not being able to run the events in the market that we were going to, and so I ended up being on the hook for a decent chunk of change, I wanna say it was something around $20,000 for a partnership that we established down there, but it was really funny. The partner actually ended up letting us come down there and applying those dollars to another event that we ended up running. And so it was a failure on my part, we learned a lot from it, but at the same time, those dollars didn’t go to waste, which was a good thing.

Kyle: Yeah. Organizational logistics and like project management are things that a lot of people think are ridiculously easy or should be but get really complicated really quickly.

Ian: They definitely can. That was an oversight on our part, but being eternally optimistic can sometimes work against you.

Kyle: Yeah. We’ll figure it out, we’ll get it done.

Ian: That’s right, exactly. And it did in that case, but honestly, the gods smiled upon me for that one. It didn’t work out to be too much of a crusher in the long run.

Kyle: And very generous of the partner to…

Ian: I’ll tell you what. You know, there’s one thing that doesn’t change no matter what business you’re in and that’s keeping good relationships really helps you out in a lot of different ways and that partner was really awesome in trying to maintain that relationship, and we’ve ended up doing stuff with him in the future, so it actually worked out pretty well.

Kyle: Yeah, just be friendly, be civil, and be understanding. You know, like stuff happens, things go wrong, people are people, we’ll make mistakes, so, you know, just kinda work through it. I’m also an eternal optimist, so…

Ian: Amen, they’re good. It’s better than being the opposite in my opinion.

Kyle: Yeah. We get annoying on occasion, but it’s good. What’s the one thing that you wished that I would have asked you today?

Ian: Oh, man.

Kyle: Yeah, that one’s tricky.

Ian: That one’s real tricky. You know what? The one thing I wish you would have asked me about was how the company started. Chris and Tracey Giebner, who own the company, actually are the second owners. The first owner, a gentleman by the name of Harold, started this sport and social league based off of what he saw in Atlanta, and so he came down to the Tampa area and started it in 1995. After a while, Harold and his wife, I believe we’re about to have their first child, and I think his wife kind of nudged him a little bit and said, “Hey, you’re about to have your first kid, it’s time to grow up and get a real job.” And at that point in time, Chris and Tracey had actually been placed on the same soccer team. She came over from Texas and Chris moved back down from Ohio. And so here this couple was placed on the same soccer team, didn’t know anybody, they’re brand new to the area, they ended dating…

Kyle: The leagues are actually coed, so there’s all men, and all women, and then there’s coed leagues as well.

Ian: There’s men’s and then there’s coed. We do have occasionally, you know, women’s leagues, but for the most part, coed tends to be the most popular, and I think it’s just because it’s easier to fill the teams out when you have the ability to add both sexes. So, Chris and Tracey got placed on a coed team, and they ended up dating, and getting married, and having kids, and they were huge believers in the company because, I mean, that’s how they met. And so, Harold approached them first when he was getting ready to get out and Chris and Tracey ended up buying the company, I believe, in late 2001, early 2002, and from that point, you know, it went from being run out of a home office to, I think, now we’re on our sixth location once we move into this new building.

Kyle: There’s quite a few people in here and quite a bit of hustle and bustle.

Ian: Oh, yeah. We’ve got 10 full-time employees now. Some of them are focused on social media, some are focused on being league directors and actually running particular sports, and then we have people that are in charge of our corporate’s events as well as our youth leagues, and we all kind of work together as a big, happy family to make sure that the company keeps growing.

Kyle: And then you also have the reps that go out to the fields and just kinda monitor the things that are going on.

Ian: Yeah. You mentioned logistics, you didn’t mention staffing. That’s always a tough one to keep up with. At any given day I think we have about 60 or 70 part-time employees that actually work and they’re out there in the field running leagues.

Kyle: Yeah. And your leagues vary from day to day, some are all times during the week. I know, personally, we play on Wednesdays. Basically, any day of the week there’s going to be something in Tampa Bay to do. So, if somebody is interested in signing up for Club Sports, how would you tell them to do it?

Ian: The easiest thing is just to go to tampabayclubsport.com, or if you’re down in the Sarasota, Bradenton area, it would be sococlubsport.com. Check the leagues out. If you have trouble finding a league that’s a good fit for you, then just call the office. We’re pretty good at being able to direct people and we kinda have a list of questions we’ll go down through, you know, “Which night’s available? What times can you play between? What sports are you most interested in? Are you interested in men’s or coed, in being a free agent or do you have a full team?” And they’ll kinda guide you as appropriate. There are nuances to everything because the sports and social industry is in a perfect one-size-fits-all model, everybody has different preferences, and in order to fill a team out, you need a specific number of people. So, logistically, we just work on perfecting those numbers by adding people in where we can and doing our best to accommodate everybody.

Kyle: Us, personally, we don’t play a full pitch, we play half-fields, the goals are small, and it’s seven versus seven. And then there’s requirements for having girls out there so you’re not running…you’re still running, trust me, but it’s not full pitch, you know, it’s not that crazy. Although, personally, I think that I would run less on a full pitch because I could play position more than having the hustle to try to get somewhere, but, yeah, that’s neither here and over there.

Ian: Those short sprints will you get you, man. I know. The 66, 77 is tough for us tall guys. I mean, you gotta… those short bursts of sprinting can really wear you out.

Kyle: Yeah. So, check it out all the details will be in our show notes. Come out and play and come out to the Rec Dec.

Ian: Awesome. Thanks for having me, Kyle.

Kyle: All right. and I would like to thank Ian for taking the time to do that interview with me. We actually did it quite a while back, but just with hiccups in scheduling. There’s a lot of stuff that happens in the Tampa Bay area between like February and April. It might have something to do with how good the weather is, but that seems to be when a lot of events and other sorts of things go on. So, yeah. So, this episode just getting moved back, moved back, moved back. So, Ian, sorry for the delay, but here we go. You’ve finally been released to the world. Coming up next, we got Segment 2, “Your Facts.”

The oldest living tree ever found was 5,067 years old, and that was according to measurements by Tom Harlan. Unfortunately, we know it’s the oldest tree because he cut it down and then he counted the rings and was tremendously heartbroken to learn that he had chopped down the oldest tree known. There are other similar bristlecone pine trees nearby that might be as old, maybe older, but let’s just say that after this little mix-up, that people aren’t really too eager to start pulling rings or chopping these things down to find out exactly how old they are. All right. don’t you feel like that is totally useful information for you, like, that’s something that you’re definitely gonna use every day in your day to day life? I think so.

So, anyway, my name is Kyle Sasser. This is “Great Things Tampa Bay.” I would love to thank you for tuning in. I’m also a realtor, and if you’re looking to find your own great place in Tampa Bay, I’d love to help you find it. You can reach out to me at the website greatthingstb.com., that’s G-R-E-A-T T-H-I-N-G-S tb.com, and there’ll be a link up there at the top where you can reach me for real estate related matters. Also, if you just wanna share your preferences or experiences, if you wanna argue about something, if you disagree with something I said, just go to the website, greatthingstb.com, and there’s plenty of contact forms, links to social media where we can interact. And I’d love to hear from you, I promise. Plan is out today. We got Christopher Coleman, Bastard Son, and it’s pretty rock and tune, I definitely liked it when it popped up on the radio and that’s why…Not on the radio but on my, you know, phone tied to Bluetooth, to my car, which it doesn’t roll off the tongue quite as well as radio, but there you go. So, this is Christopher Coleman, “Bastard Son.” And here you go, thanks for tuning in and be sure to share us with your friends. Thank you. Bye.

But before we get to that, I do have a little bit of paid advertising today. So, kind of our first for “Greats Things Tampa Bay,” but hopefully, the first of many. So, here we go.

Hospital childbirth classes teach you how to be a good patient for them. Here in Tampa, The Happiest Doulas is an independently owned agency preparing soon-to-be parents with safe strategies for labor and delivery at the hospital. With the class taught by The Happiest Doulas, you’ll learn how to advocate for yourself to get evidence-based care and reduce your C-section risk. And speaking of, have you checked the C-section rate at your hospital and? Learn insider tips to access all available options for your baby’s birthday, and how to improve your overall satisfaction with the labor experience. Reserve your seats today in a group childbirth class or schedule a private in-home lesson to know what to expect on your labor day. Save 5% on any class or in-home lesson with the code HAPPY5 at happiestdoulas.com. And hurry, demand is high and space is limited. So, register now at happiestdoulas.com, that’s happiestdoulas, D-O-U-L-A-S, .com, and save 5% off the fee of any newborn class, or private prenatal lesson or group series with the code HAPPY5. The Happiest Doulas, an experience of a lifetime.

So, funny enough, my wife and I, we were recently talking about, you know, doulas and stuff like that, so it is kind of a, you know, a little bit of an interesting coincidence that the advertisement is for The Happiest Doulas this week. We are gonna have links to their website as well as the promo code in our show notes. So, if you weren’t sure on the spelling on some of that, just go to the show notes and the links will be there. And, again, thanks to The Happiest Doulas for trusting “Great Things Tampa Bay” with your advertising. So, if you know somebody that’s in the process of birthing a human being, check ’em out.

Bastard son
Pull me down and I keep rising
You can’t, don’t, was born to shine

Bastard son
You can’t, don’t, was born to shine
Pull me down and I keep rising

Spinning jaws, you’re going nowhere
Digging my grave warmed you down there
Feeling like I just don’t give a shit
Remembering dreams of once lived nightmares
Walking in my sleep is my fare
To keep on hearing with a grip to go dance

Calling me Bastard son
Pull me down and I keep rising
You can’t, don’t, was born to shine

Oh, Bastard Son
You can’t, don’t, was born to shine
Pull me down and I keep rising
Pull me down and I keep rising

Every word, your souls do [inaudible 00:36:20]
The [inaudible 00:36:20] pressed our bases
It drives me harder when I hear them say

Calling me Bastard Son
Pull me down and I keep rising
You can’t, don’t, was born to shine

Oh, Bastard son
You can’t, don’t, was born to shine
Pull me down and I keep rising

Yeah, yeah
Yeah, yeah
Yeah, yeah
Yeah, yeah
Yeah, yeah
Yeah, yeah
Yeah, yeah
Yeah, yeah

Pull me down and I keep rising
Pull me down and I keep rising
Pull me down and I keep rising
Pull me down and I keep rising

Bastard son
Pull me down and I keep rising
You cant, don’t, was born to shine

Oh, Bastard son
You can’t, don’t, was born to shine
Pull me down and I keep rising
Pull me down and I keep rising

Categories
Category Clearwater Episode Great Eats Great Places Location St Pete Tampa

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

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

Alexa,
play Great Things Tampa Bay

Show Notes

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

Transcript at the bottom of the page!

Where to watch the World Cup

Tampa

London Heights Pub
Dubliner
MacDinton’s
Glory Days
Dunderbaks

Brandon

O’Brians
Glory Days

St Pete

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

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Category Clearwater Episode Great People Location St Pete Tampa

Episode 28 – SOAR, Suncoast Organized Animal Relief

Episode 28 - SOAR Suncoast Organized Animal Relief

Alexa,
play Great Things Tampa Bay

Show Notes

Sure there are animal shelters around Tampa Bay, maybe that’s where you adopted fluffy or rover.  And sure, maybe you or someone you know volunteers at one, helping our furry friends out.  But who helps the helpers?

SOAR, that’s who.  Suncoast Organized Animal Relief.

Transcript at the bottom of the page!

SOARChief's Creole Cafe

Stephen and Sharon manage an organization that fills the gaps.  When Animal Shelters need help with food and supplies, they can turn to SOAR for the puppy food and cleanup supplies required to keep operating.

Donate to SOAR via GiveDay Tampa Bay!

SOAR Facebook Page

Jeff Downes, Designer of the SOAR Logo

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Flamingo Facts

There are many, many more fake flamingos in the world that there are real ones.

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Transcript

Kyle: And then there’s a cat, a dog, a horse and a dolphin.

Sharon: Meow.

Kyle: All right. So yeah. Hey, everybody. This is Kyle Sasser and this is episode 28 of “Great Things Tampa Bay” and today we’re doing an interview with SOAR, which is a wonderful animal rescue organization here and you’ll learn all the details inside the interview. So be sure to stay tuned. And also we have an event coming up here in the Tampa Bay Area called Give Day Tampa Bay. And lots of great charities of which SOAR is a part. We’ll be taking part in a Give Day so be sure to give it a listen so you can find out how to contribute and we’ll also be putting information in the show notes as well so feel free to check there as well. So anyway, without further ado…

Hey, everybody. This is Kyle Sasser and I’m here with Steven Bennett and Sharon Donnelly of SOAR, which is the Sun Coast Organized Animal Relief Organization and they’re a nonprofit organization located here in Tampa Bay and we’ll get to exactly what they do in a little bit but they help out a lot of furry folks. Just to give them a little bit of an introduction here. Steven has spent 25 years in local rescue efforts. Steven also used to own Top Dog Grooming, Boarding and Photography where he would take professional photos of pups and kittens and I’m sure other strange and wonderful beasts.

Steven: Yes.

Kyle: And he’s currently the SOAR CEO, or is that right or…?

Steven: CEO, right, executive director of SOAR.

Kyle: All right, there we go, executive director of SOAR. And then Sharon Donnelly, she is currently a teacher at Plato…

Sharon: Academy.

Steven: Plato Academy.

Sharon: In Saint Pete.

Kyle: And she teaches math and science there. Don’t ask her any English questions.

Sharon: No, because I’ll flub it up so…

Kyle: Yep. She also has been a part of some Susan B. Komen fundraisers and has spent 15 years involved in nonprofits in the area.

Sharon: Correct.

Kyle: And they both have very big hearts and that’s what we’re gonna talk about today. So without further ado, Steven and Sharon, if you could just give us a little bit information on SOAR, what the overall mission is and then we’ll get into the nuts and bolts here.

Steven: Sure. Well, thank you for having us here today, Kyle. SOAR, we’re very excited about. We’re about two-and-a-half years old, and as you said, it’s SOAR, Sun Coast Organized Animal Relief. We are a 501C3 nonprofit here in the Tampa Bay area. We cover the Sun Coast so we cover Pinellas County, Hillsborough County, Manatee, Sarasota, Bradenton, Ruskin, the beaches. So it’s a large area. Covers about four million people. So we’ve been mainly focusing on Saint Petersburg for our first couple of years. We are starting to branch out a little bit now and heading across the bay a little bit and up north of here. What we do is we…we’re a little different because we don’t take in the rescue animals like most of the organizations here. We actually are trying to be an umbrella organization. We are there for those that are on the front lines rescuing the animals: dogs, cats, feral animals, birds, horses. We are also here for our sea life, which is a big part of our organization, and that includes doing beach cleanups in the area and we have a lot of problems with pollution in our waters here so…

Kyle: That we do. That we do. So what sort of help do you specifically provide to some of the shelters and citizens here?

Sharon: So as a nonprofit we know that nonprofits can have a challenge with resources whether it’s volunteers, dollars, donations, so we’re here to support other nonprofits. There can be peaks and valleys. We wanna be able to make that more consistent for all the nonprofits so they can reach out to us and we can go ahead and provide what they might need or direct them to the sources that they might need as well.

Kyle: And such as…like what would be an example of…?

Sharon: Food. So if they’re running low on food. They’ve gotten additional adoptions in and they don’t have enough food to take in those 15 pit bulls, we’ll go ahead and donate the food. If they need additional resources we could do fundraising and go ahead and hook up I with what they might need for those resources.

Steven: We have helped out with medical bills, we’ve helped out with…and it’s not just organizations, it’s individuals in the Bay Area too. We’ve had a lot of people now that we’re getting our name out there have been contacting us, finding out about us. So we have several people who have…maybe war veterans. We have a cancer patient who has five rescue cats and cannot afford to take care of them, feed them and supply kitty litter, which is expensive. So we’ve been providing that free of charge to them.

The other thing a lot of people don’t realize in the Bay Area, you know…everybody knows the major rescue organizations. They see them but they aren’t aware…a lot of people aren’t aware that we have hundreds of smaller rescue organizations here that really fly by the seat of their pants. They are self-funded. They don’t have a location so the animals are all fostered among many, many people. So sometimes they’ll take in…we had a rescue recently we provided food for that took in 56 dogs I believe.

Kyle: So yeah. So we adopted our cats from Friends of Strays, which I always thought of as like a smaller place but probably it’s actually one of the larger ones compared to…

Steven: It used to be small. And they have grown in leaps and bounds. They’ve gotten the same with like, you know, Sun Coast Animal League. They have started out very small with one little room with a few cats in it and now they have major…some of the largest fundraisers in the area and they’ve taken a lot of animals.

Kyle: My wife still likes to just go there just to like see the cats that they have and I’m like, “No.”

Steven: I can’t do that. I can’t do that because they…

Kyle: I was like, “We don’t need another one.”

Steven: Somebody’s coming home with me if I go there.

Sharon: So what we have realized, there’s a lot of big hearts out there. Sometimes their pocketbook just can’t afford what they’re trying to do from their hearts.

Kyle: So basically your role is to fill the gaps, basically?

Sharon: Correct.

Steven: Right, and we knew that when you’re on the front lines and you’re taking in the rescue animals it’s a lot of work. It is an immense amount of work and it’s 24/7. We knew we could do more and wanted to do more by saying, “Let’s help all of these organizations. There’s so many that need help so let’s go that route and we can raise money for them for vet care.” We’re starting to meet with vets now and then trying to do some kind of partnering for lower vet bills for rescues. We’ve been providing a lot of food, thousands and thousands of pounds of food for different rescue organizations as well as our eventful hurricane season last year in 2017. We sent food to Houston, supplies and food. We sent food to South Florida. We did even send some money to Puerto Rico for their animals as well. Couple of years ago, West Virginia when they had the major flooding there, we filled a U-Haul, along with two other recues, we filled a U-Haul in a short amount of time and two young ladies drove it up to West Virginia for the animal shelters up there.

Kyle: So if you could take us through and tell us how you got started with SOAR, how you started it up.

Steven: SOAR came about…it kind of morphed out of a couple of disappointments, things that didn’t happen. I was…in 2004 I was working on a book for charity called “Lifestyles of the Rich and Furry.” It was a celebrity pet interview book and it’s as yet unfinished but through that book I came across and started working with a lot of rescue organizations out in L.A. and in New York and started seeing a lot of the more famous rescue organizations, the Hollywood Humane Society, Actors and Others for Animals, and from the proceeds of the book what I was going to do was open up a place called the Pawhouse Ranch and it would be for any kind of animal. It didn’t matter, would be able to go there whether it was horses, dogs.

I would focus a lot on elderly dogs that get taken to shelters and they’re put down because of their age. Nobody wants to adopt them. So it would be a place for them to go out and live the rest of their life and I liked that idea and I was hoping to start it in many other cities. And that was part of the dream. So again, when the economy fell apart, that got put on a back burner and then the years started going by and I started thinking how time consuming taking all the animals in is and how I’ve worked on the front line of rescue for a lot of years so I thought I wanna do more. I wanna do something on a bigger scale that will help a lot more animals. So from that it morphed into, “Let’s help all the organizations that are already there.”

Kyle: Yeah. Let’s help the helpers.

Steven: Yes, exactly.

Kyle: I like it.

Steven: Thus, the front line.

Kyle: I like it. Sharon, how did you get involved?

Sharon: Well, two things that are very close to me are kids and animals, and certainly when Steven approached me about SOAR I knew his passion for animals already. So I thought, wow, how can I get into this with the educational part and the awareness? I thought, well, I can get that message out there both for children and help animals as…I’ll say it. I said I’m math and science, right? Help animals as well. So that’s really how I got into it also.

Kyle: And where are you from originally?

Sharon: I’m from Canada. [inaudible 00:09:55] I can say “about,” “house,” and all that fun stuff if you want me to.

Steven: I have to interject and just say that several people were interested in coming on board and I had one person in mind right off the bat. It was Sharon because of her compassion with charities of all different kinds and with animals and I knew, you know, doing this, something on the scale that we’re doing, I needed to surround myself with really, really good people. So Sharon Donnelly and…

Sharon: He’s making me blush.

Steven: It’s all true and it’s all…I couldn’t have come this far. SOAR would not be here without her so…and another one is we just have been trying to get on board from the beginning is Sandra Moody Green who isn’t here today but she’s another board member and has been volunteering from day one and put a lot of heart, blood, sweat and tears into it. So I wanted to acknowledge her as well.

Kyle: Yeah. Good stuff, good stuff. All right. So what do you see SOAR…where do you all see SOAR going in the next five years?

Sharon: We have a big goal but one that we can accomplish with all your help.

Kyle: I like big goals. Let me hear it.

Sharon: Okay. Pet food bank in the Saint Pete area to start out with because as we know there’s a lot of folks that cannot help out their animals and our drive right now is fundraising or raising those resources so that we can have a pet food bank for those individuals that are down or out, or having those ups and they can help us out, or having those downs and they can come get food if necessary.

Steven: And it is a very large thing because people don’t realize a lot of these organizations like Meals on Wheels are wonderful organizations, and feeding for the veterans and the homeless, these people, a lot of them have animals, therapy dogs, just animals that are comforting to them that are really getting them through day to day. We know the power of animal companionship and a lot of these people are giving their food, part of their food to their animals because they can’t afford to feed them. They don’t wanna give them up to a shelter so they give them a part of their food.

So SOAR will also help to work with a lot of these organizations where we’ll provide food for them to take along with the food for the humans to take it with the animals as well but people will be able to come to our food bank, get supplies, the rescues will be able to come, individuals. And there’s a lot of…it’s not just food. There’s these rescue organizations. They need bleach and towels and kitty litter and things that people don’t think about every day. So we will hopefully be able to provide all of this and we’re very proud that we have not had to say no yet in two-and-a-half years. Everybody that’s come to us, we have found a way. If we didn’t have it, we got it so far. We hope to really expand on that big time.

Kyle: That’s great. I mean, that has to make you feel really good that, you know…it’s impressive. It’s impressive.

Steven: When they show up…

Sharon: I’m smiling big if you can’t tell.

Steven: When they show up and they…we meet up with them or get a meeting place especially if they’re coming from far away and we’ll show up with truckloads full of food and supplies or whatever and the tears flow on both sides. And they start crying. We’re like…I had a woman the other day that had a five-month-old pit bull in the back of her car and she has two cats as well and she had money stolen from her, had no money for the rest of the month. So that was her food money for the animals. So I showed up and SOAR gave her about a three, four-month supply of food for the dogs and the cats so she…the tear…and the dog jumped out of the front seat, came around to the back. And she said the dog doesn’t go to anybody, he had been abused, and came over and did start licking my hand and then jumped up in the back of her car where all the dog food was. It was just the tail wagging and just…and then she got all choked up and I’m sitting there getting all choked up. It happens almost every time.

Kyle: Very rewarding. I’m sure it’s like you’re just like, “Here we go again.” All right. So five years, food bank.

Sharon: Absolutely.

Steven: Well, that’s coming much sooner. We’re almost there. But we wanna open more than one. This one’s gonna be based in Saint Petersburg. We’re just probably a few thousand dollars away from being able to start scouting out a location. So we’re very close, which is why our fundraisers are incredibly important.

Kyle: Yeah. And listeners, don’t worry. We’re gonna get to the how you can help at the end of the episode so just stay tuned. I know a lot of you all are probably like, “How do I help out on this thing?” Just be patient. Just be patient.

Sharon: So start off with one location. Make sure that we can consistently provide for that one location and then spread out where the need is needed.

Kyle: Absolutely. Mastery of one and then expand.

Sharon: Correct.

Steven: We started out very slowly. The general impulse was to get out there and to go to all the media right off the bat and we held off. We didn’t wanna go and say, “This is what we wanna do.” We wanted to go and have some accomplishments under our belt. So we wanted to say, “We’ve done this.” And now we have done beach cleanups in the area, we have provided food for a lot of rescue organizations as well as individuals. We are working on programs to implement in the schools to teach children about the importance of educating them about animal abuse, about the littering and all the litter and garbage.

Sharon: Good ownership.

Kyle: Yeah. Yeah, proof of concept is very important. Very important. I know.

Steven: Exactly. And so we’re almost there with the pet food, our first one. So we’re incredibly excited about that and that’s…

Kyle: Yeah. Congratulations. Like definitely. Like it’s a big…

Steven: Thank you very much, Kyle.

Kyle: It’s a big, big undertaking. All right. So you all have gotten some praise with specifically your marketing efforts and specifically your logo.

Sharon: Yeah, isn’t my shirt awesome?

Kyle: It’s the…yeah, the logo…

Sharon: You can see my shirt [inaudible 00:15:39] logo.

Steven: People that see it love it. They want it. We will be having a…when the pet food bank and office open we will be having probably…we have T-shirts now available but we will be having caps and mugs and things that 100% of the proceeds will go…

Kyle: So who designed the logo?

Steven: Jeff Downs from 454 Design I believe is…he…

Kyle: Yeah, we’ll give him a little shout out. That’s good work.

Steven: He did an amazing job and he did it for practically nothing and it was a lot of work actually and we gave him an idea and he ran with it and did an amazing job, as you can see, and people love the logo. It stands out. We’ve had…

Sharon: It encompasses what we’re trying to do because it’s got a big heart covering all different types of animals.

Kyle: Yep. And looking at the logo, so it’s got the word SOAR and then there’s a heart with some feathers or…like some wings around it.

Sharon: Wings.

Steven: We also take care of birds. We are gonna be working with bird sanctuaries as…

Kyle: Yep. And then there’s a cat, a dog, a horse and a dolphin. So definitely thank you to…what was his name again?

Steven: Jeff Downs.

Kyle: Yeah. Definitely thank you to Jeff Downs. So you’re a few thousand dollars away from reaching your goal for the food bank.

Steven: Right.

Kyle: How can people help?

Steven: They can go to…there’s a big event coming up called Give Day Tampa Bay. It’ll be coming up very shortly. Early donating will start April 17th. May 1st is the big day. It will be…

Kyle: But it goes on all year long?

Sharon: All year.

Steven: You can donate all year long but they…last year, for instance, they raised $1.7 million in 24 hours.

Kyle: Wow, okay.

Steven: So it’s very impressive. And then that amount [inaudible 00:17:16] smaller amounts will come in but that one day you will see hundreds and hundreds of restaurants in the Bay Area participating, sponsoring these organizations so when you go on to giveday.org it will have different categories. So there’s many different categories from…ours will be listed under animals. So if you click on animals, then scroll to SOAR you’ll see the logo. It’ll be SOAR, Sun Coast Organized Animal Relief.

Sharon: There’s also a real quick way if you go on, on the search, you know, that great magnifying glass, just type in SOAR and it’ll take us right to that.

Steven: Right to that, yeah.

Kyle: And dear listeners, we’ll be putting a direct link in the show notes.

Sharon: Oh, even better.

Kyle: So take a look there. I’ll make it even easier for everybody.

Steven: We are getting the word out on social media, and this is our first year so we’re thrilled to be a part of it this year. We’ve been trying for a couple of years to get in and we are this year and it’s very heavily promoted in all media around Tampa Bay. I’d say it’s getting larger and larger every year so…

Kyle: It’s good stuff.

Steven: So this could bring us over the top for the money we need.

Kyle: So does somebody need to go and give a $1,000 or like what sort of donation…?

Steven: It’s a minimum $5 donation and then there’s…you can make a custom amount so any amount you want. You can do a monthly amount that you can have deducted every month. You can just do a one-time gift of, I think it says, $5, $25, $50, $75, $100, or custom and you can make it $5.

Sharon: So it’s cumulative, every bit helps. Cumulative from $5 to whatever you can…

Steven: We’re thrilled. And a side note there, there’s over $50,000 in prize money for things like creative organizations, what you do to raise the money, creative ways. We’re thinking about doing a kissing booth.

Sharon: Yeah. Kissing puppy booth.

Steven: Kissing puppy booth. And many other ways too as well but whoever has the most unique users, the most visitors, it doesn’t mean the most money, just the most users that go on so it could be tons of $5 givers and if we have the most then we could get a $5,000 prize on top of it additionally so…

Sharon: It would so help us out too. So it can help with so many things.

Kyle: So if you want to have the biggest impact on animals donate to the umbrella organization that helps all of the other organizations.

Steven: We would greatly appreciate it, and more importantly the animals greatly appreciate it. The need is great.

Kyle: All right. So before we head on out here, what one thing do you wish people would know or do regarding animals?

Sharon: All right. I’ll try not to stand on my soapbox too long, but…

Steven: Stand up, sister.

Sharon: Education and awareness. It’s very heartbreaking every time I see that somebody gives up an animal because they just didn’t do their homework…as a teacher, homework. And it just takes a few minutes to really understand what commitment it takes, what dedication to have this lifelong friend. So don’t give up on them. Research first, understand the commitment that is gonna take, and then you’ll have this beautiful friend for the rest of your life instead of giving one up. So that’s my pet peeve. Okay.

Steven: And I’m really onboard with that big time because it just drives me insane. But there’s so many different areas too. We didn’t really touch very much on the sea life, but we for the most part live on an island in Tampa Bay. A beautiful, beautiful island for the most part, and it’s beautiful waters, but we’re failing as a society. Our dolphins, our manatees, sea turtles, our fish are filled with cigarette butts and plastic bags and plastic straws and they’re dying in very large numbers. There’s a lot of pollution in the water and we need to do better and we can and we’ve been doing a lot of beach clean ups and we would love volunteers to join us to come out and join us on them. We do them every few months or so. We partner with Keep Pinellas Beautiful. Great organization as well, and they’ve shown us how to do it and we’ve…we’re doing it. So that’s…

Kyle: I love it. I love it. And that takes us to, you know, kind of our lead out here. So if somebody wants to help and they’re eager, eager to get out there, they’re eager to donate, they wanna help with the beach cleanup, what’s the best way for them to get in contact with you or to know when your next events are?

Sharon: So glad you asked that and there’s gonna be a link there too, www.flsoar.org. You can go ahead and check out our calendar of events where you can either volunteer or help us raise funds by participating or doing the beach cleanups but if you log on to our website then you can go ahead and check out where you can be the most effective for you and for us as well.

Steven: And if you do go on our Facebook page, the first time you go on it’s Sun Coast, two words, Organized Animal Relief and that will bring up our very cool logo and then you can follow us through there and we do many, many events every month, fun things from drag queen bingo, skating nights we’re gonna be having, painting with a twist, events at The Dog Bar in Saint Pete, all over. We just do a lot of fun…

Kyle: That’s a personal favorite of mine, Dog Bar.

Steven: Yes, The Dog Bar. We’ve all…

Sharon: And they’ve been wonderful for us.

Steven: And people can also call us at 727-318-2377 if they wanna ask us where to send a check, if they want to ask how they can help that particular week or month, what we have coming up. They can do that as well and we’ll be happy to speak with them and [inaudible 00:22:38].

Kyle: Perfect, perfect. So is there any particular help that you need that…like is there anything that you kinda always need?

Sharon: Always seems like cat food and cat litter.

Steven: Cat litter because there are so many cat…dogs seem to get the majority of attention, and cat litter’s expensive. So a lot of these organizations really need…and individuals as well need cat litter. It seems like we’re always short on that and cat food more than even dog food. But we take it all and once the pet food bank opens…

Sharon: We will need it all.

Steven: …we will take as much as you can give.

Kyle: And to keep appraised of the food bank, just go to the website and there will be…eventually…it’s still a work in progress.

Steven: Right. It’s close. That’s been our goal from the beginning is to open the first one and that’s what we’ve been working at for two-and-a-half years so…

Kyle: Perfect. So the website was www.flsoar.org. There’s links in the show notes to both the website and the Facebook page. Whichever you wanna go to, dear listener. So yeah.

Steven: It’s awesome.

Kyle: Is there anything else that you wish I would’ve asked today?

Steven: Pause for a second. There is a large problem in the Tampa Bay…and in every city and town, especially big cities. You drive to any mobile home park and there’s so many of them here and you see the cats just running out from underneath the mobile homes all over the…the feral cat population is tremendous in this area. You can go to any industrial area over in Tampa. I went to Boston Terrier Rescue event years ago and I walked outside and looked down this little ravine and there was water, dirty water flooded with gas puddles on top of that. And there were cats, a lot of cats coming out of the sewer and drinking out of this water. And that’s all over the Bay Area and further east and…

Kyle: Do we have like an active, like, spay and neuter, like a…

Steven: Yeah, there are organizations and we are gonna be posting them very shortly on the website as well. By the time you’re listening to this they should hopefully already be there. You can go online and you can google that as well but there’s many catch and release programs that are trying to at least stop the population flow and that’s really where it begins. You really gotta stop it at that. And people just think it’s only cats. It’s not. If you go over the areas like [inaudible 00:24:57] and…

Kyle: Yeah, there’s feral dogs running around and…

Steven: There’s many areas with a lot of feral dogs and there’s an area over towards Winter Haven where there’s…I drive over there and there’s a lot of Chihuahuas running around. A lot of them…

Kyle: A Chihuahua herd.

Steven: There are, and it’s sad because the…

Kyle: Sorry.

Sharon: No, it’s a visual. I can understand that.

Kyle: It’s kinda funny. It’s kinda funny.

Steven: There’s a lot of them and, you know, you see them and they’re hanging down. They’ve had so many litters of puppies. And we have a coyote problem as well. So a lot of people’s animals are being attacked by coyotes as well so…

Kyle: That’s true. I didn’t believe it until somebody showed me a picture. Because I live on Shore Acres, which is, you know, it’s an island so…and somebody…I was like, “That’s probably just a, you know, ugly looking dog.” But no, it was actually a coyote.

Steven: One actually broke into our back porch and ripped a metal bar up and ripped through the screen and attacked our cat that was on the back porch and the cat had to be put down. So they do come out like 3:00, 4:00 in the morning and they go onto back porches and they’re scavengers.

Kyle: And I know I was in a community up in Largo for my real estate and I was in the office talking with a lady and she pulls out this little metal cylinder. She’s like, “Hey, check that out.” And I look at it and there’s like this scraggly gray fur on it. And I was like, “What is…” I was like, “Is this like a tranquilizer dart?” And she’s like, “Yeah.” She’s like, “We had a coyote in here up…” like the north end of Lake Seminole.” She’s like, “We had a coyote in here and we had to have the, you know, Game Commission or whatever come out. They tranquilized him. They transported it, you know, [inaudible 00:26:28] or wherever.”

Sharon: And she kept the tranquilizer?

Kyle: Yeah, yeah. It’s there on her desk. Well, thank you so much, Steven and Sharon. Thank you for coming out and…

Sharon: Thank you, sir.

Steven: Thank you, Kyle, very much. We appreciate it, and on behalf of the animals and the sea life, they appreciate it so…

Kyle: Meow.

Steven: There you go.

Kyle: All right. So yeah. So check out the show notes and see how you can help the great folks at SOAR.

Sharon: Yay.

Steven: We appreciate it.

Kyle: And now, here is your fact. There are more fake flamingoes in the world than there are real flamingoes. All right, everybody. Hope you enjoyed listening to us, you know, put a round in for the record books there. Today we’re being played out by Carlos Strong again and this song is called “Apologize.” Before we get to that though I would like to invite you to come over to the website, greatthingstb.com, and we got some really good stuff over there. In addition to show notes, we also have some forms and community that, you know, allows me to more directly interact with you and, you know, we can have a conversation back and forth, you can recommend things to me, you can talk with other listeners and, you know, and give recommendations and all that stuff. I know some people prefer Facebook for that sort of stuff but honestly a lot of the changes that they have put into place the last few months has really hindered the discussion groups and all that, which I would also be more than happy to talk about with anybody. So yeah.

I’m also a local realtor. So if you’re looking for a great home in Tampa Bay, I’d be more than happy to help you out with that. And you can reach out to me via email. My email is kyle@greatthingstb.com and yeah, I’m over here at Keller Williams. Good group of folks. If you have any questions or comments about the episode please just come on by the website, leave us a message. And again, playing us out here is Carlos Strong, “Apologize.” And I gotta say this is really one of my favorite ones that’s been submitted so far. This one really was really, really good and I’m actually looking and hoping to interview them soon. Just yeah, very good work. So anyway, I hope you enjoy.

[00:28:48]
[music]

Categories
Category Episode Great Eats Location St Pete

Episode 27 – Chief’s Creole Cafe

Episode 27 - Chief's Creole Cafe

Alexa,
play Great Things Tampa Bay

Show Notes

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

Look no further than Chief’s Creole Cafe!

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

Also, some fungus facts you might not have known!

Transcript at the bottom of the page!

Chief's Creole Cafe

Chief’s Creole Cafe!

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

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

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

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

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Fungus Facts

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

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Transcript

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

Categories
Category Episode 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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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.

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