Antioxidants are the natural residue of unicorns, what rainbows are made of and what the Easter Bunny brought you this year. Ok, so that’s not true. But, it seems, pop culture has only provided us with a limited view of the chemistry, mechanisms and variety of antioxidants.
To understand antioxidants, we should first know oxidation. In my experience, oxidation is defined in two ways. One definition is for biologists: the process or result of oxidizing or being oxidized. The other is for chemists: any chemical reaction that involves the donation of electrons (a “redox reaction”). These definitions are like different sides of the same coin. But, the biological definition may be misleading. An oxidation reaction need not require the oxygen molecule.
Animal biochemistry is, in part, governed by redox reactions. The problem with oxidation, however, is the formation of free radicals, another term that has reached the ears of consumers without clear definition. Does the sudden awareness and simultaneous clueless-ness of gluten, a decade ago, ring any bells?
Free radicals are highly reactive, short-lived, uncharged molecules with an unpaired valence electron – essentially an extra electron that throws the molecule off-keel. Such a molecule is normally found within a physiological balance in any animal. But, according to researchers, “If free radicals overwhelm the body’s ability to regulate them, a condition known as oxidative stress ensues,” (Lobo et al., 2010). Imagine these free radicals as tiny needles or knives that stab flesh with their unpaired electron.
In fact, they are known to damage nucleic acids, proteins, carbohydrates, and lipids – so, every type of biological molecule (Lobo et al., 2010). Some researchers conjecture that because damage from free-radicals accumulates with age, oxidation causes aging. Free-radical damage is also associated with inflammatory conditions.
So, how do an antioxidants work? Well, ANTI-oxidants block the transfer of electrons in a redox reaction. This month, I leave you with this teaser. More on antioxidants to come.
Disclaimer: The content of this article is not intended to diagnose, treat, prevent, or cure disease.
V. Lobo, A. Patil, A. Phatak, N. Chandra. Free radicals, antioxidants and functional foods: Impact on human health. Pharmacognosy Review. 2010 Jul-Dec; 4(8): 118–126.
I am not a stranger to the dark
Hide away, they say
‘Cause we don’t want your broken parts
I’ve learned to be ashamed of all my scars
Run away, they say
No one’ll love you as you are
But I won’t let them break me down to dust
I know that there’s a place for us
For we are glorious
When the sharpest words wanna cut me down
I’m gonna send a flood, gonna drown them out
I am brave, I am bruised
I am who I’m meant to be, this is me
Look out ’cause here I come
And I’m marching on to the beat I drum
I’m not scared to be seen
I make no apologies, this is me
Another round of bullets hits my skin
Well, fire away ’cause today, I won’t let the shame sink in
We are bursting through the barricades
And reaching for the sun (we are warriors)
Yeah, that’s what we’ve become
Won’t let them break me down to dust
I know that there’s a place for us
For we are glorious
When the sharpest words wanna cut me down
Gonna send a flood, gonna drown them out
I am brave, I am bruised
I am who I’m meant to be, this is me
Look out ’cause here I come
And I’m marching on to the beat I drum
I’m not scared to be seen
I make no apologies, this is me
Oh-oh-oh-oh
Oh-oh-oh-oh
Oh-oh-oh-oh
Oh-oh-oh-oh
Oh-oh-oh, oh-oh-oh, oh-oh-oh, oh, oh
This is me
And I know that I deserve your love
There’s nothing I’m not worthy of
When the sharpest words wanna cut me down
I’m gonna send a flood, gonna drown them out
This is brave, this is proof
This is who I’m meant to be, this is me
Look out ’cause here I come (look out ’cause here I come)
And I’m marching on to the beat I drum (marching on, marching, marching on)
I’m not scared to be seen
I make no apologies, this is me
Do you remember a time when across the skyline of pretty much any city there was a cloud of smoke across any city skyline? A haze hovered over the city that could be seen miles away.
Have you ever gone somewhere where smog was so thick that you would cough?, You might have seen people routinely walking around with masks on to protect themselves from the air.
Often, we do not miss something until it’s gone. It is so easy to take something (or someone) for granted. You may not truly appreciate it (or them) until it they’re gone.
There isn’t much thought that goes into the daily routine of grabbing your keys and wallet before heading out the door to work every morning. But, when they’re misplaced it becomes extremely urgent to find them. Suddenly, everything in the wallet is incredibly valuable. And if you cannot find your lost item, you may only just realize what the item functioned as.
With the ever-changing climate (pardon the pun) on the political landscape, it is easy to lose sight of what we have in our proverbial wallet: clear air and clean water.
While we can argue on the short-term benefits and losses of keeping and enhancing current regulations or rolling them back (which seems to be the current course or regulation), it is safe to say that we can all agree that clean air and clean water is something we all want.
How we get there is another story, but it is our story to write. It is not only for ourselves, but for our children, their children, their children, and theirs. What we do today will impact future generations.
While we may take it for granted every time we walk outside, or drink a glass of water, there are many areas of the world that are not so fortunate. We may feel like it couldn’t happen here and that we would not have those basic necessities snatched from us, but for those of us who have gone through a hurricane, we know the effects of living without running water for extended periods of time.
Again, we often do not give turning on the faucet (or the lights) much thought until we no longer have it available to us.
Clean water and clean air are too important for us to take lightly. They are only two issues regarding sustainability: our natural resources, and how much value and priority we put on them. While they may not make the headlines, there has been a lot of priority change, policy modification, and shifts in focus in a relatively short period of time.
The National Geographic website is tracking the administration changes regarding science and internet. You can follow along as well.
While these changes are ongoing, and then some, what proactive steps are we doing to ensure that we have clean water and clean air not only for ourselves but for future generations?
We all know that feeling of having misplaced our keys and/or our wallet and how lost we feel without them. Hopefully, when it comes to our most basic needs, we have the infrastructure in place to not have to realize what it is like to lose them.
Living in a free society each one of us is a voice. We can exclaim what are our priorities and what we value, not just nationally, but within our own community. We can work together to find solutions. We are more like than we realize, and while we do have differences, we all share the same water and the same sky.
The Society of the Four Arts – Your Cultural Destination
By Angela Shaw
It was one of those picture-perfect Palm Beach days in March when the sunshine glitters on every fluttering palm frond. We parked at the back of the Four Arts Theater near Lake Trail that borders the sparkling intracoastal. With time before our show, we walked straight to the glorious botanical garden. It’s amazing that this sanctuary of flora and sculpture is available to anyone for a calming stroll.
A Metropolitan Opera production of Puccini’s La Boheme was the cultural fare for the day, and we couldn’t have been more excited. The Met has been recording their live operas and adding commentary, actor interviews and behind-the-scenes secrets, making it possible for far-away viewers to feel as if they are right there at Rockefeller Center. The high-definition technology brings the opera and its creation to vivid life. A host moderates conversations about the opera itself, its world-class performers, staging and production, creating a multi-faceted entertainment experience.
The Four Arts sculpture garden was established in 1938 for the purpose of showing local home-owners what plants thrive in South Florida. There are plantings that compliment Spanish, Chinese, and Colonial-style homes, all maintained by the Garden Club of Palm Beach. Sculptures dot the landscape.
What are the four arts that are celebrated by this organization? They are drama, art, music, and literature, which are showcased in stage productions, concerts, exhibits and lectures. Take a look at April’s schedule:
DRAMA
Additionally from the Met, the Four Arts Theatre will offer Mozart’s Cosi fan tutti on April 7th, Luisa Miller singing Verdi on April 14, and Massenet’s Cendrillon on April 28th, all showing at 1:00 pm.
Film
Weekly movies are shown in the Walter S. Gubelmann Theater. Special documentaries are featured on the first two Thursdays. The Opera House, presented April 5th at 5:30pm, tells the story of the Metropolitan Opera House. Using interviews, rare photos and film, see how its advent, destruction and re-birth shaped the culture of not only New York City, but America, as well.
ART
Currently on exhibit until Sunday, April 15th is the exquisite paper art of Isabelle de Barchgrave called Fashioning Art from Paper.
The Four Arts features world-class musicians that perform classics such as this season’s Back to Bach series. Experience the best in bluegrass from award-winning Russell Moore & IIIrd Tyme Out on April 8th at 3:00 pm. more details
LITERATURE
Participate in a book discussion on Thomas Jefferson and the Tripoli Pirates by Brian Kilmeade on April 3rd at 5:30 pm, Today Will Be Different by Maria Semple on April 11th at 1:30pm, and the Gen Z Effect: The Six Forces Shaping the Future of Business.
The Lecture Series includes a talk on New York City, the art, architecture and culture of Spain, shell arts and crafts (Robin Grubman, April 19th, 10 am), as well as a choral workshop (April 16th, 5:30 pm).
My New YorkMy Spain: A Visual Memoir of Art
And for the children, each week there are multiple story times including an end-of-the-season party on April 30 at 10:30am. more details…
Season is far from over at the Society of the Four Arts. Whether it’s Drama, Art, Music or Literature that strikes your fancy—or all four—make this unique center your cultural destination all year-round.
A few days before Valentine’s Day, I awoke to see a few nurses skittering past my bed.
I blinked. Then another nurse scurried past, going the other way.
I tried to yell, “What the hell is going on?” and it came out as “Grzmblplf?”
“He’s awake!” I heard my son shout. My son?
My son lives in Long Grove, a Chicago suburb.
“Dad?!” my daughter yelled. My daughter?
My daughter lives in north Chicago.
I looked around. More nurses. Confused, I raised myself on my elbows.
My kids, (aged 59 and 57) both in tears, hugged me simultaneously from opposite sides of the bed.
“What’s going on?” came out as, “Whangon?”
“Dad” my son said, “Dad, we’re so glad you’re still with us! You had a seizure”.
“You’ve been heavily sedated since January 26th.
Amy said through tears, “Try to talk slowly. You haven’t used your voice for weeks”.
“It’s a world record!” Joel said, “You’ve never gone more than three minutes without
talking!”
I spoke very slowly “What …day…today?”
February 12th,” Amy said.
My mind still working, I did some quick math.
Somehow, I had just lost seventeen days of my life. Seventeen days, gone!
My crankiness meter moved up a notch.
When a seizure happens, your brain misfires, and your whole body goes haywire.
To this day, no one knows what happened.
They had found me on my living room floor, unconscious, my head bleeding.
I have one of those life alerts, called “Lively,” and apparently had had the wherewithal
to press the emergency button. Everyone agrees that I remember nothing of it.
The medical team had responded in minutes, called the Fire Department, and an
ambulance then toted me off to Florida Medical Hospital. I have been in rehab, in one
place or another, ever since.
First stop was Health South, an outstanding facility, which to this day is trying to
recover from my stay.
My kids, who had already done a miraculous job of taking care of my entire life,
had seen to my entrance requirements, wheel chaired me into my room. There, a nurse
awaited me with my rehab garb, which included support hose.
“What the hell are these?’ I asked.
“Support hose. They help your blood pressure.”
“How the hell are you supposed to get them on?” I asked, struggling with the left leg.
“Same way you put on panty hose.”
“Oh. Thanks. That clears up everything.”
She helped me don both pair.
“Can I get a stripper pole?” I asked.
She giggled. “No. That wouldn’t be appropriate.”
“Why not? I could put on a show every afternoon. We could charge $25 a pop and split
the proceeds.”
When you almost die, you gradually learn of the anguish suffered by all those close to
you.
I’m sure I received more get-well cards than the Pope when he got sick.
And for weeks, all of my Bridge partners and half the bridge world in South Florida,
had been peppering my son & daughter for news of my condition.
Most noteworthy, I had awakened the inner Jewish mother of all my dear friends at my
Unitarian Universalist Congregation, River of Grass. Especially those of Gary & Karen
Gonzales.
Aware of my sophisticated tastes, Gary and Karen showed up my third day with what
they know I consider a gourmet dinner: prime cheeseburger, with fries, and a chocolate
shake from Steak & Shake.
The author, scarfing down his cheeseburger. A nearby nurse exclaimed, “When I saw him wolf down that first bite, I had to time him. He didn’t devour it, he inhaled it! Eleven seconds! I’m calling Guinness!” (Photo by Karen Gonzales)
My River of Grass friends deserve mention here.
They picked up my kids at the airport and drove them back when they had to return to
Chicago. They chauffeured them all over Ft. Lauderdale and Sunrise; they took them to
lunches & dinners; they ran errands for me; they contacted doctors and dentists and re-scheduled appointments for me; they answered phones and helped my next door neighbor sort my mail.
It was like I had hired an entire corporation to manage my life.
Nothing dramatic happened during my first week at Health South, primarily because
my legs were like spaghetti noodles.
However, I was taken aback by some of the activities Health South had planned for me,
scribbled on a chalkboard hanging on my wall.
“Could you please explain to me what ‘Therapubic Dining’ is? “ I asked my nurse.
“What what is?”
“That note up there says, ‘Therapubic Dining’.”
She blinked, looked where I pointed & tried (unsuccessfully) not to laugh. Before she
erased it, she called in a few other nurses & they made a cause celebre out of it.
“It’s supposed to say, ‘Therapeutic Dining’,” one of the other nurses explained.
“Whoever wrote that left the ‘e’ out, & the’t’ looks like a ‘b’. That’s when certain
patients get together to eat.”
I’m quite certain that incident will make it into the Health South Hall of Fame.
Many other strange, humorous & outrageous events have occurred during my
convalescence, but they will have to wait for my next column. Which will also include
some of the antics perpetrated by Amy and Joel.
My poor kids! They have been remarkable and outstanding in their support and efforts in my behalf.
Which doesn’t mean they have escaped my new elevated level of crankiness.
It’s that time of year again, it’s time to tiptoe through the tulips—ukulele is optional. While Keukenhof in the Netherlands is the motherland of all tulips with its 25-mile flower-filled road trip, tulip bicycle tours and tulip cruises, it’s not the only place to see these happy flowers. Canada, New York, and even Australia celebrate tulips with festivals. Here are four tulip festivals around the world where you can tiptoe through acres of fields blanketed with the multichromatic blooms.
Ottawa Tulip Festival Photo Courtesy of Ottawa Tourism
Canadian Tulip Festival – Ottawa, Canada
Ottawa gave refuge to the Royal Dutch family during World War II. During that time, Princess Margriet was born in the Ottawa Civic Hospital. The maternity ward was temporarily declared extraterritorial by Canada to ensure the princess would have full Dutch citizenship. The Dutch showed their gratitude to Ottawa with a gift of Dutch tulips and the legacy of the Canadian Tulip Festival was created celebrating this international friendship.
Millions of tulips blanket the city for this colorful festival and celebration of culture, history and art. Experience urban tulip art creations and sample tulip-inspired cuisine while taking in the entertainment throughout the festival’s five venues. The 2018 Canadian Tulip Festival runs May 11-21.
Dutch Dances at Holland Tulip Festival
Tulip Time Festival – Holland, Michigan
If you don’t have time to travel across the pond to the original Holland, head to Holland, Michigan. Located on the scenic shores of Lake Macatawa and Lake Michigan, Holland has a rich Dutch heritage and knows how to celebrate it. The city’s annual Tulip Time Festival showcases five million tulips.
Holland’s relationship with tulips began in 1928 when the mayor purchased 100,000 tulip bulbs from the Netherlands. The bulbs were planted in city parks and were available for Holland residents to purchase at one cent each. When the tulips bloomed the following year, the tulip festival was born.
Today the festival is much more than flowers. Nearly 1,000 locals dress in traditional costumes and perform Dutch dances. There’s also a Dutch marketplace featuring traditional Dutch food, crafts and costumes. And there are national entertainment acts—this year the Beach Boys will be performing. The 2018 festival runs from May 13-18.
Albany’s Tulip Festival Photo Courtesy of Albany Tourism
Tulip Festival – Albany, New York
Henry Hudson first claimed the area that is now Albany for the Dutch in 1609 giving the city a long Dutch heritage. On July 1, 1948, Mayor Erastus Corning II passed a city ordinance declaring the tulip as Albany’s official flower. He also sent a request to Queen Wilhelmina of the Netherlands to name a variety as Albany’s tulip. She chose the Orange Wonder—an 18-inch tall orange tulip with a scarlet hue toward its center.
Albany’s connection to the Netherlands and tulips is celebrated each spring in Washington Park with the annual Tulip Festival. It begins with a ceremonial sweeping of the streets as a nod to days when women in Holland scrubbed their stoops and streets to prepare for festivals. The sweeping is done by local high school seniors dressed in traditional Dutch costumes.
More than 140,000 tulips in 15 different varieties are showcased across the park’s 81 acres. The festival also features local artisans selling handmade crafts, a fine arts show, live entertainment and a KidZone for families. The 2018 festival will be held May 12-13.
Fields of Beauty at Tesselaar Tulip Festival Photo Courtesy of Tesselaar Festival
Tesselaar Tulip Festival – Silvan, Australia
Tulip season is autumn in Australia–which means you get to celebrate these flowers twice a year. On their wedding day in 1939, Cees and Johanna Tesselaar sailed away from their beloved Holland on one of the last ships to leave Europe before the outbreak of World War II. In their luggage was a piece of their homeland—tulip bulbs. They settled outside of Melbourne, Australia after learning it was the best place to go to grow the flowers.
The colorful fields of the exotic flowers attracted motorists who would stop and even climb the fence to admire the tulips. The flowers became so popular the Tesselaar family officially opened their farm to the public in 1954 for a month-long tulip festival. Today their grandson, Paul Tesselaar, continues the tulip growing tradition.
The festival runs from September 15th to October 14th with various themed activities including a food, wine and jazz weekend where you can eat, drink and be merry among the brilliant flowered fields. There’s also an Irish weekend with bagpipes and dancing and children’s weeks with family-focused activities.
Diabetes, is a condition that occurs when the body can not use glucose (a type of sugar) normally. Glucose is the main source of energy for the body’s cells. The levels of glucose in the blood are primarily controlled by a hormone called insulin, which is made by the pancreas.
Insulin is required for the transfer of glucose from the bloodstream to the cells. If there is not enough insulin or the body is unable to use the insulin, glucose accumulates in high levels in the blood – a condition called hyperglycemia. When the blood glucose reaches a certain level, the glucose overflows into the urine (this is called glucosuria) and draws large volumes of water with it. This is why diabetic pets often drink more water and urinate more frequently and in larger amounts.
Diabetes in dogs and cats can occur at any age. However, diabetic dogs are usually 4-14 years of age and most are diagnosed at roughly 7-10 years of age. Most diabetic cats are older than 6 years of age. Diabetes occurs in female dogs twice as often as male dogs. Certain breeds of dogs may be predisposed to diabetes.
Obesity is a significant risk factor for development of diabetes. The long-term use of medications containing corticosteroids is also a risk factor for diabetes.
Signs of diabetes in pets
• Excessive water drinking and increased urination
• Weight loss, even though there may be an increased appetite
• Decreased appetite
• Cloudy eyes (especially in dogs)
• Chronic or recurring infections (including skin infections and urinary infections)
Diabetes may be suspected based on the signs a pet is showing, but the diagnosis is confirmed by your veterinarian by finding consistent hyperglycemia and glucosuria A urine culture might be recommended to rule out a urinary tract infection.
Dogs and cats with diabetes usually require lifelong treatment with special diets, a good fitness regimen and, particularly in dogs, daily insulin injections. The key to managing diabetic pets is to keep your pet’s blood sugar near normal levels and avoid too-high or too-low levels that can be life-threatening. A treatment that works for one pet might not work as well for another pet, and patience is important as you and your pet adjust to the new diet and medications.
Management of your diabetic pet may include some or all of the following:
Dogs
• A high-fiber diet is often recommended.
• Daily exercise is strongly recommended. Consult your veterinarian about an appropriate exercise program for your pet, considering factors such as weight, overall health and age.
• Owners should consider spaying female dogs diagnosed with diabetes.
Cats
• A high-protein, low carbohydrate diet is often recommended.
• Daily exercise is strongly recommended, although it can be challenging to practice a daily fitness regimen with cats. Your veterinarian may be able to help you develop a plan.
• Feline diabetes can be reversible with insulin administration, a high protein/low-carb diet and maintenance of a healthy weight, allowing the pancreas to rest and regain the ability to manufacture adequate insulin. But diabetes will recur if cats go back to an inappropriate diet.
• Unfortunately diabetes is not curable in dogs, and the vast majority of diabetic dogs require insulin injections for life once diagnosed. However, addressing underlying causes, as well as spaying females and treating Cushing’s disease, can allow the diabetes to be more easily and successfully controlled.
At Anzer Animal Hospital we have a full in house laboratory to best diagnose and treat your pet if you discover any of the signs above. Do not hesitate to call us for more information or to schedule an appointment at 561-619-7600.
I recently watched an episode of American Experience on PBS about Rachel Carson. Carson’s “Silent Spring” was published in 1962. It was a work that set her apart and “woke” many people up to environmental impacts of spraying DDT. My “greening” started with the first Earth Day 1970 and continues today. I’m trying to pass along this ecological compassion to my children.
Growing up, I loved the idea of saving baby birds and copied bird pictures from the encyclopedia. In order to build appreciation of nature I spent a lot of mornings with the kids walking along the beach, or around ponds finding the biggest bird or the most colorful. A science or art museum provides many opportunities to drill nature into young minds. But experiencing the great outdoors in fresh air lends itself to hands-on experience.
I grew up with our family growing our own food naturally and canning it for the long winter. This was my first action towards environmental awareness. Sowing seeds of ecology with real seeds is a great way to learn about earth sciences. Grow something. Try a Dixie cup filled with dirt and sunflower seeds or sprouting potatoes in water. Learn the lessons that instant gratification of computer games can’t.
I was a member of kids’ Smokey the bears prevent forest fires team. An organization like scouting has an ecological affect. Many activities promote knowledge of the surrounding environments. It also hones betterment for the community in general. My friends tease me when I pick up trash. It’s ingrained from getting involved on town clean up day. Please people, my son says, “Stop smoking and don’t throw the ends in the street”. He gave up trying to pick up the copious amounts. Same goes for water bottles, “nips” and anything McDonald’s.
However, everyday things I do aren’t a burden. It’s so automatic and I don’t think about it. I purchase non-gmo organic soy, corn and wheat. The effects of glyco-phosphates are real. MIT released a study correlating use of herbicides to autism. Eat meat sparingly. Have more meatless Mondays or go grass-fed. Meat production takes up a lot of resources. It’s so much more difficult to retain palates once you’ve grown accustomed to it. Do the ecological thing from an early age.
I bought solar panels for my house and crank out my usage of electricity every day. The electricians who installed the panels had a real impact on my son. He’s interested in solar projects and is thinking about solar engineering as a profession.
Find your own method of saving the planet for future generations. Learn how reducing, reusing, and recycling can help you, your community, and the environment by saving money, energy, and natural resources. Nothing is wasted or taken for granted. My motto is “why buy new when used will do”. I want to be able to leave the earth better than it was given to me. My kids will need clean air, water and birds.
WELLINGTON HIGH SCHOOL WOLVERINE THEATRE COMPANY PRESENTS HAIRSPRAY
Sing along, dance in your seats and cheer on the nicest kids in town!
Thursday, April 5, Friday, April 6 and Saturday, April 7, 2018 at 7 pm
The Wolverine Theatre Company of Wellington High School is proud to present “Hairspray,” the Broadway Musical. Directed by Mark Fetterly in his second year at the high school, this upbeat musical promises to make you laugh and be moved by this story of pre-civil rights Baltimore through the eyes of a plus-sized teen named Tracy Turnblad. Her dream is to become a dancer on the Corny Collins Show, a local television show featuring attractive teens from Tracy’s school. As Tracy pursues her dream and meets new friends, there is a theme of standing up for what you believe in no matter what others think. Set in the early 60’s, this musical is about love and acceptance.
Wellington’s Fine Arts Program includes a very talented group of singers, dancers and actors. The production features Avery Higgins as Tracy, Kyle Simpkins as Link, Sanju Ebanks as Seaweed, Gianna Montella as Penny, Olivia Burton as Motormouth Maybelle, Emily Shecter as Amber, Maggy Hessler as Velma, Chris Ombres as Corny Collins, Noah Zaidspiner as Edna, Dylan Shane as Wilbur, Dani Olson as Little Inez, and Tayla Youngblood at Prudy.
Tickets are for sale online at wtcwhs.booktix.com and at the door each night. $12 for adults and $5-7 for students.
Wellington Garden Club Presents “Tropical Heat Wave”
Wellington Garden Club (WGC) in partnership with the Mall at Wellington Green announces “Tropical Heat Wave,” a National Garden Clubs(NGC) Standard Flower Show, to be presented in the Grand Court on the Lower Level of the Mall on Saturday, April 14th from 10:00 a.m. to 7:00 p.m. and on Sunday, April 15th from 10:00a.m. to 5:30p.m.
“Tropical Heat Wave “ Flower Show, which is free and open to the public, is a gift to the community from the Wellington Garden Club and features the talents of WGC members and members from other garden clubs in our area. According to Twig Morris, Flower Show Chair, “We are excited to invite Mall visitors to view exquisite floral designs, incredible horticulture, special educational exhibits, botanical arts and youth entries that tell the story of Florida’s diverse weather patterns and convey the essence of the tropical paradise in which we live.”
Horticulture exhibits include orchids,cacti,begonias, bromeliads and more. Creative designs interpreting a wide variety of weather events are sure to dazzle visitors. Who could resist the charms of hats and other wearable items made entirely of plant material as well as spectacular photos depicting the charms of nature? Other exhibits will help you understand the importance of protecting Florida’s waters and how to stormproof your landscape. Youth exhibits in design and horticulture feature third,fourth,and fifth grade students from the Greenacres Aftercare Program and children from the Boys and Girls Club of Wellington. Their exhibits demonstrate that our youth will “Plant America, Rain or Shine”.
The show is to be judged by NGC Accredited Judges and top awards will be given for Horticulture, Design, Education, Botanical Arts, and Youth Divisions. Visitors to the show can select their favorite exhibits via the People’s Choice Awards as they stroll through the show and are encouraged to cast their votes! Other attractions at the show include raffle prizes donated by the local merchants, Design tips and Horticulture advice at the Ask the Expert booth both days.
Carol Coleman,WGC President, said “ Our Club is grateful to the many sponsors whose financial support has made the “Tropical Heat Wave” Flower Show possible. We especially thank the Mall at Wellington Green for partnering with us to bring this experience to fruition. “