Thursday, December 11, 2014

Christmas Updates from the Daufuskie Island Front Porch News Paper-December Events

Dear Front Porch Readers,

Please note the following:

From the Daufuskie Island Community Farm & Artisan Village:
Holiday Tour of Homes at Bloody Point to benefit DI Community Farm
Friday, December 12, 1:00 - 4:00PM. Tour starts at the Eagles Nest. Refreshments will be served there and tickets may be purchased there at the door. $60.00 per person or $100.00 for two. Houses on the tour are the Silver's, Deitch's, Simonelli's and Loftus'. Please RSVP to Pat  Beichler for a head count for the food. 678-897-0942 or email: bowwow@hargray.com
****************************
From the DI Co-Op:
The Annual DI Christmas Parade will be Saturday, December 13th at 3:00PM. Parade line up will be at the DI Community farm and the parade will end at Marshsides Mamas. Santa and Mrs Claus will be on hand for all the children. Bring your best floats because there will be cash prizes. Donations are always appreciated and will go toward the Christmas tree and decorations. Additionally, each child will receive a stocking full of goodies from Santa and desserts will be provided for everyone. Checks should be made out to Daufuskie IslandChristmas Parade and mailed to Laura Leigh Miles PO Box 10 Daufuskie island, SC 29915.
****************************
From the Daufuskie Island Elementary School:
Please join us December 17th at 6:00PM for our annual Christmas play being held at the Daufuskie Island Firehouse. Refreshments will be served afterwards.
*****************************
From DI Historical Foundation:
You are invited to shop for distinctively Low country/Daufuskie Island holiday gifts at the Daufuskie Island Historical Foundation’s Billie Burn Museum. There are books and toys for children, as well as a variety of goodies for adults. The Museum is open Tuesday – Saturday, 12:30 – 3:30.  Y’all come now!

Best regards,

Paula Nickels
Editor, The Daufuskie Island Front Porch
www.daufuskieislandfrontporch.com
info@daufuskieislandfrontporch.com

Saturday, November 29, 2014

Updates from the Daufuskie Island Front Porch News

Dear Front Porch Readers,

Please note the following:

As most of you have heard, beloved islander Chris Hutton passed away last weekend. The Hutton family would like to invite everyone to a Celebration of Life to be held at Marshside Mama’s on Sunday, November 30, at 1:00PM. The Huttons have asked that you bring stories and photos of Chris to share.
Bring your own libations. Light appetizers will be provided.
****************************
A golf tournament and silent auction to benefit the Hutton family will be held on December 7th at Bloody Point Golf Club and Eagle's Nest Restaurant. All proceeds will go directly to the Hutton family. If you are interested in playing in the tournament please call the Pro-Shop 843-341-5566. If you are interested in donating items for the auctions, please contact Haley Casey via facebook, or email her at haleybcasey@gmail.com
*****************************
Those who would like their gift to be tax deductible, the Daufuskie Island Community Foundation is a 501-c-3 organization that is also available as a giving option. You can make checks out to Daufuskie Island Community Foundation, write "Hutton" in the memo section, and give the checks to either Aaron Crosby or Milton Deitch, or mail them to the Daufuskie Island Community Foundation c/o Aaron Crosby, PO Box 71 Daufuskie Island SC 29915. You can also contact Aaron via e-mail at Aaron.crosby1@gmail.com for further information
***************************
From the Front Porch:
Join us for our 3rd annual 5K Walk/Run Benefit on Saturday, November 29th. The race will start and end at the Melrose Beach Club at 11:00AM, registration at 10:30AM. All race participants will receive a complimentary T Shirt.

Immediately following the race we will be hosting "A Taste of Daufuskie”. Come sample dishes from 9 island chefs and vote for your favorite. $15 donation to the Daufuskie Island Front Porch.
All Daufuskie restaurant venues will be participating. The DI Conservancy, Historical Foundation and Community Farm will also be represented with information and gift items available for sale. Join us for a great day of food and fun!
**************************
From the Daufuskie Island Community Farm & Artisan Village
Come join us at the Daufuskie Community Farm, 348 Haig Point Road, for the
Third Daufuskie Community Farm/Artisan Village Festival
Stop by anytime from noon until 4:PM
There will be animals, information booths, handmade on Daufuskie items for sale & artisans working on their crafts.
Sign up for artisan classes, enjoy hot dogs, chili, gumbo, salads, baked potatoes, desserts, iced tea, coffee, lemonade, sweet tea
Donations appreciated. We are a 501(c)(3).
**************************
From Bloody Point:
Holiday Hours of Operation & Revised Calendar
Beginning December 1st, The Eagle's Nest Restaurant will be closed on Tuesdays and Wednesdays through February 2015. The golf course will also be closed for play on those days, although the Pro Shop will remain open. Limited hours of operation may apply.
*************************
Holiday Get Togethers & Sales:
Those who are not braving Black Friday at the Tanger Outlet, are invited for tea and cookies and to see what I have been up to in the way of gorgeous hand-woven scarves and shawls: Friday, November 28, 11-4 PM. Sara Deitch, 94 Fuskie Lane, or call 341-5705.
**************************
The Annual DI Christmas Parade will be Saturday, December 13th at 3:00PM. Parade line up will be at the DI Community farm and parade will end at Marshsides Mamas. Santa and Mrs Claus will be on hand for all the children. Bring your best floats because their will be cash prizes .Donations are always appreciated and will go toward the Christmas tree and decorations. Additionally, each child will receive a stocking full of goodies from Santa and desserts will be provided for everyone. Checks should be made out to Daufuskie islandChristmas Parade and mailed to Laura Leigh Miles PO Box 10 Daufuskie island, SC 29915.
***************************
From DI Historica Foundation:
You are invited to shop for distinctively Lowcountry/Daufuskie Island holiday gifts at the Daufuskie Island Historical Foundation’s Billie Burn Museum. There are books and toys for children, as well as a variety of goodies for adults. The Museum is open Tuesday – Saturday, 12:30 – 3:30.  Y’all come now!

Wishing you all a very Happy Thanksgiving,

Paula Nickels
Editor, The Daufuskie Island Front Porch
info@daufuskieislandfrontporch.com
==============================================

Wednesday, October 15, 2014

Fourth Annual Daufuskie Literary Throwdown on Daufuskie Island

Fourth Annual Daufuskie Literary Throwdown and the Tenth Annual Daufuskie Fall Festival Nov 1, 2014 at Freeport Marina, Daufuskie Island. The Throwdown features a dozen of the Lowcountry’s best loved writers, meeting their fans and signing books in a beautiful and historic setting along the banks of the Cooper River. There will be live music and legendary hospitality at the Old Daufuskie Crab Company beginning at noon and ending when we can’t stand any more fun. Hosts Roger Pinckney (Reefer Moon, Right Side of the River, Blue Roots and Blow the Man Down) and Wick Scurry (Wick and Jake’s Daufuskie) will be joined by Ben Moise (Ramblings of a Lowcountry Game Warden,) Wendy Pollitzer (South,) William Rice (The Lost Woods,) Janet Garrity (Going Down the River) Gibbes McDowell (Driftwood Corey,) Diann Shaddox (The Faded Cottage) and children’s authors Randy Bazemore and Leigh Anne Hoover. Special guest Ken Carter Jr will be selling and signing a DVD of his most recent movie, Savannah. Limited overnight accommodations on site (843-785-8242) and limited free public docking. Regular ferry service from Broad Creek Marina, times to be announced (843-342-8687.)

Tuesday, October 14, 2014

Updates from the Daufuskie Island Front Porch News

Dear Front Porch Readers, Please note the following: Election Day, Tuesday, November 4, 2014 On Tuesday, November 4th, there will be several races on the ballot for local, state and federal offices. There are one Local Question and two Statewide Constitutional Amendments also on the ballot. Voting will take place between 7 AM and 7 PM at the Janie Hamilton School. You will be asked to show a photo ID and state your current address. That ID could be a SC Driver’s License, a SC DMV ID card, a SC Voter Registration card with photo, a U.S. Passport, or a Federal Military ID with a photo. Your Voter Registration card that does not have a photo is not sufficient. Any ID that you present must be current, that is, not expired. If you do not show a photo ID, you will be able to vote a paper ballot, not an electronic ballot. To see a sample ballot, go to www.scvotes.org. On the right hand side of the screen, click “Get My Sample Ballot”. Fill in the form and follow the prompts. If you will not be on Daufuskie on November 4th, you may vote in person from October 6-31 at the Beaufort County offices in Bluffton at 61B Ulmer Road between 9AM and 4PM. On Monday, November 3rd, you may vote at this same location between 9AM and 5PM. *************************** From Melrose: Melrose Beach Club Restaurant fall menu is out! Come try some great new additions from Chef Larry! Melrose Beach Club Restaurant will be closed Friday October 10th for a private party. See you Saturday for College Football and Sunday for NFL football. Great food and drink specials! Halloween Village sign ups have begun. Contact Krista Bright at 843-540-1272 or Krista @rbcenterprises.com for details! Let’s make it a great night for the children (and adults) of the Island. ***************************** From the Daufuskie Island Elementary School: We would like to invite everyone to Daufuskie Elementary School’s Annual Fall Festival. It is being held October 25, 2014 from 1PM to 3PM. Come join us for great food, fun games, a silent auction, and much more. For all those who love to bake, get your aprons out! We would love to have donations of baked goods for our Bake Sale and Cake Walk. All baked items need to be in disposable containers and delivered to the school by 11AM on Saturday, October 25th. Contact Kristina Roberts for details on baked items at 843-540-7650. **************************** From the Iron Fish Art Gallery: Island artist Chase Allen has been chosen from 3000 artists as one of 200 finalists for the 2014 Martha Stewart American Made Awards. The awards spotlight great American makers, small-business owners, and innovative entrepreneurs who are changing the way we eat, shop, work, and live. Help support the Iron Fish Art Gallery by going to the Martha Stewart web site and casting your vote. Click on the “Vote for American Made’s Audience Choice Award.” Support our Daufuskie artisan - you can vote 6 times per day until October 13. ************************** From Freeport Marina: Fourth Annual Daufuskie Literary Throwdown scheduled for Nov 1, 2014 at Freeport Marina, Daufuskie Island. The Throwdown features a dozen of the Lowcountry’s best loved writers, meeting their fans and signing books in a beautiful and historic setting along the banks of the Cooper River. There will be live music and legendary hospitality at the Old Daufuskie Crab Company beginning at noon and ending when we can’t stand any more fun. Hosts Roger Pinckney (Reefer Moon, Right Side of the River, Blue Roots and Blow the Man Down) and Wick Scurry (Wick and Jake’s Daufuskie) will be joined by Ben Moise (Ramblings of a Lowcountry Game Warden,) Wendy Pollitzer (South,) William Rice (The Lost Woods,) Janet Garrity (Going Down the River) Gibbes McDowell (Driftwood Corey,) Diann Shaddox (The Faded Cottage) and children’s authors Randy Bazemore and Leigh Anne Hoover. Special guest Ken Carter Jr will be selling and signing a DVD of his most recent movie, Savannah. Publishers and author’s agents will be in attendance, so aspiring writers are urged to bring a sample of their work. There will be limited overnight accommodations on site (843-785-8242) and limited free public docking. Regular ferry service from Broad Creek Marina, times to be announced (843-342-8687.) Visit “Daufuskie Crab Company” or “Enjoy Daufuskie” on Facebook. Inquiries: Roger Pinckney 843-842-9642 email: rpinck@hargray.com ************************** Best regards, Paula Nickels Editor, The Daufuskie Island Front Porch info@daufuskieislandfrontporch.com

Friday, October 3, 2014

Updates this week from the Daufuskie Island Front Page Newspaper

Dear Front Porch Readers, Please note the following: Dear Front Porch Readers, Please note the following: From the Daufuskie Island Farm: Fall FUNding for the Farm! Join us for oysters, brats, beer and more at the home of Sharon and Eddie Havird, 28 Martinangel Lane, Melrose. Thursday, October 9th at 6:30. All proceeds benefit the Daufuskie Community Farm and Artisan Village and are greatly appreciated. Please RSVP to Pat at bowwow@hargray.com or (678) 897-0942 by October 2, 2014. ***************************** From the Daufuskie Island Elementary School: We would like to invite everyone to Daufuskie Elementary School’s Annual Fall Festival. It is being held October 25, 2014 from 1PM to 3PM. Come join us for great food, fun games, a silent auction, and much more. For all those who love to bake, get your aprons out! We would love to have donations of baked goods for our Bake Sale and Cake Walk. All baked items need to be in disposable containers and delivered to the school by 11AM on Saturday, October 25th. Contact Kristina Roberts for details on baked items at 843-540-7650. This year, our school is participating in the Box Tops for Education™ program and Campbell’s Labels program. Clipping Box Tops and Campbell’s Labels is an easy way for you to help our school. They quickly add up to real cash. To help our school, just look for specialized labels on products, clip them, and bring them to our school. If you have any questions, please don’t hesitate to contact me at 843-842-1251. Do you shop at Harris Teeter or Publix? If so, you can help support Daufuskie Island Elementary School by using your Harris Teeter VIC card or using a Publix Partners for Education card. For Harris Teeter all you have to do is link up your VIC card to our "Together in Education" program. For those of you who wish to link up your card stop by the customer service desk at Harris Teeter and tell them you would like to be linked to Daufuskie Elementary’ s Together in Education account. Our information: Daufuskie Island Elementary School #3979. For Publix Partners use your Publix Partners card each time you check out. If you do not have a Publix Partners for Education card for Daufuskie Elementary, they will be given out at the Fall Festival being held October 25th. Neither of these programs interfere with your savings or cost you any money. The school receives a percentage of the money from your purchases, which helps us fund great programs at Daufuskie Elementary! ************************* From Melrose Resort: Join is Friday night for our low country boil and oyster roast! Live music!! Ladies, please join us Tuesday, September 30 for afternoon tea! 3:30-5:00 at the beach club! Sign ups have begun! Please help us create Halloween Village! Sign up today for your complimentary 10 x 10 tent on the beach club lawn to decorate for trick or treating! Lots of fun & games for all ages, a DJ playing great Halloween music, food and drinks, a costume parade, and prizes, prizes, prizes! Best tent wins a $50 gift certificate to the beach club restaurant, and many more! The evening ends with s’mores at the fire pit! Contact Krista at 843-540-1272 or email krista@rbcenterprises.com Let's make this Daufuskie's best Halloween ever for kids and adults!!! *************************** From the Iron Fish Art Gallery: Island artist Chase Allen has been chosen from 3000 artists as one of 200 finalists for the 2014 Martha Stewart American Made Awards. The awards spotlight great American makers, small-business owners, and innovative entrepreneurs who are changing the way we eat, shop, work, and live. Help support the Iron Fish Art Gallery by going to the Martha Stewart web site and casting your vote. Click on the “Vote for American Made’s Audience Choice Award.” Support our Daufuskie artisan - you can vote 6 times per day until October 13. **************************** Best regards, Paula Nickels Editor, The Daufuskie Island Front Porch info@daufuskieislandfrontporch.com

Thursday, September 25, 2014

Updates for Daufuskie Island from The Front Page News

Dear Front Porch Readers, Please note the following: From the Daufuskie Island Farm: Fall FUNding for the Farm! Join us for oysters, brats, beer and more at the home of Sharon and Eddie Havird, 28 Martinangel Lane, Melrose. Thursday, October 9th at 6:30. All proceeds benefit the Daufuskie Community Farm and Artisan Village and are greatly appreciated. Please RSVP to Pat at bowwow@hargray.com or (678) 897-0942 by October 2, 2014. ***************************** From the Daufuskie Island Elementary School: We would like to invite everyone to Daufuskie Elementary School’s Annual Fall Festival. It is being held October 25, 2014 from 1PM to 3PM. Come join us for great food, fun games, a silent auction, and much more. For all those who love to bake, get your aprons out! We would love to have donations of baked goods for our Bake Sale and Cake Walk. All baked items need to be in disposable containers and delivered to the school by 11AM on Saturday, October 25th. Contact Kristina Roberts for details on baked items at 843-540-7650. This year, our school is participating in the Box Tops for Education™ program and Campbell’s Labels program. Clipping Box Tops and Campbell’s Labels is an easy way for you to help our school. They quickly add up to real cash. To help our school, just look for specialized labels on products, clip them, and bring them to our school. If you have any questions, please don’t hesitate to contact me at 843-842-1251. Do you shop at Harris Teeter or Publix? If so, you can help support Daufuskie Island Elementary School by using your Harris Teeter VIC card or using a Publix Partners for Education card. For Harris Teeter all you have to do is link up your VIC card to our "Together in Education" program. For those of you who wish to link up your card stop by the customer service desk at Harris Teeter and tell them you would like to be linked to Daufuskie Elementary’s Together in Education account. Our information: Daufuskie Island Elementary School #3979. For Publix Partners use your Publix Partners card each time you check out. If you do not have a Publix Partners for Education card for Daufuskie Elementary, they will be given out at the Fall Festival being held October 25th. Neither of these programs interfere with your savings or cost you any money. The school receives a percentage of the money from your purchases, which helps us fund great programs at Daufuskie Elementary! ************************** From Melrose Resort: Join is Friday night for our low country boil and oyster roast! Live music!! Ladies, please join us Tuesday, September 30 for afternoon tea! 3:30-5:00 at the beach club! Sign ups have begun! Please help us create Halloween Village! Sign up today for your complimentary 10 x 10 tent on the beach club lawn to decorate for trick or treating! Lots of fun & games for all ages, a DJ playing great Halloween music, food and drinks, a costume parade, and prizes, prizes, prizes! Best tent wins a $50 gift certificate to the beach club restaurant, and many more! The evening ends with s’mores at the fire pit! Contact Krista at 843-540-1272 or email krista@rbcenterprises.com Let's make this Daufuskie's best Halloween ever for kids and adults!!! *************************** From the Iron Fish Art Gallery: Island artist Chase Allen has been chosen from 3000 artists as one of 200 finalists for the 2014 Martha Stewart American Made Awards. The awards spotlight great American makers, small-business owners, and innovative entrepreneurs who are changing the way we eat, shop, work, and live. Help support the Iron Fish Art Gallery by going to the Martha Stewart web site and casting your vote. Click on the “Vote for American Made’s Audience Choice Award.” Support our Daufuskie artisan - you can vote 6 times per day until October 13. **************************** From Bloody Point: Please note that the Eagle's Nest Restaurant will be closed beginning September 22nd for renovations and will re-open October 2nd, resuming regular business hours. A limited menu will be available for take-out only, through the Pro Shop, during lunch hours from 11AM to 3PM during the renovation. Best regards, Paula Nickels Editor, The Daufuskie Island Front Porch info@daufuskieislandfrontporch.com

Tuesday, September 23, 2014

Oyster Roast and Live Music this Saturday at the Old Daufuskie Crab Co. from 3-7pm

The weather is absolutely perfect for this event. Oyster Roast this Saturday at the Old Daufuskie Crab Co. Sept 27th at 3pm-7pm (All you can eat oysters). Live music and lots of fun. Go to the Enjoy Daufuskie facebook page to let them know you are attending with reservations.

Tuesday, September 16, 2014

Let's help The Iron Fish Art Gallery win this award





VOTING STARTS TONIGHT!! In case you missed it, I am a Finalist for the Martha Stewart American Made Awards. #AmericanMadeMSL spotlights great American makers, small-business owners, and innovative entrepreneurs who are changing the way we eat, shop, work, and live. Help support the Iron Fish Art Gallery by casting your vote at this link: http://bit.ly/1lJDZ6M – thank you so much for your support! #ironfishart #americanmade #letsgetrusty

Thursday, September 11, 2014

Enjoy Daufuskie now has an online store

Great news http://www.enjoydaufuskie.com/ is your one stop shop for booking your Daufuskie Island vacation or move. They also now have an online store where you can buy souvenirs or holiday gifts. Check it out today.

How cute are these little crab towels. Buy them for the holidays or a souvenir to remind you of your trip.

Wednesday, September 10, 2014

What's Going On at Bloody Point on Daufuskie Island, SC?

I wanted to remind everyone of the October 16th-19th Fall Frolic golf tournament at Bloody Point. But while your here take a look at all the other fun events that are happening. Call them for a T-Time or Reservations.


Tuesday, September 9, 2014

Daufuskie Island Updates from the Front Porch News

Dear Front Porch Readers,

Please note the following:

From the Daufuskie Island Front Porch:

From the Daufuskie Island Conservancy:
Annual Beach Sweep scheduled for Saturday, September 20, 2014. Volunteers are requested to gather at 10:30AM at one of two locations on the Island:
Beach Road Gazebo at Bloody Point
Calibogue Beach Club at Haig Point
Refreshments will be provided by Haig Point, Bloody Point and Melrose.
For further information, please contact Eileen Pojednic aat 842-6770 or erpojednic@aol.com.  Thank you!
*****************************
From Bloody Point:
Please note that the Eagle's Nest Restaurant will be closed beginning September 22nd for renovations and will re-open October 2nd, resuming regular business hours. A limited menu will be available for take-out only, through the Pro Shop, during lunch hours from 11AM to 3PM during the renovation. 
*****************************
From Melrose on the Beach:
Join us at Melrose on the Beach Friday night for live music and an oceanfront 
low country boil/oyster roast!! 
Tuesday, September 9, join us at Melrose Beach Club for a "meet the managers" 
reception. Come say hi to our management staff, enjoy some complimentary 
appetizers and cash bar, and lets us know what you would like to see happening 
this Fall!  6-8PM
Join us Wednesday, September 10th Calloway Golf Tournament at Melrose Golf 
Course.  
From the Daufuskie Island Elementary School:
Daufuskie Island Elementary School welcomes 16 students in pre-kindergarten – fifth grade for the 2014/15 school year. Teachers, Amy Dungan and Kym Castillo continue for their second year on the island and look forward to stretching student learning to reach each individual’s potential. They’ll also continue to commute to school on bikes, adding to the 900 miles they logged last year getting to and from school. Leanne Coulter comes back to work with students in Speech and Resource, Amanda Lofton and Yvonne Wilson continue to keep the school running smoothly.
We look forward to planning our annual Fall Festival at the first Parent Teacher Organization meeting. Look for details on time and date of the Festival to come out soon.  
As always, we welcome community volunteers who will read one on one with a student, or share a special talent.  Contact Amanda Lofton at 686-1580 if you are interested in volunteering.
*****************************
From the Daufuskie Island Front Porch:

Don't forget our latest issue is now available in print on the island and online.



Best regards,

Paula Nickels
Editor, The Daufuskie Island Front Porch
www.daufuskieislandfrontporch
info@daufuskieislandfrontporch.com

Daufuskie Island Updates from the Front Porch News

Dear Front Porch Readers,

Please note the following:

From the Daufuskie Island Front Porch:

From the Daufuskie Island Conservancy:
Annual Beach Sweep scheduled for Saturday, September 20, 2014. Volunteers are requested to gather at 10:30AM at one of two locations on the Island:
Beach Road Gazebo at Bloody Point
Calibogue Beach Club at Haig Point
Refreshments will be provided by Haig Point, Bloody Point and Melrose.
For further information, please contact Eileen Pojednic aat 842-6770 or erpojednic@aol.com.  Thank you!
*****************************
From Bloody Point:
Please note that the Eagle's Nest Restaurant will be closed beginning September 22nd for renovations and will re-open October 2nd, resuming regular business hours. A limited menu will be available for take-out only, through the Pro Shop, during lunch hours from 11AM to 3PM during the renovation. 
*****************************
From Melrose on the Beach:
Join us at Melrose on the Beach Friday night for live music and an oceanfront 
low country boil/oyster roast!! 
Tuesday, September 9, join us at Melrose Beach Club for a "meet the managers" 
reception. Come say hi to our management staff, enjoy some complimentary 
appetizers and cash bar, and lets us know what you would like to see happening 
this Fall!  6-8PM
Join us Wednesday, September 10th Calloway Golf Tournament at Melrose Golf 
Course.  
From the Daufuskie Island Elementary School:
Daufuskie Island Elementary School welcomes 16 students in pre-kindergarten – fifth grade for the 2014/15 school year. Teachers, Amy Dungan and Kym Castillo continue for their second year on the island and look forward to stretching student learning to reach each individual’s potential. They’ll also continue to commute to school on bikes, adding to the 900 miles they logged last year getting to and from school. Leanne Coulter comes back to work with students in Speech and Resource, Amanda Lofton and Yvonne Wilson continue to keep the school running smoothly.
We look forward to planning our annual Fall Festival at the first Parent Teacher Organization meeting. Look for details on time and date of the Festival to come out soon.  
As always, we welcome community volunteers who will read one on one with a student, or share a special talent.  Contact Amanda Lofton at 686-1580 if you are interested in volunteering.
*****************************
From the Daufuskie Island Front Porch:

Don't forget our latest issue is now available in print on the island and online.



Best regards,

Paula Nickels
Editor, The Daufuskie Island Front Porch
www.daufuskieislandfrontporch
info@daufuskieislandfrontporch.com

Friday, August 29, 2014

Labor Day-Updates from the Daufuskie Island Front Porch News

Our Labor Day issue is online and in print around the island!

Have you been looking for a great plumber or handyman but been unable to find one? Do you have one that you would highly recommend? Lost your dog? Are you in need of a golf cart, or piece of furniture, or looking sell or buy one but would rather not deal with barge and delivery costs involved in getting it here? Looking for a reliable babysitter? Hosting a garage sale or fundraising event? We are recommending a website that is strictly for Daufuskie Island residents and property owners.
While we print stories and items of interest quarterly and send out weekly email blasts detailing time sensitive news, our readership has grown significantly and only some of our content is solely for residents. Additionally, we receive far too many classified requests to accommodate them all in the weekly blast.
We would like to encourage our readers to sign up on nextdoor.com where a Daufuskie Island account has been set up. This is an online network for sharing useful information, available only to people with verifiable addresses on Daufuskie Island. Please consider signing up and posting helpful information on this site.

We are updating and expanding our website directory. If you would like to have your business or organization listed in our directory send your information to info@daufuskieislandfrontporch.
*****************************
From Bloody Point:
Labor Day Sunday Fun-day at Bloody Point
Join us this Sunday for brunch from 11AM - 3PM, including a $6 Bloody Mary Bar, followed by a poolside cookout from 12PM - 5PM featuring poolside drink service, and $10 Frozen Drinks. Our Sunday night special will be Fried Chicken Night. Call 843-341-5522 for reservations.
**********************
From Melrose on the Beach:
Greetings From Melrose Resort.  Please join us this weekend for a great Labor Day Celebration- Friday night  - Low Country Boil/Oyster Roast with music by Positive Vibrations,  Saturday is Prime Rib Night at the Beach Club, and Sunday we celebrate Labor Day with an amazing "cook out" buffet from 5-8PM with music by The Horan Brothers.
Join us Tuesday, September 9th from 6-8PM at the Melrose Beach Club and "meet the managers", we have a lot of new faces at Melrose, and would love for you to come by, say hello, enjoy some delicious complimentary appetizers and a cash bar, and let us know what YOU would like to see in the way of special events and services. We look forward to seeing you there!
Wednesday, September 10th Melrose Golf Club is hosting a Calloway Format 18 hole golf tournament. Entry fee is $40 for Melrose Members, Firemen, Teachers and the Military, and $50 for guests. Price includes golf, prizes and lunch!  Call 843-422-6963 for details!
*********************
From the Bat House Project:
Please let us know the following:
1. If your bat houses have any occupants
2. Where the bat house is located
Email nolfilighthouse@aol.com
****************************
From island resident Melissa Davis:
I recently signed up to help take care of injured or orphaned wildlife with the DNR. If anyone knows of an injured/needy animal or non-venomous reptile on this island, please contact Melissa Davis at 706-829-3149 or email me at melissasp33@aol.com.
*****************************
From the Old Daufuskie Crab Company:
Over the Labor Day holiday in addition to the regular menu we will also be featuring an outdoor cookout with a southern style barbecue, Low Country Boil, and hand-dipped ice cream stand.
Entertainment:
Saturday August 30th; The Horan Bros.  2-8PM
Sunday August 31st: Danielle Hicks and The Eight Ohm Resistance 2-8PM
Monday September 1st: Danielle Hicks and The Eight Ohm Resistance 1-6PM
****************************
Daufuskie Farmers Market 
Saturdays 11:00AM - 1:00PM
Public dock parking lot next to Marshside Mama’s.
Vendors welcome.
****************************
Best regards,

Paula Nickels
Editor, The Daufuskie Island Front Porch
www.daufuskieislandfrontporch

Friday, August 8, 2014

The Daufuskie Island Rum Company

Everyone is super excited for the opening of the Daufuskie Island Rum Company. I can't wait until my 1st tasting. Be sure to join their facebook page to keep up with the progress of the company. Here are a few fun pictures of the new building.










Friday, August 1, 2014

Summer Drive-In Movies at Bloody Point

From Bloody Point:
Join us this Saturday, 8/2, at 8:30pm for a Drive-In Movie on the Clubhouse Lawn!  We will be showing The Lego Movie. Bring your golf cart or picnic blanket! We'll provide snacks, ice cream, and beverages for purchase. Admission is free. In the event of rain, this event will relocate to the screened-in porch on the back of the Clubhouse. Feel free to call  843-341-5505 if you have any questions.
****************************
Daufuskie Farmers Market 
Saturdays 11:00AM - 1:00PM
Public dock parking lot next to Marshside Mama’s.
Vendors welcome.

Wednesday, June 4, 2014

Architectual Digest did a great piece on John Mellancamps Beach House in Daufuskie Island.

The Gothic Revival House is in Bloody Point on Daufuskie Island, SC 29915. The back of the house is my favorite part. It opens up to the wide Atlantic Ocean with an infinity pool and two beautiful covered porches, both with fire places. An outdoor kitchen offers year round relaxed living right on the beach.



John Mellencamp's South Carolina Island Getaway

The musician's Daufuskie Island retreat, designed by Monique Gibson, is a striking complement to his all-American songs


Some 30 years ago John Mellencamp discovered Daufuskie Island, a relatively unspoiled spot in South Carolina, just across the border from Savannah, Georgia. Fascinated by the island's history (until the 1980s it had been inhabited largely by the Gullah, descendants of freed slaves) and enamored of its privacy (it can only be reached by boat), the singer-songwriter purchased several acres on the Atlantic Ocean. But the land sat empty for more than a decade. "I had every intention of building a house—I just never got around to it," says Mellencamp, who is also an accomplished painter, occasional actor, Farm Aid cofounder, and Rock and Roll Hall of Famer. (The recently released box set John Mellencamp 1978–2012 features 19 of his studio albums, including 30 Billboard Hot 100 singles.) Then one day he snapped a photograph of a church in Myrtle Beach, and the structure's shape inspired him to finally hire an architect.
The finished residence—the work of Neil Gordon, whose office is on neighboring Hilton Head Island—bears ample evidence of that church's influence, with pointed-arch windows and doors and a navelike central living hall that is ringed by a gallery reminiscent of a choir loft. Mellencamp filled the rooms with odds and ends from storage, but the home, like the property before it, "just kind of sat fallow," he says. It's not that he didn't love the area. Two of his five children grew up nearby, and he has lived part-time in the region for more than half of his life. But this particular house never felt right. Mellencamp's girlfriend, actress Meg Ryan, however, thought the place had promise, and asked last year, "Why don't you make it as beautiful as it can be?" Energized by her enthusiasm, he called New York City interior designer Monique Gibson, with whom he'd collaborated on three previous dwellings, including his Indiana home base.
The decorator headed to Daufuskie "to let the house tell me what it needed," she says. "I'd walk around on the phone and tell John, 'This kitchen makes no sense' or 'These doors are too small.'" Thus, the kitchen was redone, the doors were enlarged, and the woodwork was stained to give it depth. Gibson played off the peaked windows by incorporating their shape into the metal base of the 27-foot-long table that bisects the living hall. On one side of that space is a library rich with art books; on the other is a movie room, where classic films are a regular after-dinner feature. Mellencamp is notably partial to movies with screenplays by Tennessee Williams—he can recite whole stretches of dialogue from Baby Doll, and a prized possession is a poster of The Fugitive Kind, a gift from his friend Joanne Woodward, who starred in it.
One of Gibson's first clients was Elton John, so she is especially comfortable working with creative powerhouses. (Jon Bon Jovi is another client.) On their first project together, long ago, Mellencamp gave the designer a tight budget and a six-week deadline, all without actually meeting her: "The first time I saw him was when he rang his own doorbell," she says. Fortunately, he liked what he walked into. "John's a tough businessman, and he's very clear about how he wants to live," Gibson continues, adding that the musician's not above making his own contributions. During the improvements on the Daufuskie house, Mellencamp inquired if she had selected any art for an unusually large expanse of wall in the living hall. "When I said, 'Not yet,' he got his stencils out," the designer recalls. The result is a mural that reproduces the lyrics to his song "For the Children."
"I meant it as a blessing for the house," Mellencamp says with a grin. "Then my kids saw it and laughed at me."
Artworks by Walt Kuhn, Marvin Cherney, and Jack Levine are displa ed everywhere—from the shelves in the kitchen to the wall above the headboard in the master bedroom—the expressive social-realist portraits evoking the characters in Mellencamp's gritty songbook. (The musician is currently working on his first solo album in four years, with producer T Bone Burnett.) Mixed among that boldface art are cherished bits of ephemera, such as vintage signs from a now-demolished mental hospital; the gilt letters of one spell out the institute for wayward young women.
Gibson added warmth and texture to the airy interiors and generous porches with lots of linen and leather upholstery and furnishings that are either sculptural, comfortable, or both. But she remained acutely aware that the house serves as laboratory for one man's rampant creativity. "There is always something going on in that big brain of his," she says. "He's always making something: music, art, houses, chaos!" Mellencamp often paints in a studio located on the second floor; nearly 40 of his works were recently exhibited by the Butler Institute of American Art in Youngstown, Ohio, in a show that will travel in the fall to the Museum of Art–DeLand, Florida.
While Daufuskie is Mellencamp's refuge, he readily throws open the five guest rooms to friends and family, proof that a once forlorn and overgrown piece of real estate has become absolutely essential. "John really uses this place now," Gibson notes. "I take that as a huge compliment."


John Mellencamp

Singer-songwriter John Mellencamp at his retreat on South Carolina's Daufuskie Island; he stenciled the wall with lyrics from one of his songs. The home was designed by Neil Gordon Architect and decorated by Monique Gibson Interior Design. For details see Sources.

Dining Area

The dining table displays an assortment of glass vessels from Balsamo Antiques; RG Ironworks made the French doors.

Screened Porch

The screened porch includes furnishings by RH (the dining and cocktail tables, dining chairs, sofa, and club chair); the platter is from Balsamo Antiques.


How to get to paradise---Daufuskie Island, SC 29915

Getting to Daufuskie Island, SC. 29915
First you must make your way to Broad Creek Marina on Hilton Head Island and wait for one of the few boats that arrive each day to take you on the 45-50min cruise over to Daufuskie Island. It has no bridge from or to the mainland. You start to feel all the stress drain out of your system. The tickets run about $33 a person unless you live or have a residence on Daufuskie Island. You will also pay $5.00 a day to park and can only take two bags. Golf clubs and large bags will be subject to an additional fee. Also be sure to call and make reservations. (843) 342-8687.



Monday, April 21, 2014

Congratulations to Matt Kuchar on winning the RBC Heritage Classic

Congratulations to Matt Kuchar on winning the RBC Heritage Classic played on Hilton Head Island at Sea Pines Plantation. The wind was strong and it was difficult play for everyone. Boats filled the Calibogue sound many from Daufuskie Island watching the golf event.


Thursday, February 20, 2014

Environmental Committee works for sustainable living at Haig Point


Read more here: http://www.islandpacket.com/2014/02/19/2958697/environmental-committee-works.html#storylink=cpy



The residents of the Haig Point community on Daufuskie Island are united by their love of the area’s natural beauty. And for the past four years the community’s Environmental Committee has been working to make sure its natural beauty endures.
 “We want to be recognized for being a sustainable and green community,” said Yvonne Clemons, chairwoman of the seven-person group that has brought recycling and water conservation initiatives to the residential development where electric golf carts are the only mode of private transportation.
 “The things we are doing are good for the residents and good for the community,” she said.
 The committee also has positioned Haig Point to be a leader in building environmentally sound homes, complete with water conservation methods and native plants that will reduce the amount of water needed for lush, green lawns.
 And while South Carolina is still behind the curve when it comes to recycling, Haig Point now has a community program where recyclables are collected from each household on a regular schedule.
 “It can be hard to break old habits, but we have to rethink our ways, Clemons said. “Recycling was the committee’s first initiative and we have made great strides, and we have saved the community money in the process.”
 The committee also is seeking recognition for its Rees Jones Signature golf course as an Audubon Cooperative Sanctuary. And its members are revitalizing a nature trail in the center of the community that winds through an old Gullah cemetery.
 On an island-wide scale, the committee shares a common bond with the Daufuskie Island Conservancy that includes five Haig Point members on its board and has more than 100 members total.
Recycling is a once-a-week collection at curbside for each homeowner. In addition, there are recycling bins at other businesses around the island inclduding the restaurants, golf club, visitor center and mansion. The recyclables are then collected, loaded on a ferry and delivered to a company on Hilton Head.
 “You have to love this island first,” said Clemons, who relocated with her husband, Michael, to Haig Point from Columbus, Ohio, seven years ago. “I was in the fashion industry, so this is like a whole new second life to me. I love this place. And I want it to look this beautiful for a long time to come.”

Read more here: http://www.islandpacket.com/2014/02/19/2958697/environmental-committee-works.html#storylink=cpy

Thursday, January 23, 2014

Minor fire reported on Daufuskie ferry

rlurye@islandpacket.comJanuary 22, 2014 Updated 14 hours ago



A fan in a Daufuskie Island public ferry caught fire Wednesday afternoon as the boat was returning to Hilton Head Island, according to the Town of Hilton Head Island Fire & Rescue Division.
Fortunately, a fire chief was among the ferry's 50 passengers, Hilton Head division Battalion Chief Mick Mayers said.
Daufuskie Island Fire District Chief Eddie Boys used a fire extinguisher to put out the flames, which originated from a fan in the bathroom shortly before 4 p.m., Mayers said. The fire was out by the time the boat arrived at the Haig Point Embarkation at 4:06 p.m., Mayers said.
The fire, which spewed smoke throughout the ferry's cabin, caused about $1,000 in damage, he said.
No one was injured.

Read more here: http://www.islandpacket.com/2014/01/22/2906769/minor-fire-reported-on-daufuskie.html#storylink=cpy
 

Read more here: http://www.islandpacket.com/2014/01/22/2906769/minor-fire-reported-on-daufuskie.html#storylink=cpy

Wednesday, January 22, 2014

Hilton Head Island liquor store owner, distiller team up with Gullah women to produce moonshine



 

Read more here: http://www.islandpacket.com/2014/01/21/2904564/hilton-head-island-liquor-store.html#storylink=cpy

Hooch, White Lightning, Hillbilly Pop, Radiator Whiskey and Mule Kick are just a few nicknames for moonshine, an illegal spirit distilled in backwoods Appalachia since the 1800s.
Moonshine has Lowcountry roots as well. On Daufuskie Island, the Gullah called it "scrap iron," perhaps for the metal still it was made in or the iron will it took to drink it.
If the self-explanatory monikers are any indication, then moonshine is not something one consumes quickly or easily.

The original name, "moonshine," is said to emanate from bootleggers who illicitly distilled the unaged corn whiskey by the light of the moon, far away from the prying eyes of Prohibition revenuers.
Thanks to new South Carolina micro-distillery laws, moonshine is now legal -- if the appropriate taxes are paid -- and coming back in a big way.
In accordance with its increasing trendiness, its nicknames are getting more inviting. At Sea Pines Liquor and Market on Hilton Head Island, moonshine goes by Midnight Moon, Tillman's Baby and Black Spirit.

It used to come in one flavor: alcohol. Now, the mind-bending proofs are sweetened with the flavors of apple pie, raspberry and lemonade.
"The first perception of moonshine is that it's made in a radiator and that it'll blind you. Once people get past that and actually taste it, they realize it's as tasty as anything they've ever had," said Jeff Gould, the owner of Sea Pines Liquor and Market.
Gould is one of the handful of South Carolinians taking advantage of moonshine's new legality.
Two years ago, Gould had two varieties of moonshine available in his store. Now he has more than 100.

"We see the whole liquor store turning into moonshine," he said. "It's amazing where this has gone in just a short period of time."
As a top moonshine retailer in South Carolina, Gould is working to rapidly expand his business, even shipping cases of 'shine overseas.
Gould owns five distilleries, two of which are in South Carolina, and a spring in the North Carolina mountains, because "moonshine is meant to be made with pure mountain spring water, just like Kentucky bourbon is made with limestone water," he said. He also owns an orchard in North Carolina that provides the fruit for the apple pie moonshine, his best seller.

"What you're seeing here is a new twist to an old industry," Gould said. The twist is the abundance of flavors, the fancy, health-code-abiding distilleries and the aggressive business plan. But the base is a collection of old family recipes and an appreciation for where moonshine came from. Both Gould and his wife, Debby, are from North Carolina and familiar with moonshine.

After opening a retail store on Daufuskie Island, Gould discovered the Gullah had a similar appreciation. He approached three Gullah sisters about adding their family recipes to his moonshine.
Janice Gordon, Amelia Stevens and Cynthia Murray grew up on Daufuskie Island. Their grandmother used to sell moonshine made from a still their uncle operated. Moonshine was a part of their family and their culture. It was used in times of sickness and in health, in celebration and in sorrow.
When someone took sick on the island, they would send for Meme, or Lemon, as their grandmother was called by non-family members. Before leaving, she'd grab a couple jars of roots brewing in moonshine and a handful of dried herbs for making a Gullah hot toddy.

"I didn't go to the doctor until I was 13. Any ailments I had, my grandmother treated. It apparently worked," Gordon said.
People up in the mountains of North Carolina have moonshine in their medicine cabinets, too, Gould said. "When I came here to the Lowcountry and found out the Gullah had done the same thing, I saw the link between the two," he said.

When someone died on the island, friends and family of the deceased would have a "sittin' up," where everyone would stay awake through the night, sipping moonshine and telling stories. It was also a big part of Christmas season, for visiting relatives and sharing a drink.
But most importantly for the sisters, it was income.

"Meme had to make a living off the island and its surroundings," Gordon said. She would sell crab and shrimp to tourists from Savannah, along with her moonshine, but only if they knew to ask. She kept it in brown paper bags hidden under the table until it was requested. A half pint cost 75 cents.
Eventually, revenuers discovered their uncle's still and destroyed it, bringing the family's moonshine business to an end.
Now, Gordon, Stevens and Murray are reviving it, with Gould's (and the law's) help. They created Meme's Fuskie Gals, a homemade moonshine and wine label with products that will be made in Gould's distilleries and sold in his stores.
Their homemade wine, called Black Spirit, is already available, and they have three moonshines coming out in March.

There will be a Black Spirit 'shine, Fuskie Mysteek, which is intended to be used for medicinal purposes, and Ole Red Eye, for the reddish color moonshine took on when tree bark was added to it.
"We're committing as much time to it as possible," Stevens said. "This culture is near and dear to us, so this is a venture that we're very proud of."

Like Appalachian moonshine, the Gullah spirit didn't have much flavor, so the sisters are working off the family recipes and tweaking them.
"It's reimagining the moonshine we grew up with," Gordon said. "The moonshine business was good to our family while it lasted. Looks like the good times are here again."
Follow Erin Shaw at twitter.com/IPBG_ErinShaw.

Read more here: http://www.islandpacket.com/2014/01/21/2904564/hilton-head-island-liquor-store.html#storylink=cpy

Tuesday, January 14, 2014

Plan a golf outing to Daufuskie Island, SC.

With three professionally designed courses Haig Point, Bloody Point and Melrose on the Beach Daufuskie Island is a golfers paradise.




Thursday, January 2, 2014

Preservation two-step: Saving a home and its current ownership

Robert Behre
Posted: Thursday, December 26, 2013 9:00 a.m.



David Helmuth steps between the hodgepodge of exposed floor joists and walls studs inside the early 20th-century cottage here at 188 School Road, as he finishes removing the last of its termite-damaged wood.
Helmuth, a contractor, is working for the Palmetto Trust for Historic Preservation, a state preservation group working to save this remnant of the island's once-thriving Gullah culture.
This cottage is more historic than most because it once was home to Frances Jones, a revered community figure who taught black schoolchildren on this remote Sea Island and who also helped many of their illiterate parents.

But the most significant aspect of this ongoing restoration is not Jones' story, nor the uniqueness of the structure itself.
Instead, it's the innovative deal that the Palmetto Trust struck that not only aims to restore the home but also to preserve its ownership by Jones' descendants, even though they currently cannot afford the repairs.

Michael Bedenbaugh, the trust's director, came up with the program to try to save a historic house while also preserving its ownership by a family whose ancestors created a thriving community here a few generations ago, when timbering and oyster factory jobs were plentiful.
"The hope is it goes beyond this house," he says, "and there will be others."
How it works

The Daufuskie Endangered Places Program was made possible through a $150,000 grant from the 1772 Foundation, a Connecticut-based nonprofit that supports preservation work across the country.
The grant is helping the trust finance the current restoration work, which is expected to be finished in June. The Palmetto Trust is leasing the house from Jones' family for 30 years and plans to rent it out to island visitors for about $150 a night.
Bedenbaugh says that income - and other donations - will help the Palmetto Trust recoup its costs over time.

"If we do it right, we might raise more money from donations" than rentals, he says. "While we do this, they (family members) can stay there any time it's not rented."
The Palmetto Trust has received support beyond the 1772 Foundation. Haig Point, a private development on the island's northern end, has helped Bedenbaugh with logistics, and many island families also have helped out.

Once the trust gets its investment back - which could happen in just a few years - it will end the lease and turn the home back to the Jones family with a protective easement. The family could keep leasing it out or just enjoy it privately.
And the trust then would hope to restore another home here on similar terms. The island's historic district still has about 16 black-built cottages from the late 19th and early 20th centuries. Bedenbaugh says the next home could be leased out as a residence or it could become a restaurant or distillery or have some other income stream.

"We see ourselves as nurturing this systematically and letting it go," he says. "I think it will work, but the mechanism will show itself going forward."
If it works, it could prove an important new strategy for preserving historic buildings owned by Lowcountry families who don't have the means to repair them but also don't want to sell the land.
Frances Jones

In some homes here, Jones' picture hangs on the wall alongside Martin Luther King Jr. and President John F. Kennedy.
She taught school for many decades, and her retirement opened a teaching slot filled by a young white Citadel graduate named Pat Conroy, who chronicled his time here in his 1972 memoir, "The Water is Wide."

Despite Jones' status as a leading figure, her home was modest. Its foundation included mostly cinder blocks stacked on the ground - and an occasional tree stump. Its wall joists show markings of plaster and lathe - a sure sign they were salvaged from an earlier building. The house's bones also show its oldest part is an 11-by- 18-foot cabin that was added to over time until it reached about 900 square feet.
Bedenbaugh says the restoration aims to keep as much of its old charm as possible while creating two bedrooms and a working kitchen and bathroom.

"We're going to keep it on the concrete blocks," he says. As he talks, he and Helmuth debate where would be the best place to put a washer and dryer. They agree only to discuss it more in a few weeks, and the work is expected to continue at least through May.
"We've got a ways to go before we get down to the lip gloss and makeup," Helmuth says.
Will it work?

Bedenbaugh knows a lot is riding on the success or failure of Jones' house.
This island, reachable only by ferry, once was inhabited mostly by blacks, descendants of slaves and those who came here to work in the oyster factory.
But in recent decades, that population has dwindled as private resorts have cropped up. The changing nature of these islands, and the gradual loss of black residents and black-owned properties, have created a political tension.

Leon Love, chair of the South Carolina African American Heritage Commission, is among those excited by the Daufuskie Endangered Places Program.

"When you say Daufuskie, people think of Hilton Head a long time ago. There's a natural suspicion that someone is trying to take African-American-owned land and turn it into a resort," he says. "What Daufuskie needs is a victory. If they take the Jones home and make it work, it could serve as an example for others."

Love says the impact could even extend beyond the island.
"There's a lot of heirs property and a lot of property people can't afford to maintain," he says. "That's why I think the method they're using on Daufuskie is so creative. You're maintaining ownership even though you're sharing it with a developer."
But Ervin Simmons of the Daufuskie Island Foundation is not so sure.
The foundation continues the tradition of the Daufuskie Day celebration that Jones first held in 1976.
"My concern is land, and the risk of blacks losing land," he says. "I've said it many, many times. We've had a lot of land stolen from the black community or manipulated or swindled or however you put it."
Simmons says while he doesn't know all the deal's details, he is concerned that there are strings that could lead to the property changing hands.

Bedenbaugh says he accepts that the only way to counter such skepticism is to make the program succeed by preserving not only historic homes but also longtime family ownership.
"We'll see if it works. It's better than sitting back and watching them fall back in and rot," he says. "There's no place left like this on the coast of South Carolina."
Reach Robert Behre at 937-5771.
 

Spring is the official start of vacation season and planning for Daufuskie Island, SC 29915

Check out this group on facebook Daufuskie Island, South Carolina They have all the lastest updates and tips and tricks for making your vac...