Tuesday, December 9, 2008

Groundbreaking Ceremony

On Dec 16, 2008, at 10 am, there will be a reception in Goodwin Hall and a groundbreaking ceremony to begin the grant project A Facelift for Blvd 7. The Beautification Committee is looking for volunteers to help with the raking that will be needed once the concrete has been removed. The persons who signed the volunteer sheet will be notified personally.

Early brochures illustrate the types of plantings that proved frustrating to maintain through the intense summer heat and during winter droughts.A micro-irrigation system will be installed to periodically irrigate the Florida-friendly plants if needed. A few volunteers will be needed for this part of the installation. New soil and mulch will fill the area. This garden will serve as a model for the community using maximum. xeriscaping techniques. It will also serve as a showcase to the entire community for arriving guests.

Sunday, December 7, 2008

Website Toolbar Introduced

Next time you visit the website www.regencycove.com, please take a moment to download the free Regency Cove community toolbar. With this fantastic accessory, you can access our site from a push of a button on your top toolbar. You will able to receive real time alerts from the manager, office staff, or board of directors, in the event of an emergency.
I put a few fun things on the toolbar as well, a radio that plays a few oldies and county channels while you are browsing, a weather button for up-to-the-minute weather broadcasts, and a message center for friendly reminders and non-emergency items.
There are many options that can also be included... a chat room for residents, a link for stockmarket updates, and several games, to name just a few. We'll have the board talk about it before I rush into anything.
This blog is not an official site , but the webpage is. Please try it out. You can always uninstall it if you don't like it. Let me know what you think.

Friday, December 5, 2008

New Water Restrictions

Water Restrictions Tightened to Conserve our Water Supplies

By Neil Combee
Governing Board Chair
Southwest Florida Water Management District

The Tampa Bay region continues to suffer from the effects of a three-year drought, moving from a "severe" to an "extreme" status. We need your help to conserve water and protect the environment.

This summer's rainy season was not enough to refill our lakes and rivers. We are just beginning our eight-month dry season, yet many water levels are where they'd normally be at the end of the dry season. This month, the Hillsborough River reservoir, the main water supply for the city of Tampa, is as low as it normally is in May. The Alafia River is so low that it is no longer able to provide water to meet public supply needs. The C.W. Bill Young Regional Reservoir has about five billion gallons left in storage, compared to a capacity of 15 billion gallons, and water supply officials predict it could be dry by late April or early May, well before the start of the annual summer rainy season in mid-June. Weather forecasters are predicting below-normal rainfall conditions this coming winter and spring.

With seven months of the dry season still ahead of us and demand for water spiking, we face many challenges. If we don't reduce the amount of water we use, increased withdrawals will result in further impacts to our lakes, wetlands, streams and estuaries. In an effort to reduce demand for water, Tampa Bay Water, the region's wholesale water supplier, requested the District increase its watering restrictions for Tampa Bay Water's member governments in Hillsborough, Pasco and Pinellas counties.

On Oct. 28, the District Governing Board increased its water shortage designation for the Tampa Bay area from severe to extreme. The additional water shortage measures include restricting hand-watering and micro-irrigation for non-lawn landscaping to before 8 a.m. or after 6 p.m.; ordering the postponement of turfgrass renovations (including sod replacement and vertical mowing); reducing the hours that aesthetic fountains and waterfalls may operate from eight hours to only four hours per day; and requiring water utilities and other local enforcement officials to increase their education and enforcement efforts, including issuing citations for a first offense rather than a warning. These additional measures apply to all areas of Hillsborough, Pasco and Pinellas counties.

The Governing Board is asking residents and business owners to do their part by following the tightened one-day-per-week watering restrictions and by conserving water whenever possible both indoors and outdoors.

We're asking you to:
Only water on your watering day and only if your lawn needs it.
Skip your watering day if the soil is already moist or within two days of a heavy rain.

The District appreciates everyone's efforts over the last two years to conserve water during the drought. However, we must be vigilant and continue working together to protect Tampa Bay's fragile water resources and natural environment over the next seven months. Let's all pitch in and do our part.

For more information and free materials about the tightened water restrictions, the drought and how you can conserve water both indoors and outdoors, I encourage you to visit the District's web site at www.WaterMatters.org/drought.

Wednesday, December 3, 2008

Grant Money Awarded


Marylou Laycock, Community Services Program Coordinator from Hillsborough County Office of Neighborhood Relations met this morning with Ron Herb and Sandy Ross to sign the Letter of Understanding, which finalizes the process of awarding the $1500 beautifucation grant to Regency Cove. This grant is made possible by the Hillsborough County Board of Commissioners, Hillsborough County Children's Board, and the Frank E. Duckwall Foundation within the Community Foundation of Tampa Bay.

The grant was written by Sandy Ross and Judy Webb last Spring, and was submitted well before the summer deadline. In October, the park was notified that we had won the full amount. The grant is called A Florida-Friendly Facelife for Boulevard Seven. It involves the use of a jack hammer to break up the cemented stone, installation of a micro-irrigation system, and purchase of dirt, mulch, and Florida friendly plantings to landscape a central eye-catching garden.

Many residents volunteered last Spring to assist in the project. They will be notified, and a kick-off meeting is planned in a few weeks, when our Christmas activities die down.

This project must be completed by August 2009, but we expect it will be finished before the snowbirds fly back home.

Joel - John Concert Tickets


Elton John and Billy Joel will perform at the St. Pete Times Forum on March 5, 2009 at 7:30 pm. Tickets officially go on sale this Saturday at 10 am, and can be purchased at the Forum box Office, at all Ticketmaster locations, and by calling Ticketmaster Express (866) 448-7849. This is for automated sales only, no live people.
Tickets will range in price from $55 to $177. Great Christmas presents!

Tuesday, December 2, 2008

A Few Helpers Needed

Volunteers are needed to string the Christmas lights around the pool area. Remember how nice it looked last year? Leave a comment below, or email hoa@regencycove.net if you'd like to help.

Christmas is Coming



Next time you walk into the clubhouse and see the decorations, thank a volunteer. Sunday afternoon, a dedicated group of volunteers wrapped the pictures hanging on the walls, and set up 3 trees and the manger. Take a minute and look at the ornaments from residents of days gone by. Better yet, add an ornament to one of the trees with YOUR name immortalized on it. Under the trees are stuffed animals with gift tags commemorating a few of our OUTSTANDING (deceased) residents.







Alice Disharoon and Sandy Ross hosted the party that decorated the hall, shopped and served the wine and cheese and fresh fruit, and cleaned up afterwards.



Please bring a signed Christmas card to post in the Information Room. We are trying to eliminate the need for people to send out many cards. The economy is tough right now. Bring your community Christmas card and tape it to the wall. Let's begin a new tradition.

Our thanks to the lively group of helpers, shown below. Missing from the photo is Ellen Nimon, who came, did her job, and left before the party started.




Volunteers: Margaret Mohar, Ruth Paruszkiewicz, Chet and Carole Hindman, Roger DesRosiers, Mary Lou Mittel, Charlene Haviland, Marvin and Earlene Randolph, Katie Johnson, Alice and Joe Disharoon, and Sandy Ross. (Your name could be here.) How could we EVER forget Karen and Chuck Paramore?! You guys are the greatest!