Lovin Life After 50: Phoenix March 2019

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March 2019

Chef to the Stars

Changing Times

Robin Murphy has cooked for Madonna and Mariah Carey

Upgraded amenities at many 55+ communities around the Valley

Spirit Search Where to find Kirsch, stout, wine and whisky

Meet Steve Fish Lovin’ Life After 50’s founder shares publication’s storied past Phoenix Edition Mailed toYour Home Monthly

Jeff Dayton recalls Campbell

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Resources to Help You Care for Mom & Dad Finding the best senior care option for Mom and Dad, knowing when it’s time – and even starting that conversation – can be really hard. Navigate this challenging time with our podcast and article series featuring Donna Taylor, COO of LifeStream Complete Senior Living and hosted by Jayme West of Arizona’s Morning News KTAR 92.3 FM.

Episode 1 - How to Start the Conversation It’s hard to talk to your Mom and Dad about senior living options. Listen to our tips on what to do and what NOT to do! 09:49

Episode 2 - Understanding Your Options Navigating the many living options can be a challenge. Learn what each offers and which is best for your Mom or Dad. 08:38

Episode 3 - Making the Decision These decisions are hard. Find the best place for your Mom or Dad - as well as help them plan financially. 10:35

Subscribe and listen to SeniorLivingChecklist.com on Apple Podcasts.

SeniorLivingChecklist.com 623-512-4567 LifeStream Complete Senior Living is a faith-based, nonprofit organization, open to all. ALTCS and Medicare Certified. © 2019 SeniorLivingChecklist.com by LifeStream Complete Senior Living. All Rights Reserved.

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“You will LOVE your life”

inside THIS ISSUE

12 Changing Times

6 15

Amazing amenities await residents of many 55-plus communities

Opinion

8 Ask Gabby Gayle 10 News Briefs

Leibo At Large

Features Downsizing 101

Tips on how to ‘rightsize’ your living situation

Wickenburg’s Premier Independent and Assisted Living Community

16

Meet Steve Fish Former publisher reflects on 40 years of Lovin’ Life

18

Age of Elegance

Ms. Senior Arizona ready to crown a new winner

26 Thank You for the Music

Entertainment

20 Saluting a Friend

ABBA Mania pays tribute to the Swedish pop act

20 Calendar of Events 24 Tinseltown Talks

Jake Potje and Susan Morrow Potje connect artists and collectors

Guitarist Jeff Dayton has a bit of Glen Campbell in each performance

Carl Reiner says keeping busy keeps you going

28 Celebration of Fine Art 30 Honoring Tom Jones

R&B/soul revue benefits cancer foundation

32 Puzzles

Travel

34 In Search of Kirsch, Stout, Wine and Whisky 42 An Oasis in the Desert 41 Long Beach

Dining

44 Chef to the Stars

The long and short of California’s seaside town

46 Taste of

Robin Murphy adds her flair to Starfire Grille

Lebanon

Publisher

Graphic Designer

Vice President

Senior Account Executives

Surprisingly Affordable Surprisingly Fun

Tonya Mildenberg

Managing Editor

Lou Lagrave, Gordon Wood

Travel Editor

Courtney Oldham

Christina Fuoco-Karasinski

Administrator

Ed Boitano

Contributors

Kristine Cannon, Fred Cicetti, Lin Sue Cooney, Miranda Cyr, Jan D’Atri, Connor Dziawura, Sherry Jackson, Gayle Lagman-Creswick, David Leibowitz, Olivia Munson, Bob Roth, Alison Stanton, Nick Thomas

Cover Photo Kimberly Carrillo

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Spring Training sausage and peppers

50 Hospice Is Hope 51 The Healthy Geezer

48 Aging Today

Michael Hiatt

47 What’s Cooking?

MVPita in Northeast Mesa is a family affair

Columns

Steve T. Strickbine

Historic Castle Hot Springs has made its grand comeback

An Ageless Attitude Since 1979

Lovin’ Life After 50 is distributed by AZ Integrated Media, a circulation service company owned by Times Media Group. The public is permitted one copy per reader. For further information regarding the circulation of this publication or others in the Times Media Group family of publications, and for subscription information, please contact AZ Integrated Media at circ@azintegratedmedia.com or 480-898-5641. For circulation services please contact Aaron Kolodny at aaron@azintegatedmedia.com.

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©2019 by EOS Publishing, LLC. Lovin’ Life After 50 is a monthly publication dedicated to informing, serving and entertaining the active adults of Arizona. It is published by EOS Publishing, LLC, an Arizona limited liability company. Subscriptions are available for $24 per year or $40 for two years. Send check or money order to Lovin’ Life After 50. Another quality product of the East Valley Tribune.

Arizona Newspapers Association

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Opinion Leibo At Large

It pays to be skeptical about outrageous claims BY DAVID LEIBOWITZ Maybe you’re shocked that the Jussie Smollett hate crime tale appears to have turned into a hoax, but I’m not. I wish I could say it’s because I’m some 21st century Sherlock Holmes. I’m not. But here’s what I am when it comes to everything I see and hear, especially in the news. Skeptical. Skepticism has been around since the old Greeks. Skeptics believe that absolute truth is tough to ascertain, so it’s best to apply a healthy sense of doubt to most stories and propositions. Having been around journalism for the past 25 years, I can say that skepticism has become increasingly helpful over time because it has helped me avoid embarrassing public mistakes and heartbreak. When I first heard that Smollett, an actor and singer who is black and gay, claimed to have been beaten by two white men who shouted racist and homophobic slurs, tied a noose around his neck, then doused him with bleach while screaming about “MAGA country,” my reaction was … skeptical. I didn’t shout, “Wow, that’s a hoax.” Rather, I thought, “Hmm, if that story is true, it’s awful. And if it’s not true, it’s equally awful. I’m going to wait for all the facts before I make up my mind.” In retrospect, that turned out to be wise, at least in contrast to Democratic presidential contenders Kamala Harris and Cory Booker – who both immediately labeled Smollett’s case a “modern-day lynching” – and director Rob Reiner, who laid the “attack” at the feet of President Trump. “Homophobia existed before Trump, but there is no question that since he has injected his hatred into the American bloodstream, we are less decent, less human, and less loving,” Reiner tweeted. My thought: When a Hollywood celebrity claims to be walking to Subway alone at 2 a.m. in downtown Chicago on the coldest night of the year, take a deep breath before hitting send on that tweet. Point being, skeptics don’t assume ev-

erything is fake. Cynics do. Cynics believe everyone is inherently awful, everyone is out to screw everyone, and everyone is a self-interested liar. I only believe that about most politicians, lawyers and car salesmen. For the rest of mankind, I believe the truth is slippery and complex, so I seek a high degree of proof before buying in to anyone’s claims. One of the great rewards of skepticism, besides avoiding looking silly? You’ll have lots of chances to say, “I told you so,” which you can then pass up to much self-acclaim. Recently, a researcher friend emailed me a front-page story from a Phoenix newspaper claiming “thousands of people may have been exposed to dangerous levels of radiation” emanating from three big buckets of uranium ore stored for almost 20 years in a museum at the Grand Canyon’s South Rim. His point: “This ‘scoop’ doesn’t quote a single scientist about the relative safety of uranium. It’s mostly premised on some email from a serial whistleblower who sounds like a nutjob.” The next day, I emailed my friend the paper’s “skin back” – journalism slang for a follow-up story that basically says “whoops” about the original story. The funniest line? “It’s just a bucket of rocks,” said a health physicist who disputed the whistleblower’s allegations. “I wouldn’t line my baby’s crib with it but …” My buddy emailed back a “laughing so hard I’m crying” emoji and one line: “Score another victory for skepticism.” A much smarter fellow than most of us, the astronomer and author Carl Sagan used to say, “Extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence.” That was true in Sagan’s time, but not so much nowadays. Today, sadly, saying, tweeting and emailing is believing. David Leibowitz has called the Valley home since 1995. Contact david@leibowitzsolo.com.

www.LovinLife.com


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Ask Gabby Gayle

That first ‘frog’ may be the right one BY GAYLE LAGMAN-CRESWICK

Q

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Dear Gabby Gayle:

I have read quite a few complaints about dating sites. I had a great experience. I thought your readers should hear it. My very first acquaintance on the dating site was a nice man who thought we should have coffee. I met him and we have been together for over a year and are planning our marriage. We are going to have a service by a chaplain, but we are not making it legal – except in the eyes of God. We are in our 80s, and feel because of our financial situations and our pre-nup, it would simplify things. Tell your readers you “don’t always have to kiss a lot of frogs before you find your prince!”

Signed, Happy Camper

A

Dear Happy:

Thank you for writing. It is good to hear dating site successes! Best wishes for a happy life.

GG

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Q

Dear Gabby Gayle:

My husband is retired now, and I still work part time. I am younger than he, and I am very active with our church and my friends. My dear husband does not want to do anything. He acts hurt when I leave him home alone, but he won’t go with me. I urge him to volunteer or get a hobby. Any ideas you or your readers have to get him going would be appreciated. He is a good husband, not a drinker. He has had a successful career. I don’t want to sit around myself!

Signed, BL

A

Dear BL:

It sounds to me like he may be depressed and need professional intervention. Depression is a mysterious malady and is serious. We think our urging and coaxing will snap them out of it, but it does not work that way. They simply cannot get out of it without help. Please get help for him. Approach this in a loving way, and I would not leave him alone for long periods of time until he gets help. Let me know how it goes. With medication and counseling, he

could greatly improve. If he will not go to the doctor, please go to the doctor for professional advice for him.

GG

Q

Dear Gabby Gayle:

I have a delicate problem. My 19-year-old granddaughter, whom I love dearly, has asked to borrow money from me but says she cannot tell me why she needs it. She also says her parents cannot know about it. She said she needs $1,000. She seems rather desperate, and I have plenty of money, but I told her I would have to think about it. Meanwhile, I am asking Gabby Gayle! Help!

Signed, ???

A

Dear ???:

You realize when you ask me for help you are getting one person’s opinion, and I can only tell you what I would do in this situation. I see several problems if it were my problem. I have given small amounts of money to grandchildren from time to time. Like gas money or something like that. I don’t believe I would give $1,000 to one without their parents’ knowledge, and I am certain the parents would want to know why she needs it. With my limited knowledge I would suspect she might want it for an abortion or some cosmetic thing, or even a gambling debt. If that were true, think of the consequences if something went wrong and you were found to be the money lender! I would try to talk to my granddaughter about the fact that there is nothing so bad that you should be afraid to tell your parents or grandparents. Nothing is so bad it cannot be fixed. I would say that I would be glad to help out with her parents’ approval. Explain the consequences of deception in your own life (if there are any...I have some). I might even say if she doesn’t tell them, I might feel obligated to tell them about the request. You might offer to go with her to tell the parents. Although she may lose trust in you, if you were to do this without her. You have to weigh the situation for yourself. Good luck.

GG

If you have questions for Gabby Gayle, please send them to “Ask Gabby Gayle” at lagmancreswick@gmail.com.

www.LovinLife.com


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News Briefs COMPILED BY CHRISTINA FUOCO-KARASINSKI

Sun City man wins Super Bowl trip Sun City resident/veteran Joseph Billingsley won a trip to the Super Bowl, thanks to Desert Financial Credit Union. His prize included two plane tickets to Atlanta, Sun City resident/veteran Joseph a hotel stay, Billingsley won a trip to the Super Bowl, thanks to Desert Financial $5,000 cash Credit Union. (Photo courtesy Desert and tickets Financial Credit Union) to the Super Bowl. He took Susan Rinaldini. The “Big Kickoff Sweepstakes” from Desert Financial Credit Union was part of a 2018 “Year of Giving,” with a goal of investing $7 million in the community and its members, and offering chances to win experiences, support education and improve the community. “Giving back to the members we serve is a core part of our business,” says Desert Financial Credit Union President and CEO Jeff Meshey. “It was a pleasure for both myself and our entire company to be able to treat Joe, a 13-year member of Desert Financial, to such a special event.”

Florence celebrating G.I. Bill of Rights’ anniversary American Legion Post 9, in conjunction with McFarland State Historic Park and the Greater Florence Chamber of Commerce, is hosting the 75th anniversary celebration of the G.I. Bill of Rights from 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. Saturday, March 30. The event honors the legislation that has helped millions of veterans since 1944, and Ernest “Mac” McFarland, Arizona statesman and one of the bill’s authors. The free event starts with a parade on North Main Street. A ceremony of celebration immediately follows at 11 a.m. at Padilla Park, 440 N. Main Street. For more information, call 520-868-4496 or 520-868-9433, email florencevisitorcenter@gmail.com or visit ewmcfarland.org.

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Simply A Cappella headed for convention Simply A Cappella, a chapter of Sweet Adelines International, will compete during Gateway to Harmony, Region 21, convention and competition on Saturday, April 6, at the Orpheum Theater in Phoenix. This women of all ages are committed to four-part a cappella harmony. The chorus and double quartet Simply Singin’ is available for performances in the Phoenix and East Valley areas. Topher Keene is the director of this vocal chorus, which entertains at churches, adult community villages and assisted living facilities. Additional voices and venues are always needed. The rehearsals are 7 p.m. Thursdays at First United Methodist Church, 15 E. First Avenue, Mesa. For more information, call 480-969-5517.

“…And the Beat Goes On,” set for Saturday, March 9. The appointment underscores the museum’s recognition of the vital role grandparents play in children’s lives. The museum has over 5,000 member families, 11.5 percent of which are grandparent memberships. Carstens is the head of Carstens Family Funds, a philanthropic organization active in Arizona, California and Colorado. The gala begins at 6 p.m. with cocktails, hors d’oeuvres, and a silent auction inside the museum. Festivities continue outside with a live auction and dinner. Entertainment will include interactive music from Frank Thompson of AZ Rhythm Connection. The evening will be emceed by auctioneer Bobby D. Ehlert of Call to Auction. Proceeds directly benefit the museum’s Every Child Program, which provides free or reduced rate museum access to families battling financial, emotional or circumstantial challenges. Tickets are $275 and available at tinyurl. com/cmopgala or by calling Tenneille Choi at 602-648-2761.

Sun City Rotary Club hosting spaghetti dinner fundraiser

Roger’s Tom Jones and the Motown Blossoms will play a benefit for Valley of the Sun United Way at the Tempe Center for the Arts, 700 W. Rio Salado Parkway, at 3 p.m. Sunday, March 17. This all-ages show also features performances by Sister Sledge’s Amber Dirks, with a special tribute to veterans by Nisha Kataria. Tickets are $29 and $40. For more information, visit rogerstomjones.com/events. Senior and veterans discounts are available by using the code “TOM” at checkout online. The TCA box office number is 480-350-2822.

The Rotary Club of Sun City Del Sol is hosting its 29th annual spaghetti dinner fundraiser from 4:30 to 7 p.m. Thursday, March 21, at Fountain of Life Lutheran Church, 15630 N. Del Webb Boulevard, Sun City. Besides the unlimited dinner with dessert, there will be a live auction and a silent auction with the ability to purchase gift baskets with various themes. Tickets are $10 for adults and $5 for children under 12. The proceeds benefit many Rotary projects. For more information, contact Carol Steficek, president of the Rotary Club of Sun City Del Sol, at 623-200-7280. The Rotary Club of Sun City-Del Sol meets 7 a.m. Thursdays at the Salvation Army Sun Cities Valley Corps, 17420 Avenue of the Arts, Surprise.

Carstens honorary grandparent chairwoman

Sun City West veteran honored

The Children’s Museum of Phoenix appointed Deborah G. Carstens as honorary grandparent chairwoman of its 2019 gala,

Military and Veterans Liaison Chuck Byers from the office of Rep. Debbie Lesko presented Ret. Col. Larry Leighton of Sun City

Roger’s Tom Jones returns to Tempe Center for the Arts

West with Arizona’s District 8 Congressional Recognition at the Corte Bella Veterans meeting. “After serving the country for over 28 years, Larry has become an active member of Arizona’s veteran community,” Lesko says. “Larry founded the Corte Bella Veterans, which has over 200 members and has helped raise over $100,000 for Arizona veterans charities and other veterans in need.”

Tropical Caribbean cruise, conference focuses on caregivers A new cruise and conference designed for caregivers and their loved ones living with early-stage Alzheimer’s disease is set to sail to the Caribbean in April. “The theme is ‘Connecting Circles of Care and Building Bridges of Hope,’ and the goal for this unique cruise and conference is that it will inspire, educate and empower caregivers and their family members on many levels,” says Lisa Marie Chirico, cruise and conference producer and founder of nursinghomeology.com, where she serves as a nursing home navigator coach. As a former caregiver for her father, who battled Alzheimer’s disease, Chirico knows the multiple challenges that families and their loved ones face, at home and in a skilled nursing environment. A panel of dementia and senior care practitioners and professionals join Chirico for this conference. The “Connecting Circles of Care and Bridging Bridges of Hope” cruise and conference also features an opportunity aboard for attendees to find support during their journey from memoirs and handbooks written by dementia caregivers offered through a new program created by AlzAuthors.com called the AlzAuthors Inspiration Library. This seven-day cruise and conference sails to the Caribbean on Holland America’s MS Oosterdam and departs from Fort Lauderdale, Florida, on April 6, with stops in Key West; Turks and Caicos; Amber Cove, Dominican Republic; and Holland America’s private island Half Moon Cay, Bahamas. Prices start at $909. All cruise reservations are required to be made by Jody McShea at DePrez Travel Bureau Inc., at 585-442-8900, ext. 208, or via email at jmcshea@depreztravel.com. www.LovinLife.com


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Features

Changing

Times

Amazing amenities await residents of many 55-plus communities

BY ALISON STANTON

Traditionally, 55-and-older communities are synonymous with bingo and golf cart parking. To say times have changed is probably the understatement of the year. These days, a number of 55-and-older communities around the state offer their residents a number of attractive and resortstyle amenities – everything from bistros and day spas to breweries and state-of-theart fitness centers. For example, the following 55-and-older communities are definitely part of the trend of providing residents an amenity-centric experience. From assisted living options to 55-and-older neighborhoods filled with single-family homes, these communities offer something for everyone – and plenty of activities and features:

Trilogy 55+ Communities Shea Homes offers four Trilogy communities that are 55 and older or all ages with 55-and-older neighborhoods. They are: Trilogy at Vistancia in Peoria; Encanterra in the San Tan Valley; Trilogy at Verde River in Rio Verde; and Wickenburg Ranch. “Today’s buyers are interested in resort clubs that feature more than a few treadmills, free weights, monthly game nights and a multi-use room,” says Hal Looney, Arizona president of Shea Homes Active

Lifestyle Communities. Today’s buyers are looking for a wellrounded approach when it comes to creating an edgy, fun lifestyle, he says. For example, all Trilogy communities feature a signature resort club, Looney says. “The club is designed to feel like an extension of your own home,” he says. Amenities at each community complement the surrounding area, Looney says, and usually feature a championship 18hole golf course, three or four restaurants – which include a signature restaurant led by an executive chef – a full bar and poolside dining, and cafés. Trilogy 55-and-older communities also include a resort pool, fitness and lap pools, a market place with gourmet and everyday grocery items plus locally-made gifts, a day spa, a culinary studio, a fitness center, outdoor sports courts with pickleball, bocce and tennis, and an event center. “We’ve also introduced culinary studios for cooking classes or private parties, wine education programs, and weekly classes and events that bring people together while educating them on art, culinary and sports, all in a spirited, joyful environment,” Looney says. For more information about Trilogy communities, call 1-855-321-5510 or visit arizonatrilogy.com.

Robson Resort Communities

The Grand Living Room at Encanterra in the San Tan Valley

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Robson has built a number of 55-andolder communities around the Valley and state, including PebbleCreek in Goodyear; SaddleBrooke and SaddleBrooke Ranch in Oracle; Robson Ranch Arizona in Eloy and Quail Creek in Green Valley.

The Club House at Encanterra and The Vault, a private wine dining experience, in the San Tan Valley (Photos special to LLAF)

While golf is definitely still a popular activity at each Robson Resort Community, Alina Hushka, senior vice president of marketing, says many other world-class amenities, activities and recreation options are available. “Amenities include resortstyle pools, state-of-the-art fitness centers, gorgeous clubWithin the Ranch House Clubhouse, the houses, softball fields, creative arts centers, Ranch House Brewery is a huge hit, Hushka walking paths, dog parks, tennis and pick- says, and the in-house craft brews and a leball complexes, ballrooms/auditoriums, pizza station have already become popular and so much more,” Hushka says. with residents and visitors. Each Robson Resort Community also In addition, Hushka says, Robson Ranch offers more than 100 clubs, organizations, Arizona has expanded its Creative Arts Cenclasses and activities, Hushka says. ter by adding approximately 5,000 square “When designing active adult communities, we put ourselves in the mindset of our customers. Our goal is to create a community that embodies the classic favorites, while still incorporating innovation in everything we do,” she says. Every few years, The Ranch House patio at Robson Resort Communities Hushka says, new amenities are built at Robson’s 55-and- feet of space, giving additional room for older communities, based on the needs a variety of clubs. The center consists of a and wants of active adults. ceramics studio, art gallery, painting studio, “For example, SaddleBrooke Ranch just sewing and craft room, and a wood shop. opened the new Ranch House Clubhouse, “Increasingly, we are seeing the 55-plus featuring a gorgeous ballroom and audi- community becoming more interested in torium, private dining room, climate-con- living an active lifestyle, nurturing their trolled wine wall, outdoor terraces, as well well-being and enjoying life to the fullest,” as a U-shaped bar with views overlooking Hushka says. Communities...continued on page 14 the lake,” she says. www.LovinLife.com


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Communities...continued from page 12

“In our 40 years of experience For more information, call 1-800-732- serving seniors at LifeStream, we 9949 or visit robson.com. have found the most important benefit to nurturing seniors’ LifeStream Complete minds, bodies and souls is to Senior Living provide environments that fosLifeStream Complete Senior Living has ter new relationships. Whether four 55-and-older communities, notes that is through daily activities or Donna Taylor, chief operating officer of day trips with a group, we have LifeStream. Three of them have indepen- found that the personal frienddent living options that include all the ships, and even some that can benefits of retirement living in a cozy, grow into something more, are maintenance-free apartment, duplex or what keep seniors feeling young, patio home. independent and active.” “These independent living communiAs Taylor explains, LifeStream’s ties are conveniently located in the north goal is to provide a comfortable and Northwest Valley and feature full-size and thriving environment that kitchens, community pools/spas, beauty promotes genuine human consalons, chapels, dining rooms and plenty nections so residents can find of social outings and activities to help resi- meaning and purpose. Every dents build new and lasting relationships.” activity and amenity they offer Residents enjoy chef-inspired fine dining at The Manor Village at Desert Ridge. As Taylor notes, many senior living com- centers around this approach. munities like LifeStream Complete Senior “We’re finding that the more mature “For example, our art classes, go shopping, or see spring wildflowers or Living are offering new amenities to try to exercise programs, video game competi- holiday lights. buyers are attracted to our secure lockappeal to younger prospective residents. tions and daily Bible studies encourage “These trips are great for building rela- and-leave living and resort-style amenities “Too often, many of these services or community and interaction. We also offer tionship with other residents.” that keep them active and engaged within activities aren’t what the seniors want; it’s planned group trips and ‘Random Trips of In addition, one of the 55-and-older com- the community,” Mann says. what their adult children want because Fun,’” she says. The Statesman Group is constructing almunities, LifeStream at Thunderbird, offers they think it will help their parents stay most $300 million in residential real estate For these enjoyable adventures, resi- all-day dining. active,” Taylor says. dents load into an air-conditioned bus to “Residents can get a late dinner or after- across the Valley. “That’s what makes The Manor Village noon snack whenever it fits in their schedule. We also know how important pets are, Life Centers so unique. We’re able to apso we welcome them at several of our inde- ply our expertise in multifamily real estate pendent communities and provide ameni- to create a state-of-the-art senior living ties such as water bowls, treats and areas to community complete with the same deplay,” Taylor says. sign standards, amenities and services that For more information, call 623-512-4567 our luxury apartments and condominiums or visit lifestreamliving.com. have.” As Mann notes, when older buyers are The Manor Village ready to make the transition into senior livat Desert Ridge ing like The Manor Village at Desert Ridge, Although it is not open yet – the target they will enter into a community that has d CCepTe completion date is in mid-2020 – The Man- the same level of amenities, activities and or Village at Desert Ridge in North Phoenix services they were previously used to, just Call for details about our Secured Memory Care Unit will feature a large number of attractive with a little more care. amenities. While resort-style amenities and chefPersonal Care & Alana Mann, president and owner of driven dining are “must-haves” for current Residents Enjoy Secured Memory Care The Statesman Group, the developer of and incoming residents, Mann says a car• Media Center with high speed internet • Private spacious home-like apartments the community, says The Manor Village ing and personable staff is still an imporaccess computers and a theater • Three meals per day plus snacks Dietary laws observed • Mini Mart at Desert Ridge will be comprised of 196 tant feature. • Housekeeping & laundry service • Campus-wide assistance using individual Pendant apartment-style, independent-living, as“At The Manor Village, we understand • Care Staff on duty 24 hours a day Call System sisted-living and memory-care suites that the importance of creating amenity and • Total Medication Management • Full Calendar of Activities On & Off Campus • Hair Care Salon aboard the Kivel Bus feature a variety of floor plans ranging in service-rich communities for our valued • Social Services Coordinators size from 446 to 1,043 square feet. residents and design our communities acFor more information or to schedule a tour, When completed, The Manor Village at cordingly with the best team members,” please call Desert Ridge will offer a wide variety of she says. amenities, Mann says, including the Apple For more information about The Manor (602) 443-8039 a Day Bistro, full-service day spa, theater, at Desert Ridge, call 480-767-7646 or visit 3040 N. 36th Street • Phoenix, AZ 85018 pool, wellness center and a fireside lounge themanorvillageusa.com. 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Downsizing 101 Tips on how to ‘rightsize’ your living situation BY MIRANDA CYR

Op Gra Sp en nd ec in ia g ls!

Downsizing has been a hot topic in Prepare, prepare, prepare media as of late, with books, articles and Interior designer and co-author of “Deshows popping up across the board. sign Your Retirement Lifestyle” Jeanette With larger homes and lifespans, seniors Knudsen says the most important aspect are finding themselves in an unforeseeable of downsizing is planning ahead. situation in which their houses have now “Sometimes people get in a big hurry, outgrown them. and they just start pitching and tossing “When people hit 50, they just get stuck,” things,” the Mesa resident says. “To downsays Debra Metzler, owner and founder of size wisely basically means to take time Effective Organizing LLC in Glendale. “By and thoughtful consideration, so prepare, the time they’re 70 or 75, they have all these prepare, prepare. In successful downsizing, things that make it very overwhelming for it’s the pre-work.” them to start downsizing, and it’s really Planning ahead can ensure downsizing hard if they’ve got people saying ‘just get isn’t overwhelming, which is easy to do in rid of it, just get rid of it.’” a large home with excess clutter. By think“Don’t guess, calculate,” Knudsen says. Apart from the financial benefits of ing about the space available in the new “Space plan your new space with your exdownsizing, large, cluttered homes pose or current home, a plan can be created to isting furniture.” safety and tripping hazards. help accomplish all the goals. Living Assisted & Memory Care But what exactly is downsizing andIndependent how Start small Knudsen also says it’s helpful toLiving plan the can older adults be expected to take 623-544-4777 on layout of the new space. She has By taking trivial material objects that drawn 623-975-0880 this seemingly impossible task? Four ex- blueprints have less emotional connection, such as to designate which furniture Off of Bell & Grand Ave in Surprise perts give their downsizing advice. will fit. The plans can also help movers set kitchen supplies, the process can start at a www.chaparralwinds.com good pace, according to Metzler. up the desired layout of each room.

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Interior designer and co-author of “Design Your PMS Retirement Lifestyle” Jeanette Knudsen, left,7260 says the most important aspect of downsizing is planning ahead.

“I might start with something like something simple like kitchen utensils,” Metzler says. “To work through that without getting overwhelmed and knowing that you’re making the right decisions, is to literally clear off a countertop, clear off a dining room table and take all of your utensils and lay them out.” Downsizing...continued on page 19

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Meet Steve Fish

During Steve Fish’s tenure as publisher of Lovin’ Life After 50, the magazine had as many as 17 editions, from Metropolitan Phoenix to Yavapai County. (Photo by

Former publisher reflects on 40 years of Lovin’ Life BY CONNOR DZIAWURA

Kimberly Carrillo)

Someone once likened a publication to Tempe office. The company acquired the a three-legged stool, with each leg being a senior-focused publication in 2009, with different component: Editorial, distribution Fish remaining on board. and advertising. “I had a great team,” Fish reflects. “When To this day that metaphor sticks with for- we made the transition, I think my newest mer Lovin’ Life After 50 publisher Steve Fish, employee had been with me 13 years.” who spent Long benearly three fore it beThe thing that I enjoyed decades with came the No. the after1-ranked free most, I think, about it was 50-marketed circulation publication. publication all of the employees and “If any one in the state, getting them involved. of those is however, like weak, then eve r y thin g I had a great team. the stool’s else it had - Steve Fish, going to fall small beginFormer publisher of Lovin’ Life After 50 over,” Fish nings. explains. Fish was As such, in raised on a his many years with the brand, Fish always ranch in West Texas. Though he wound made sure to have a good team behind up in the newspaper business, journalism him. And perhaps those memories remain wasn’t his background. But he did have the closest to him all these years later. business acumen. “The thing that I enjoyed most, I think, Fish earned his undergraduate degree about it was all of the employees and get- in agricultural economics from Texas Tech ting them involved,” Fish ponders from a University in Lubbock. After that, he purconference room at Times Media Group’s sued a graduate degree from The Univer-

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sity of Texas at Arlington and switched his focus to accounting. “When I graduated from college, I decided to make a change, so I got into accounting,” he says. “I was with Price Waterhouse for about three years, and then I went to work for Harte-Hanks Communications, which at that time was primarily a newspaper company that had recently gone public and was expanding. But from the business side, I was the internal audit manager, and then became vice president of a San Diego group of publications.” As Fish tells it, part of Harte-Hanks’ commercial work in the 1970s included the San Diego-based Senior World Publications. That brand expanded to Arizona in 1979. Fish ultimately left Harte-Hanks and bought into Senior World Publications. But when he intended to close the failing Arizona edition, he “got enthused.” “What does a person who doesn’t know what he’s doing do? He bought it from the parent company and took it over in August of 1980,” Fish adds with a laugh. “That’s when I actually became the owner of what was then Arizona Senior World. “The first issue was 12 pages and had less than $5,000 of ad revenue in it. And it was a combined August/September issue, which was the only combined issue we ever had in the 40 years.” But with hard work, Arizona Senior World grew.

At one point, Fish remembers, there were as many as 17 editions, from the Metropolitan Phoenix area to Yavapai County, Tucson and even Las Vegas, Nevada. The largest issue was about 104 pages, he estimates, and at one point he had around 12 sales representatives working for him. “We tried different things and some of them worked and some of them we backed off of,” Fish says, calling 17 zones “too much” with a laugh. Nevada Senior World, in particular, he acquired in the 1990s; Times Media Group discontinued it. But why did Fish become enthused in the first place? According to him, he saw Phoenix had a large senior population and there were changes that could be made. But while the news business had its ups, it also had its downs. “It was a tough go back then. People thought that seniors all lived in nursing homes, and they didn’t then and they certainly don’t now,” Fish says, adding that it was difficult to acquire advertisers targeting seniors then. Early on, Arizona Senior World was in Phoenix and Tucson, but circulation was pulled back. In 1984, Fish says, it reopened in Tucson and expanded Phoenix-area circulation. In fact, the Tucson edition was already making revenue by its second issue. “We just about tripled revenue in ’84, over ’83, and that was the first year that I was here on a full-time basis, because I had taken another position in San Diego to put food on the table,” he adds. There were several factors in Arizona Senior World’s turnaround, Fish says. First, there was his heavy work load, alternating between the paper here and work in San Diego. Then, he feels “people started understanding a little more about the senior market.”

San Diego company Senior World Publications expanded to Arizona in 1979. Steve Fish bought the Arizona edition in 1980. Today, it is known as Lovin’ Life After 50.

www.LovinLife.com


Various events have long been tied with the publication. Lovin’ Life After 50 has sponsored the Ms. Senior Arizona Pageant during its 30 years. This year’s pageant is Saturday, March 30, at the Valley Vista Performing Arts Center in Surprise, and rehearsals have already started. “Working with Steve Fish was just absolutely wonderful,” says Herme Sherry, executive director of the pageant, who likens Fish to a mentor. “He was always there to help. I could call him at any time. We started working with the expos, the Lovin’ Life Expos, and whatever we needed he had it there.” She adds, “Steve Fish is one of the hardest-working guys, and I can understand why Lovin’ Life lasted so long … He was much like a second father to me, as far as business.” Perhaps the magazine’s most notable contribution is its Lovin’ Life Expos. Now 31 years in, they didn’t always succeed. In fact, everything went wrong the first time, Fish says. Guests were charged for entry and parking, there were issues with the organizer, and more than 100 exhibitors signed up but very few guests attended. It was held in a barn at the Arizona State Fairgrounds, alongside a home show, which had even fewer guests, Fish recalls. Feeling obligated to give it another go, he held it the following year at the Phoenix Convention Center. Alas, it still didn’t perform up to snuff. So, they kept trying, and, well, the rest is history. Today, the expos are Arizona’s longest-running expos for the after-50 market. Now, there are five: East Valley, Mesa, Sun City, Tucson and West Valley. Set during the fall and winter months, they accommodate exhibitors in the businesses of tour and travel, retirement living, health care, finance, leisure and education. According to Fish, like the once-diverse zoning, there were at one point as many as eight expos. “One of the great things about the expos was talking to the readers of the paper and all of the positives that they had to say,” he says. “Very, very seldom do we hear anything negative as far as the publication. They liked it.” In 2004, Arizona Senior World changed its name. At first it became Lovin’ Life News, but then it changed to Lovin’ Life After 50 so the target market would be clearer. The name was inspired by the expos. Though Fish felt the negative connotation some Baby Boomers derived from the word “senior” was unnecessary, and he didn’t want www.LovinLife.com

to change the publication’s name, he ultimately feels they made the right decision. While things were “great” for much of the ’90s and early 2000s, according to Fish, he eventually sold it to Times Media Group. Initially, it was just a meeting of minds between Fish and Times Media Group publisher Steve Strickbine, who hadn’t set out to acquire Lovin’ Life After 50. “I just hit it off with him,” Strickbine says of Fish. “He’s one of those guys that I felt we had a connection because we had been through a lot of the same wars in terms of just publishing and some of the challenges of starting a publication. He understood very, very well. So, we almost had just kind of a fraternity feeling right out of the gate.” In fact, business acumen was a shared trait, with both publishers coming from accounting backgrounds. “The one thing we had in common, I think, that was odd is – and I’ve never had this since, and I may never have it again – that we were both CPAs at one time in our careers. So, we were publishers but CPAs, and that’s an odd coincidence,” Strickbine notes. “We had a lot in common in that regard, I think from just the standpoint of understanding the language of business well and being a man of high integrity. Because I think accountants go through pretty rigorous ethics training. So, we always had that kind of, I guess just ability to shake hands and agree on things, and I think that really had served us well for a long time after I bought the papers.” But with the recession hitting, Fish and Strickbine say merging Times Media Group and Lovin’ Life After 50 was a viable solution to increasing difficulties at Lovin’ Life. Strickbine calls it a “powerhouse publication” and estimates it having once hit a peak circulation of 200,000 copies every month. He observes a bright future in the after-50 market. After the acquisition, Fish remained at the company until September 2017. Still living in the Valley, Fish now does consulting and also serves as treasurer on the board for the Arizona Senior Olympics. Though he is no longer with the publication he helped build over several decades, through good times and bad, Fish looks back fondly on his time in news – and the decision to continue its legacy in a new light. “It was probably the best thing that either one of us (Fish and Strickbine) ever did as far as a business decision, when we combined efforts,” he says.

Get your copy of

Lovin’ Life After 50 today!

MARCH 2019

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Age of Elegance Ms. Senior Arizona ready to crown a new winner BY OLIVIA MUNSON Ms. Senior Arizona 2018 Cheri Seith finds it bittersweet that her year-long reign is coming to an end. However, the Surprise resident knows her experience does not end with the 2019 pageant, set for Saturday, March 30. She will continue to support and work with Ms. Senior Arizona; its sponsor, the Cameo Foundation, and its organizers, Herme and Ken Sherry. “Herme and Ken Sherry are the glue that holds the foundation together,” Seith says. “Everyone is so appreciative. It is a wonderful place to be as we age.” The Cameo Foundation provides “programs and opportunities that allow senior citizens to demonstrate and share their talents, skills, resources and experiences with people of all ages,” according to its website. In addition, proceeds from the pageant go to survivors of domestic violence. Herme Sherry says the foundation does everything it can to help shelters. Cameo

works with smaller shelters to give aid and attention toward the topic of domestic violence.

Three decades Ms. Senior Arizona is celebrating its 30th anniversary this year at the Valley Vista Performing Arts Center. According to Sherry, the pageant director and Ms. Senior Arizona 2004, the event is “not what people think of as a pageant atmosphere.” It has four categories. Contestants will be interviewed on Friday, March 29, by a panel of judges. On the pageant day, contestants will recite their philosophy of life in 35 seconds or less, model an evening gown and perform a talent of no more than 2 minutes and 45 seconds. Sherry says the women have myriad talents, ranging from dancing to a jazz routine to “Diamonds are a Girl’s Best Friend” to monologues. Other talents include a

A Surprise resident, Cheri Seith, was Ms. Senior Arizona 2018. (Photo courtesy Ms. Senior Arizona)

hula-hoop routine to “These Boots Are Made for Walkin’” as well as an American Sign Language performance. For five weeks, the 20 contestants will rehearse with the hopes of becoming Ms. Senior America. Over that short time span, the contestants bond and form friendships. Sherry says she enjoys the women’s camaraderie. Looking back on her reign, Seith says it was overwhelming, but she was excited to hold the title. “I love my age now,” she says. “It really does get better with age; it’s more of an attitude than a number.” After winning the Ms. Senior Arizona title, Seith competed in the Ms. Senior Pageant in Atlantic City, New Jersey. “I have nothing but positive praise for my experience in Atlantic City,” she says. “They really treat you like a queen.” She says she feels she gained “sisters” from around the United States through participating in the Ms. Senior America Pageant. Among Seith’s favorite moments was visiting the veterans hospital. She saw how being there and making a difference in someone’s life is so precious.

Seith says Sherry was right in saying, “You may never know who you have touched; your life will be touched in so many ways by so many people.” As a former winner, Sherry says the pageant goes beyond a crown and sash. Even if a contestant does not win, Sherry says it is a life-changing experience. “A humble queen is the best kind of queen there is,” Sherry says.

MORE INFO

What: Ms. Senior Arizona 2019 Pageant When: 6 p.m. Saturday, March 30 Where: Valley Vista Performing Arts Center, 15550 N. Parkview Place, Surprise Cost: Tickets are $15; $25 for VIP Info: msseniorarizona.com

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Downsizing... continued from page 15 Seeing the progress of emptying and organizing drawers and cabinets in a specified area can boost confidence in the tender beginning stages. “Getting started is a lot harder than finishing,” Metzler says.

Keep useful belongings Metzler’s philosophy is to look at the process as “rightsizing,” not “downsizing.” “Rightsizing is basically just envisioning the possessions and space that perfectly fit your needs today, not yesterday or what you might have in the future,” Metzler says. “It’s all about today.” Keep in mind the most-used objects, and separate belongings into things used in the past year. This will give an accurate representation of what to keep and what to toss. Metzler recommends creating a staging area that is out of sight, like a dining room, and lay out one specific project to organize at a time, such as kitchen utensils, blankets or mugs. “Walk down the line with a bin and pick out the (things) that are your go-to or that meet the types of cooking that you’re doing today, not that you might do in the future, or not that you would have done in the past,” Metzler says.

Don’t lose the vision By setting an end goal, it becomes more apparent what steps need to be taken to accomplish it. “We run all the decisions through what the future holds for them,” says professional organizer Andrea Brundage of Mesa. Keep the original goal in mind to provide a motivation to complete tasks. Setting deadlines and appointments keeps the task in mind as a priority, according to Metzler.

Why downsize? Nancy Tossel, who worked on “Design Your Retirement Lifestyle” with Knudsen, says, “Boomers have not been good savers,” and because of lengthening life expectancies, seniors are at risk of running www.LovinLife.com

out of money. “I think we’re going to be forced into a lifestyle where we’re going to have to do with less and live as economically (efficient) as we can,” Tossel says. But due to emotional attachment to belongings, the downsizing process can be painful, according to Brundage. Brundage says the key is to start now because it only gets more difficult as time passes. “We’re all going to have to downsize at some point,” Brundage says. “Start sooner rather than later. One of the things, as we age, we are very afraid of is control and not being able to make decisions for ourselves. This is a good place to make decisions, and it supports the family if you don’t have children bickering because you didn’t decide who gets what. It’s actually a gift of love to make decisions for your family.” Downsizing can lessen the burden of cleaning out a loved one’s belongings after they pass, Knudsen says. She says giving out heirlooms can not only reduce clutter, but bring joy. Brundage echoed similar sentiments. “Being able to pass things on while you’re still alive is such a great thing because you get to experience the joy of seeing the receiver receive those gifts, and you don’t have to be gone to pass things on,” Brundage says. “I had a lady tell me her granddaughter always loved her wedding ring. She said, ‘It gives me so much joy to see her with that ring on.’ I’m so glad that I gave it to her now instead of waiting to pass it on to her until I died.”

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Entertainment Saluting a Friend

Calendar of Events FRIDAY MARCH 1

Guitarist Jeff Dayton has a bit of Glen Campbell in each performance BY CHRISTINA FUOCO-KARASINSKI Guitarist Jeff Dayton has spent years backing artists like Jeff Dayton will perform around the state this month. Kenny Chesney, Toby Keith, (Photo courtesy Jeff Dayton) Gene Autry and Mac Davis. Now he’s finding time to pay tribute to his good friend, the late Glen Campbell. Whether it’s his solo show or “Salute to Glen Campbell,” there’s a bit of the country superstar in every gig. “I can’t perform without telling stories about him,” Dayton says. Dayton will play a handful of March shows in the Valley, some solo and others “Salute to Glen Campbell.” “For ‘Salute to Glen Campbell,’ I bring as many of the old guys from Glen Campbell’s band as I can,” he says. “We tell stories. We do the hits. We talk about how bum, “Sip It Slow,” which will be available the songs happen, what he was like on the at his Valley shows in March. “‘Sip It Slow’ is all original,” he says. “I’m golf course. There’s a song called ‘Long Slow Train Out of Town.’ That’s a metaphor doing some bluegrass, some Caribbean, some Latin, and some pretty straightfor him losing his memory.” Dayton has been playing guitar since he ahead country and modern stuff. Some of was 9, and he immediately formed his first the album is in Spanish. “The Caribbean stuff is fun. It’s inspired band, The Emperors. From there, he played local clubs and concerts in Minnesota, pay- by a trip I took to Turks and Caicos this ing his dues and working with musicians winter. Then there’s the bluegrass stuff. who became sidemen for Prince and Bob We have tremendous players in Nashville. I have four songs with banjo, mandolin, Dylan. He moved to the Valley, got his first Nash- dobro and fiddle.” The album took some time, he says, priville song contracts and played in a handful of bands, including the Jeff Dayton Band. marily due to a death in his family. “I lost a brother a year ago,” Dayton exHe met Campbell, and it set the stage for plains. “It was out of the blue and really his move to Nashville in 2000. In 2003, Dayton toured the world with quickly. I thought I needed to do what I wanted to do now rather than wait until Chesney. “It was really a thrill,” he says. “Kenny has I’m 80. I did a three-week trip to Hawaii. I amazing energy. The crowd was pumped. went to Turks and Caicos last month for a The energy level was so high in the room. month, and met some good people.” He’ll play songs from his album at a variIt’ll give you goosebumps before you go on stage. You go out there and they love you. ety of gigs, including The Listening Room Phoenix, a venue for the diehard music fan I respect the heck out of him.” Now he is a music producer, songwriter, who doesn’t want distractions. “It’s a cool room,” he says. “There’s nothsession guitarist, recording artist and eduing like it. It’s a great spot. It’s not a noisy cator. Dayton is preparing to release a solo al- bar. People actually listen to us.”

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MARCH 2019

Vegas Jubilee, 5:30 to 7 p.m. (buffet), 7:30 p.m. (show), Silver Star Theater, 5247 E. Brown Road, Mesa, 480-288-0300, $45. Most recently from Las Vegas, Patrick Mahoney brings his Vegas-style variety show and, with the Rhythm Cats, will provide classic tunes from the greats, such as Frank Sinatra, Dean Martin, Elvis Presley and Sammy Davis Jr. Vegas County Concert: A Tribute to Shania Twain and Tim McGraw, 7 p.m., Greenfield Village RV Resort, 111 S. Greenfield Road (enter off Main Street and Quinn Circle), Mesa, 480-832-3844, $15$20.

SATURDAY MARCH 2

Hillcrest Dance and Social Club, 7 p.m., R.H. Johnson Social Center, 19803 R.H. Johnson Boulevard, Sun City West, 605-430-5337, hillcrest.scwclubs.com, $4 members, $5 guests. Bobby Freeman and Charlene provide the music. New Image Fashion Show, 9 a.m. to 1 p.m., Greenfield Village RV Resort (enter off Main Street and Quinn Circle), Mesa, 480-832-3844, call for charge.

MORE INFO

What: Jeff Dayton shows Info: jeffdaytonmusic.com When: 7 p.m. Friday, March 1, Palm Ridge Recreation Center, 13800 W. Deer Valley Drive, Sun City West, 623-544-6000 4 and 7 p.m. Saturday, March 2, Renaissance Performing Arts Theater, PebbleCreek, 16222 Clubhouse Drive, Goodyear, robson.com Noon Sunday, March 3, Glendale Folk and Heritage Festival, 9802 N. 59th Avenue, Glendale, glendaleaz.com 7 p.m. Tuesday, March 5, Fountain Hills Presbyterian, 13001 N. Fountain Hills Boulevard, Fountain Hills, 480-837-1763 7 p.m. Thursday, March 7, The Listening Room Phoenix, 4614 N. Seventh Street, Phoenix, thelisteningroomphoenix.com 7 p.m. Friday, March 8, Canyon Vista RV Resort, 6601 E. U.S. Highway 60, Gold Canyon, 480-288-8844 2 and 6 p.m. Saturday, March 9, Gaslight Music Hall, 13005 N. Oracle Road, Suite 165, Tucson, 520-529-1000

Mark Lucas and The Wild Bunch, 11:30 a.m. (lunch), 1:30 p.m. (show), Silver Star Theater, 5247 E. Brown Road, Mesa, 480288-0300, silverstartheater.com. Grand buffet dinner followed by great music and great laughs with Mark and his Wild Bunch. Variety Show Spectacular, 5:30 p.m. (dinner), 7:30 p.m. (show), Silver Star Theater, 5247 E. Brown Road, Mesa, 480-288-0300, silverstartheater.com. Something for everyone, with music from every decade and genre. Tickets include buffet dinner and great music from rock ‘n’ roll to country, big band to Broadway, and blues to pop favorites.

SUNDAY MARCH 3

North Dakota Picnic in Arizona, 10 a.m., Red Mountain Park, 7745 E. Brown Road, Mesa, 701-222-8349, https://ndcf. net/learn/nd-picnic.html, $5. This picnic is a gathering of current and former North Dakotans who now live either permanently or temporarily in Arizona. There will be a live band, vendor booths and food trucks. Apache Junction Rock and Gem Show, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m., repeats 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. March 4, Skyline High School, 845 S. Crismon Road, Mesa, ajrockclub.com, tickets start at $1. Malt Shop Oldies 2 Dinner Show, 5:30 p.m. (grand buffet), 7:30 p.m. (show), Silver Star Theater, 5247 E. Brown Road, Mesa, 480-288-0300, silverstartheater.com, $42$45. Enjoy dinner and The Rhythm Cats performing favorite rock ‘n’ roll music from the 1950s and 1960s.

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MONDAY MARCH 4

Phoenix Suns vs. Milwaukee Bucks, 7 p.m., Talking Stick Resort Arena, 201 E. Jefferson Street, Phoenix, nba.com/suns, tickets start at $18.

TUESDAY MARCH 5

THURSDAY MARCH 7

Malt Shop Oldies 1 Dinner Show, 5:30 p.m. (buffet), 7:30 p.m. (show), Silver Star Theater, 5247 E. Brown Road, Mesa, 480-288-0300, silverstartheater.com, $42-$45. Enjoy dinner and The Rhythm Cats performing familiar rock ‘n’ roll music from the 1950s and 1960s.

Malt Shop Oldies 1 Dinner Show, 5:30 p.m. (buffet), 7:30 p.m. (show), Silver Star Theater, 5247 E. Brown Road, Mesa, 480-288-0300, silverstartheater.com, $42-$45. Enjoy dinner and The Rhythm Cats performing familiar rock ‘n’ roll music from the 1950s and 1960s.

“Mexican Oaxacan Wood Carvings” Lecture, 2 p.m., Superstition Mountain Museum, 4087 N. Apache Trail, Apache Junction, 480-9834888, superstitionmountainmuseum.org, call for charge.

Knitting Circle at the J, 1:30 p.m. Tuesdays, Valley of the Sun JCC, 12701 N. Scottsdale Road, Scottsdale, free, 480-481-7033, harrietc@vosjcc.org.

Merrymakers Ballroom Dance, 7 p.m., Las Palmas Grand, 2550 S. Ellsworth Road, Mesa, 480-654-1994, dancemm.com, $7 members, $8 nonmembers. Julie Lee and White Rose Band provides the music.

Bright Health Table Presentation, 10 a.m., Avondale Community Center, 1007 S. Third Street, Avondale, free, 623-333-2705.

FRIDAY MARCH 8

WEDNESDAY MARCH 6

Variety Show Spectacular, 5:30 p.m. (dinner), 7:30 p.m. (show), Silver Star Theater, 5247 E. Brown Road, Mesa, 480-288-0300, silverstartheater.com. Something for everyone, with music from every decade and genre. Tickets include buffet dinner and great music from rock ‘n’ roll to country, big band to Broadway, and blues to pop favorites. Blood Pressure Checks, 10 a.m., repeats March 13, Avondale Community Center, 1007 S. Third Street, Avondale, free, 623-333-2705.

Legends of Country Music Dinner Show, 5:30 to 7 p.m., Silver Star Theater, 5247 E. Brown Road, Mesa, 480-288-0300, silverstartheater. com, $42-$45. Dinner and great hits, and back stories from big-name country legends like Johnny Cash, Marty Robbins, Willie Nelson, George Jones, Conway Twitty and Patsy Cline. Mardi Gras Party, 5 to 8 p.m., Avondale Community Center, 1007 S. Third Street, Avondale, $5, 623-333-2705. Party features New Orleans-style dinner and dancing. Adults are encouraged to wear masks and party attire.

It’s Not Just Lunch, noon to 1:30 p.m., Valley of the Sun JCC, 12701 N. Scottsdale Road, Scottsdale, 480-481-7033, $5 suggested donation. In partnership with Smile on Seniors.

“Magic of Mexican Artistry,” 9 a.m. to 4 p.m., repeats March 9 and March 10, Superstition Mountain Museum, 4087 N. Apache Trail, Apache Junction, 480-983-4888, superstitionmountainmuseum.org, call for charge.

Current Events Discussion Group, 2 to 3:30 p.m., Valley of the Sun JCC, 12701 N. Scottsdale Road, Scottsdale, 480-481-7033, harrietc@vosjcc.org, free. Bill Adler leads the discussion each month on current events.

Ostrich Festival, 2 p.m. to midnight, repeats 10 a.m. to midnight March 9, and 10 a.m. to 11 p.m. March 10, Tumbleweed Park, 745 E. Germann Road, Chandler, 480-963-4571, ostrichfestival.com, tickets start at $7.

East Valley Friends and Neighbors, 9:30 to 11 a.m., repeats the first Wednesday each month, Grace United Methodist Church, 2024 E. University (at Gilbert Road), Mesa, 480-848-5146, evfanaz.org, evfanaz@gmail. com. A nonreligious and nonpartisan group, East Valley Friends and Neighbors welcomes those who wish to get better acquainted with others and to participate in social and charitable activities.

SATURDAY MARCH 9

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Domingo DeGrazia and Spanish Guitar Band Concert, 5 p.m., Superstition Mountain Museum, 4087 N. Apache Trail, Apache Junction, 480-983-4888, superstitionmountainmuseum.org, call for charge. Trilogy at Power Ranch Quilt Show and Country Store, 10 a.m. to 3 p.m., Trilogy, 4969 E. Village Parkway, Gilbert, free admission. Quilts and other handmade items will be for sale. All proceeds go toward the purchase of fabric for charity quilts. There will be a quilt raffled at 2:30; guests need not be present to win. The winner will have their choice of one of the two quilts on display. The café will be open from 10 a.m. to 1:30 p.m. The car show returns 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. Enter Village Parkway on south side of Queen Creek Road between Higley and Power roads. Variety Show Spectacular, 5:30 p.m. (dinner), 7:30 p.m. (show), Silver Star Theater, 5247 E. Brown Road, Mesa, 480-288-0300, silverstartheater.com. Something for everyone, with music from every decade and genre. Tickets include buffet dinner and great music from rock ‘n’ roll to country, big band to Broadway, and blues to pop favorites. Malt Shop Oldies 2 Dinner Show, 5:30 p.m. (grand buffet), 7:30 p.m. (show), Silver Star Theater, 5247 E. Brown Road, Mesa, 480-2880300, silverstartheater.com, $42-$45. Enjoy dinner and The Rhythm Cats performing favorite rock ‘n’ roll music from the 1950s and 1960s.

SUNDAY MARCH 10

1970s Rock ‘n’ Roll Lunch Show, 5:30 p.m. (dinner), 7:30 p.m. (show), Silver Star Theater, 5247 E. Brown Road, Mesa, 480-288-0300, silverstartheater.com, $42-$45. Grand buffet followed by a Rhythm Cats performance of Billboard chart hits from 1965 to 1979.

TUESDAY, MARCH 12

0178, slgop.org, free. The club will discuss “The Southern Border Crisis” with Border Patrol Agent Art Del Cueto. Also, Sen. J.D. Mesnard will provide his perspective on the state legislative session. Discussion with the Rabbi, 11 a.m. to noon, Valley of the Sun JCC, 12701 N. Scottsdale Road, Scottsdale, 602-492-7670, chani@sosaz. org, free. Gather with Rabbi Levi Levertov for stimulating discussion on an issue relevant to Judaism in contemporary society. Bring questions. Alzheimer’s Foundation of America’s Alzheimer’s and Caregiver Educational Conference, 9 a.m. to 1:30 p.m., The Marriott Tempe at the Buttes, 2000 W. Westcourt Way, Tempe, alzfdn.org, free. The conference is open to the public and designed to connect people with information about Alzheimer’s disease, brain health and dementia caregiving. Participants have the opportunity to interact with Alzheimer’s experts, ask questions, network and obtain a free memory screening.

WEDNESDAY, MARCH 13

Mark Lucas and The Wild Bunch, 5:30 p.m. (dinner), 7:30 p.m. (show), Silver Star Theater, 5247 E. Brown Road, Mesa, 480-288-0300, silverstartheater.com, $42-$45. Grand buffet dinner followed by great music and great laughs. Meet the Author: “The Eddie Cantor Story: A Jewish Life in Performance and Politics,” 11 a.m. to noon, Valley of the Sun JCC, 12701 N. Scottsdale Road, Scottsdale, vosjcc.org/ cantor, $5 members, $15 guests. Author David Weinstein documents theater, film and radio star Eddie Cantor’s extraordinary life, including his courageous campaign against the Nazis in the 1930s. The multimedia presentation will include rare photos, songs and film clips.

THURSDAY, MARCH 14

Hillcrest Dance and Social Club, 7 p.m., R.H. Johnson Social Center, 19803 R.H. Johnson Boulevard, Sun City West, 605-430-5337, hillcrest.scwclubs.com, $4 members, $5 guests. Michael and Manuel provide the music.

Variety Show Spectacular, 5:30 p.m. (dinner), 7:30 p.m. (show), Silver Star Theater, 5247 E. Brown Road, Mesa, 480-288-0300, silverstartheater.com, $42-$45. Something for everyone, with music from every decade and genre. Tickets include buffet dinner and great music from rock ‘n’ roll to country, big band to Broadway, and blues to pop favorites.

Myron Sommerfeld, 7 to 10 p.m., Las Palmas Grand, 2550 S. Ellsworth Road, Mesa, 480-3571148, $10.

Sun Lakes Republican Club, 6:30 p.m., Sun Lakes Country Club’s Arizona Room, 25601 S. Sun Lakes Boulevard, Sun Lakes, 480-802-

Variety Show Spectacular, 5:30 p.m. (dinner), 7:30 p.m. (show), Silver Star Theater,

Malt Shop Oldies 2 Dinner Show, 5:30 p.m. (grand buffet), 7:30 p.m. (show), Silver Star Theater, 5247 E. Brown Road, Mesa, 480-2880300, silverstartheater.com, $42-$45. Enjoy dinner and The Rhythm Cats performing favorite rock ‘n’ roll music from the 1950s and 1960s.

Calendar ...continues on page 22

MARCH 2019

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Calendar of Events continued from page 21

5247 E. Brown Road, Mesa, 480-288-0300, silverstartheater.com, $42-$45. Something for everyone, with music from every decade and genre. Tickets include buffet dinner and great music from rock ‘n’ roll to country, big band to Broadway, and blues to pop favorites. “Crazy Arizona Legends” by Bob Boze Bell, 2 p.m., Superstition Mountain Museum, 4087 N. Apache Trail, Apache Junction, 480-9834888, superstitionmountainmuseum.org, call for charge. “Front Row at Nuremberg and Miraculous Escapes from Germany,” 11 a.m. to noon, Valley of the Sun JCC, 12701 N. Scottsdale Road, Scottsdale, vosjcc.org/Nuremberg, $5 members, $15 guests. Singer, composer, pianist and actor Lori Rosolowsky shares poignant and humorous stories of her relatives’ unlikely escapes from Nazi persecution and her aunt’s role as a translator at Nuremberg. Merrymakers Ballroom Dance, 7 p.m., Las Palmas Grand, 2550 S. Ellsworth Road, Mesa, 480-654-1994, dancemm.com, $7 members, $8 nonmembers. Tuxedoe Junction provides the music.

FRIDAY, MARCH 15

Myron Sommerfeld, 7 to 10 p.m., Venture Out, 5001 E. Main Street, Mesa, 480-832-9000, $8. Cash & King, 7:30 p.m., Mesa Arts Center, 1 E. Main Street, Mesa, 480-644-6500,

mesaartscenter.com, $48-$68. Steven Kent and his band are accomplished performers, providing audiences with their rendition of Johnny Cash and Elvis Presley songs.

SATURDAY, MARCH 16

Hillcrest Dance and Social Club’s St. Patrick’s Day Theme Dance, 7 p.m., Palm Ridge Recreation Center, 13800 W. Deer Valley Drive, Sun City West, 605-430-5337, hillcrest. scwclubs.com, $4 members, $5 guests. Soul Impression provides the music. Resort Wide Patio Sale, 9 a.m. to noon, Greenfield Village RV Resort, 111 S. Greenfield Road (enter off Main Street and Quinn Circle), Mesa, 480-832-3844, free admission. Desert Safety and Survival Class, 9 a.m. to noon, Superstition Mountain Museum, 4087 N. Apache Trail, Apache Junction, 480-983-4888, superstitionmountainmuseum.org, call for charge. Country Dinner Show, 11:30 a.m. (lunch), 1:30 p.m. (show), Silver Star Theater, 5247 E. Brown Road, Mesa, 480-288-0300, silverstartheater. com, $42-$45. 1970s Rock ‘n’ Roll Lunch Show, 5:30 p.m. (buffet), 7:30 p.m. (show), Silver Star Theater, 5247 E. Brown Road, Mesa, 480-288-0300, silverstartheater.com, $42-$45. Navajo Sand Painting Workshop, 9 a.m. to 1 p.m., continues March 17, Superstition Mountain Museum, 4087 N. Apache Trail, Apache Junction, 480-983-4888, superstitionmountainmuseum.org, call for charge.

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MARCH 2019

Spring Arts and Crafts Fair, 8 a.m. to 2 p.m., R.H. Johnson Recreation Center, 19803 N. RH Johnson Boulevard, Sun City West, 623-5446135, info.suncitywest.com, free admission. This event features the work of hundreds of artisans from 20 local clubs. Anthem Gem and Mineral Show, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m., continues 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. March 17, Boulder Creek High School, 40404 N. Gavilan Peak Parkway, Anthem, 978-460-1528, dmrmc. com.

SUNDAY, MARCH 17

Malt Shop Oldies 1 Dinner Show, 5:30 p.m. (buffet), 7:30 p.m. (show), Silver Star Theater, 5247 E. Brown Road, Mesa, 480-288-0300, silverstartheater.com, $42-$45. Enjoy dinner and The Rhythm Cats performing familiar rock ‘n’ roll music from the 1950s and 1960s. Luck of the Irish Concert, 7 p.m., Greenfield Village RV Resort, 111 S. Greenfield Road (enter off Main Street and Quinn Circle), Mesa, 480832-3844, $15-$20. Roger’s Tom Jones with the Motown Blossoms, 3 p.m., Tempe Center for the Arts, 700 Rio Salado Parkway, Tempe, 480-3502822, tempecenterforthearts.com, $29 and $40.

MONDAY, MARCH 18

Phoenix Suns vs. Chicago, 7 p.m., Talking Stick Resort Arena, 201 E. Jefferson Street, Phoenix, nba.com/suns, tickets start at $18. It’s APS Los Suns Night and the first 2,500 fans will receive a Los Suns Night Light.

TUESDAY, MARCH 19

Malt Shop Oldies 2 Dinner Show, 5:30 p.m. (grand buffet), 7:30 p.m. (show), Silver Star Theater, 5247 E. Brown Road, Mesa, 480-288-0300, silverstartheater.com, $42-$45. Enjoy dinner and The Rhythm Cats performing favorite rock ‘n’ roll music from the 1950s and 1960s. Art All Around Us, 11 a.m. to noon, Valley of the Sun JCC, 12701 N. Scottsdale Road, Scottsdale, 480-481-7033, harrietc@vosjcc.org, free. Share the world of art with docents from the Phoenix Art Museum. This month, explore “Buenos Aires, Tango and Impressionism.”

WEDNESDAY, MARCH 20

Lunch and Learn at The J: Male Fitness After 65 – Myths, Facts and Solutions, 11:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m., Valley of the Sun JCC, 12701 N. Scottsdale Road, Scottsdale, free, vosjcc.org/ fit65, reservations required by March 18.

THURSDAY, MARCH 21

Mature Mavens Dinner, 5 p.m., address and cost given when making reservations, 602-3713744. Make new friends during dinner. “Rock Art” by David Morris, 2 p.m., Superstition Mountain Museum, 4087 N. Apache Trail, Apache Junction, 480-983-4888, superstitionmountainmuseum.org, call for charge. Merrymakers Ballroom Dance, 7 p.m., Las Palmas Grand, 2550 S. Ellsworth Road, Mesa, 480-654-1994, dancemm.com, $7 members, $8 nonmembers. Manuel Dorantes provides the music.

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Vegas Jubilee, 5:30 to 7 p.m. (buffet), 7:30 p.m. (show), Silver Star Theater, 5247 E. Brown Road, Mesa, 480-288-0300, $45. Most recently from Las Vegas, Patrick Mahoney brings his Vegas-style variety show and, with the Rhythm Cats, will provide classic tunes from the greats, such as Frank Sinatra, Dean Martin, Elvis Presley and Sammy Davis Jr.

SATURDAY, MARCH 23

Hillcrest Dance and Social Club, 7 p.m., R.H. Johnson Social Center, 19803 R.H. Johnson Boulevard, Sun City West, 605-430-5337, hillcrest.scwclubs.com, $4 members, $5 guests. Howard Schneider Variety Band provides the music. Dutch Oven Cooking Class, 9 a.m. to noon, Superstition Mountain Museum, 4087 N. Apache Trail, Apache Junction, 480-983-4888, superstitionmountainmuseum.org, call for charge. Gardening Class, 11 a.m. to noon, Superstition Mountain Museum, 4087 N. Apache Trail, Apache Junction, 480-983-4888, superstitionmountainmuseum.org, free. Malt Shop Oldies 2 Dinner Show, 5:30 p.m. (grand buffet), 7:30 p.m. (show), Silver Star Theater, 5247 E. Brown Road, Mesa, 480-2880300, silverstartheater.com, $42-$45. Enjoy dinner and The Rhythm Cats performing favorite rock ‘n’ roll music from the 1950s and 1960s. Sun Lakes Arts & Crafts Association’s Spring Show and Sale, 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. Oakwood Country Club, 24218 S. Oakwood Boulevard, Sun Lakes, slaca.net.

SUNDAY, MARCH 24

Super Show Finale, 5:30 p.m. (grand buffet), 7:30 p.m. (show), Silver Star Theater, 5247 E. Brown Road, Mesa, 480-288-0300, silverstartheater.com, $42-$45. End the season with a musical lineup chosen by fans. Marty Robbins Tribute, 6 to 9 p.m., Carriage Manor RV Resort, 7750 E. Broadway Road, Mesa, 913-683-3510, 315-373-3049, $12 reserved seating. Roger Wade, who formerly performed at the Mining Camp, pays tribute to Marty Robbins.

MONDAY, MARCH 25

Enjoy breakfast! It’s National Waffle Day!

TUESDAY, MARCH 26

Nutrition with Savannah, 10 a.m., Avondale Community Center, 1007 S. Third Street, Avondale, free, 623-333-2705.

WEDNESDAY, MARCH 27

Malt Shop Oldies 1 Dinner Show, 5:30 p.m. (buffet), 7:30 p.m. (show), Silver Star Theater, 5247 E. Brown Road, Mesa, 480-288-0300, silverstartheater.com, $42-$45. Enjoy dinner and The Rhythm Cats performing familiar rock ‘n’ roll music from the 1950s and 1960s. “Love, Bill: Finding My Father Through Letters from World War II,” 11 a.m. to noon, Valley of the Sun JCC, 12701 N. Scottsdale Road, Scottdale, vosjcc.org/bill, 45 members, $15 guests. Author Jan Krulick-Belin’s awardwinning memoir is a love story and war story. Join the group as she shares the journey that led her to learn about the history of the Jews in the Maghreb and France, and the man who she thought she would never get to know.

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THURSDAY, MARCH 28

Super Show Finale, 5:30 p.m. (grand buffet), 7:30 p.m. (show), Silver Star Theater, 5247 E. Brown Road, Mesa, 480-288-0300, silverstartheater.com, $42-$45. End the season with a musical lineup chosen by fans.

FIRST MONDAY OF THE MONTH

Merrymakers Ballroom Dance, 7 p.m., Las Palmas Grand, 2550 S. Ellsworth Road, Mesa, 480-654-1994, dancemm.com, $7 members, $8 nonmembers. Easy Sounds provides the music. “Arizona Reptiles and Snakes” by Richard Lapidus, 2 p.m., Superstition Mountain Museum, 4087 N. Apache Trail, Apache Junction, 480-983-4888, superstitionmountainmuseum.org, free. UnitedHealthCare Visit, 11 a.m., Avondale Community Center, 1007 S. Third Street, Avondale, free, 623-333-2705.

FRIDAY, MARCH 29

1970s Rock ‘n’ Roll Lunch Show, 5:30 p.m. (buffet), 7:30 p.m. (show), Silver Star Theater, 5247 E. Brown Road, Mesa, 480-288-0300, silverstartheater.com, $42-$45.

SATURDAY, MARCH 30

Hillcrest Dance and Social Club Dance, 7 p.m., R.H. Johnson Social Center, 19803 R.H. Johnson Boulevard, Sun City West, 605-4305337, hillcrest.scwclubs.com, $4 members, $5 guests. The Breeze provides the music. Day of Dance and Local Vendor Fair, 9 a.m. to 1 p.m., Kaleidoscope Dance, 2848 S. Carriage Lane, Mesa, 480-692-0332, kaleidoscopedance.com, free admission. Day of Dance features complimentary, 30-minute dance classes; local vendors selling handmade, unique gifts; and light refreshments. Falcon Field Open House, 9 a.m. to 2 p.m., Falcon Field, 4800 E. Falcon Drive, Mesa, 480644-2450, falconfieldairport.com/home-ffa, free admission. The open house will focus the future of flight with new and unique aircraft and prototypes, such as unmanned aerial vehicles/drones, heli-taxis and personal flight vehicles.

SUNDAY, MARCH 31

Mark Lucas and The Wild Bunch, 5:30 p.m. (dinner), 7:30 p.m. (show), Silver Star Theater, 5247 E. Brown Road, Mesa, 480-288-0300, silverstartheater.com, $42-$45. Grand buffet dinner followed by music and laughs.

Have an event to share? Send the details before the 15th of the month to christina@timespublications.com

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Tinseltown Talks

Carl Reiner says keeping busy keeps him going BY NICK THOMAS Turning 97 in March, Carl Reiner shows no sign of slowing down. “I wake up with ideas!” the veteran actor, writer, director and producer says from Los Angeles says. One of those ideas was to colorize episodes of his crown television jewel, “The Dick Van Dyke Show.” Two color episodes were produced in 2017 and last year Reiner selected a couple more favorites, with plots loosely based on his family’s experience, which aired on CBS over the holiday season. “I’ve done a lot in my life but have to say that show is what I’m most proud of,” Reiner says. “We couldn’t afford to shoot it originally in color and make a profit, but I’m so pleased with the colorized episodes – they look fantastic.” In “Where Did I Come From?” young Richie (Larry Matthews) questions his par-

ents about his birth, much like Reiner’s own children did, while in “Never Bathe on Saturday,” Laura (Mary Tyler Moore) gets stuck in a hotel bathtub, ruining a vacation for hubby Rob (Dick Van Dyke). “I wrote that based on the time my wife and I were away, and she noticed the faucet dripping while taking a bath and wanted to get a plumber,” Reiner recalls. Reiner says it was important to produce colorized versions close to the originals. “Luckily some enterprising photographers were on hand during the original filming and took color photos of the set and actors,” he notes. “So some colors are very accurate, like the rooms. Colorization has come a long way and I wish we could do all 158 episodes, but it’s very expensive.” Reiner’s 2017 HBO documentary “If You’re Not in the Obit, Eat Breakfast,” in

which he narrates a series of interviews with active nonagenarians, was also recently released on DVD. “In my opening section, I’m reading the newspaper obituary section and remark if I’m not in it, I’ll have breakfast,” he says. “They thought that would make a good title.” The documentary features 90-plusyear-old guests still Carl Reiner with Betty White (Photos courtesy Nick Thomas) active in areas such as sports, fashion, music, comedy and act- the most extraordinary woman I ever met ing such as Dick Van Dyke, Kirk Douglas and and could do everything better than anyReiner’s longtime cohort in comedy, Mel one else. I think about her every night I go Brooks. “Truly a collection of remarkable to bed, so she’s still alive in me, no question.” people,” Reiner says. A prominent comedy writer throughout But of all the people Reiner has known, he has the highest praise for his late wife, his career, Reiner also continues to work on Estelle, to whom he was married for 65 new book projects this year. “If you have something to do every day, years. you’ll hang around,” he says. “While you do live in your memories as you get older and especially after losing a Nick Thomas teaches at Auburn University at Montgomery spouse, if you’ve had a good marriage it and has written features and columns for over 700 magazines and newspapers. Visit getnickt.com. sustains you,” he says. “She was perhaps

Carl Reiner has a laugh with George Shapiro, Mel Brooks and Norman Lear.

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Moneyball, 10 regular games plus double action. WHEN: Mondays and Thursdays, sales start at 9:30 a.m. WHERE: Beuf Senior Center, 3435 W. Pinnacle Peak Rd., Phoenix COST: Starts at $4/pack, City of Phoenix Membership card or $5 guest INFO: 602-534-9743

Brentwood Southern

There is a money ball; 17 games include three that are percentage payout. WHEN: Mondays, hall opens at 4:30 p.m., sale starts at 5:15 p.m. and bingo starts at 6:30 p.m. WHERE: Brentwood Southern, 8103 E. Southern Ave., Mesa COST: Varies according to games and number purchased INFO: 480-306-4569

Chandler Senior Center Bring a friend or make some new ones while enjoying some fun and prizes. WHEN: Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays from 12:15 p.m. to 1:15 p.m. WHERE: Chandler Senior Center, 202 E. Boston St., Chandler COST: 50 cents per card. No limit on cards purchased. INFO: 480-782-2720, chandleraz.gov/ senior-adults

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200-seat bingo hall open Wednesdays through Sundays in Goodyear. Ana’s dinners and desserts inside. WHEN: Wednesdays through Sundays at 6:30 p.m.; Fridays at 10:30 p.m.; and Sundays at 2 p.m. WHERE: Community Bingo, 3690 S. Estrella Pkwy., Suite 108, Goodyear COST: $21 (includes progressive) for 18 games; $14, late night and matinee for 13 games. INFO: 623-512-8878

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Money ball, 10 regular games plus progressive coverall. Split-the-pot games are early birds and double action. WHEN: Tuesdays, Thursdays and Saturdays, sales start at 12:15 p.m. WHERE: Devonshire Senior Center, 2802 E. Devonshire, Phoenix COST: Starts at $2; must have City of Phoenix Parks and Recreation membership card to be eligible to play. INFO: 602-256-3130 www.LovinLife.com

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WHEN: Thursdays at 1:30 p.m. WHERE: FCF-Holland Community Center, 34250 N. 60th St., Scottsdale, AZ COST: $13 and up INFO: 480-488-1090 or azfcf.org Games: 15 games of Bingo with a minimum of $375 prize money weekly

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Experience bingo in Fort McDowell Casino’s state-of-the-art and awardwinning 1,700-seat bingo hall. WHEN: Seven days a week, various times WHERE: Fort McDowell Casino, 10424 N. Fort McDowell Rd., Fort McDowell COST: Charge for cards INFO: 800-THE-FORT, ext. 4380, fortmcdowellcasino.com/bingo.php

Granite Reef Senior Center

Everyone welcome. Enjoy 20 games of bingo with prizes. WHEN: Tuesdays from 12:30 p.m. to 3 p.m. WHERE: Granite Reef Senior Center, 1700 N. Granite Reef Rd., Scottsdale COST: $1 per card; three-card minimum. No limit on cards purchased. INFO: 480-312-1700, scottsdaleaz.gov

Las Palmas Grand Bingo WHEN: Monday Night WHERE: Las Palmas Grand, 2550 S. Ellsworth Rd., Mesa, AZ COST: $21 buy-in INFO: 480-357-1148 Snack Bar: Opens 5 p.m. Early Bird Session: 6:30 p.m. Games: Double action, Betty Boop, $1,000 progressive jackpot with additional number added each week, with a $300 Consolation Prize. Pay out $70, Early Bird; $100 Regular Game

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Spacious bingo hall features 850 seats with morning, matinee and evening sessions. The morning sessions include five regular games and two specials, with three for $10 and $1 specials. WHEN: Seven days a week, times vary WHERE: Lone Butte Casino, 1077 S. Kyrene Rd., Chandler COST: $2 to $32 INFO: 800-946-4452, ext. 8928, wingilariver.com/index.php/lone-butte/ gaming/bingo

Mesa Adult Center

Twenty-one games, win up to $500 in losers’ bingo, social bingo and big game bingo. WHEN: Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays at 1 p.m. WHERE: Mesa Adult Center, 247 N. Macdonald St., Mesa COST: Various costs, call for pricing INFO: 480-962-5612, mesa.evadultresources.org

Palmas del Sol

Come join the group to play Bingo weekly. Bingo doors and snack bar open at 5:15 p.m. WHEN: Thursdays at 6:30 p.m. WHERE: Palmas del Sol, 6209 E. McKellips Rd., Mesa COST: Charge for cards varies according to number purchased. INFO: 480-528-4689

Peoria Community Center

Prize money will vary based on attendance. WHEN: Tuesdays and Fridays at 12:30 p.m. WHERE: Peoria Community Center, 8335 W. Jefferson, Peoria COST: 25 cents per card; 50 cents for overall INFO: 623-979-3570

Red Mountain Active Adult Center

Bingo seating begins at 12:50 p.m. WHEN: Tuesdays and Thursdays, from 1:15 p.m. to 3 p.m. WHERE: Red Mountain Active Adult Center, 7550 E. Adobe Rd., Mesa COST: Tuesdays there are various prices; Thursdays the cards are 25 cents INFO: 480-218-2221 or rm.evadultresources.org

Social Bingo

Join others during social bingo. WHEN: Mondays, from 1 p.m. to 3 p.m. WHERE: Apache Junction Active Adult Center, 1035 N. Idaho Rd., Apache Junction COST: 25 cents per card INFO: 480-474-5262, aj.evadultresources.org

Sun Lakes VFW Post 8053

The organization holds bingo for up to 230 people. Payouts are based on sales; total may reach $900. All proceeds go to veteran needs, including homeless veterans, disabled veterans and military families. WHEN: Wednesdays at 7 p.m. Sales start at 6 p.m. WHERE: Sun Lakes Country Club, 25601 N. Sun Lakes Blvd., Sun Lakes COST: $7 minimum for play of all 19 games INFO: 480-895-9270

Sunland Village

Auditorium doors open at 4:30 p.m., cards are sold at 6 p.m. and play begins at 7 p.m. There’s a $900 progressive pot. WHEN: Thursdays WHERE: Sunland Village Auditorium, 4601 E. Dolphin Ave., Mesa COST: Charge for cards varies according to number purchased INFO: 480-832-9003

Sunland Village East

Prize money will vary during the year based on attendance. WHEN: Sundays, at 6 p.m. WHERE: Sunland Village East Auditorium, 8026 E. Lakeview Ave., Mesa COST: Charge for cards varies to number purchased INFO: 480-986-9822, 480-313-7033

Sunrise Village

Join the group to play Bingo weekly. The cards start selling at 5:45 p.m., early bird at 6:45 p.m., and regular bingo at 7 p.m. WHEN: Fridays at 5:45 p.m. WHERE: Sunrise Village, 5402 E. McKellips Rd., Mesa COST: $13 minimum buy-in INFO: 480-985-0548

Vee Quiva Hotel and Casino

Gamers who stop by Bingo Park enjoy picturesque National Park views in the state-of-the-art, 550-seat bingo hall. WHEN: Seven days a week, various times WHERE: Vee Quiva Hotel and Casino, 15091 S. Komatke Ln., Laveen COST: $2 to $32 INFO: 800-946-4452, ext. 1942, wingilariver.com/index.php/vq-veequiva-hotel-casino/gaming/bingo-park MARCH 2019

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Thank You for the Music ABBA Mania pays tribute to the Swedish pop act BY CHRISTINA FUOCO-KARASINSKI Amy Edwards was exposed to ABBA as a child; singing and dancing her way through the Swedish band’s catalog. “I remember singing ‘Dancing Queen’ wearing my mom’s high heels when I was 5 years old,” she says. “My love for their music grew.” Decades later, she has found her way to ABBA Mania, which plays the Orpheum Theatre in Phoenix on Sunday, March 10. “There were so many songs that I hadn’t heard,” she says in her Australian accent. “It was great to learn different songs. I had my favorites in the beginning, but that’s all completely changed. I love ‘Chiquitita,’ ‘Name of the Game’ and ‘Take a Chance on Me.’ My love for them has grown so much.” ABBA Mania formed in 1999 and the show has been selling out theaters and concert halls internationally since. ABBA Mania has previously grossed over $1 million AUD at the box office in Sydney, Australia. The show has ventured to France, Denmark, Belgium, Spain, South Africa, New Zealand, Singapore, Australia and South Korea as well as the United Kingdom. With 30 shows in more than six weeks, ABBA Mania’s tour is its eighth. Edwards,

who now lives in Las Vegas, is excited about this run. “We take you through the iconic eras of ABBA,” she says. “We wear the iconic costumes they wore in videos. We play all the songs everybody knows and loves. “We take you back to that time when they reigned in the music world. Even if someone wasn’t the biggest fan, they will still have the best time. You’ll be on your feet dancing and singing.” This is right up Edwards’ alley. She’s been singing and dancing since she was 6 in Australia. When she was 21, she moved to London to perform in West End shows. “We perform all over the country and all over the world,” she says. “It’s definitely in my blood.”

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Celebration of Fine Art

Jake Potje and Susan Morrow Potje connect artists and collectors BY CHRISTINA FUOCO-KARASINSKI For almost 30 years, the Valley has hosted one of the country’s premier art events: the Celebration of Fine Art. Sprawled under white tents in Scottsdale from January to March, this juried, invitational show and art sale showcases over 100 artists from around the country, who continuously create and sell their pieces from within personal open studios. Patrons are free to wander about, chat with artists and experience the artistic process while seeing new pieces come to life. The creativity is entrancing; even artists agree, saying the collaborations are fulfilling. Visitors can also learn about the inspiration, techniques and stories behind mediums during the Friday afternoon one-hour Art Discovery series, from blown glass and jewelry to steel sculptures and impressionistic influence. Arts & Antiques Magazine called the Celebration of Fine Art, “One of the West’s Premier Art Events” – and much of these accolades come from the work of Susan Morrow Potje, the second-generation owner of the Celebration of Fine Art. Along with her husband, Jake, she’s increased the annual revenue to over $6 million and is known for her unique approach to connecting artists and their customers. Woven glass artist Mark Lewanski is a firsttime participant who quickly learned the effect he and his peers have on guests who walk through the 40,000-square-foot space. “A guy broke down and cried when he saw my weaving,” says Lewanski, a Michigan native. “People see my weaving and sometimes think of a rug, which I understand. I

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don’t take it in a bad way, considering the size of the fibers and the color. “But a man saw my weaving and it brought back such a strong memory of his grandmother making these rugs. It brought him back. It was such an emotional response and a moving moment.” He was referred to the show by his friend and fellow artist, Carlos Page. “We’ve been friends for 12 years now, so I trust him,” he says. “It’s completely lived up to all the promises he made. It’s been really good. Usually, your first year in the market, you have to establish yourself. But we hit the ground running, really.” Anthony Barbano is another newbie to the Celebration of Fine Art. Barbano, a Tempe resident, is so well regarded that Potje wears one of his glass pieces on a chain around her neck. “I enjoy the camaraderie of the artists and there are a lot of collaborations,” he says. “The owners, they do an amazing job curating the show. There are a few other glass artists here, but none of us has a similar style. They have an amazing following, too.” The colors of Barbano’s glass is achieved through gold and silver, with the orange color being 24K gold. Some of the pieces have opals in the middle which reflect nicely.

Modest beginnings The Celebration of Fine Art’s roots are in the late-1980s, when the founders, Tom and Ann Morrow – Potje’s mother and father – spent time in Laguna Beach visiting three art shows, which ran for eight weeks during the summer. It occurred to them that Scottsdale would be a perfect spot for an extended art show in the winter. There was a learning curve, but over the years, the show evolved into a magical The totems in “Forest Fantasy” by Vicki Grant are each based on a different children’s book.

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MARCH 2019

experience for artists and visitors/collectors. “It is a true community that fosters a sense of excitement and joy, and enthusiasm is shared freely,” Potje says. Potje and her husband have been involved in one fashion or another since the beginning of the show. Jake built the display walls for the artists’ studios prior to the opening in 1991. In 2004, the couple became partners and took over ownership a Jake and Susan Morrow Potje pose in the studio of artist Kathleen Hope. (Photos by Kimberly Carrillo) few years after that. The Celebration of Fine Art has become an a visitor say he would rather sip his coffee in integral part of Scottsdale’s art experience. the exhibit than Starbucks. It is a juried and carefully curated show limAnother aspect that makes the show speited to around 100 artists. The jury looks for cial is the Artist Discovery Series, held from a variety of things including quality of art, 4 to 5 p.m. Fridays. During the talks, guests variety of styles and mediums, ability for the can discover inspiration, techniques and stoartist to be present during the 10 weeks and ries behind the creation of art while enjoying ability to connect with visitors. wine and cheese. For more information or to Walking through the show, Potje says reserve your spot, call 480-443-7695 or email when guests enter the white tents, any mis- info@celebrateart.com. conceptions they have are dissipated. “Even though I know more about most “Each season we have people who tell us of the artists than probably anyone here, I they have been driving by for years and fi- always learn something new myself,” Potje nally decided to stop in and see what it is all says. about,” she shares. Clearly, Potje loves what she does. “Although we might be known as the ‘big “Buying art is usually an emotional rewhite tent art show,’ people literally forget sponse to the art and how it makes a person about the tent once they take a few steps feel,” she says. “It is impossible to leave here into the show. Everything about the Cele- without feeling better than you did when bration is a transformative experience, start- you arrived. Art lifts spirits. Connecting with ing from the fact we turn an empty lot into others lifts spirits. This truly is a Celebration an extraordinary art community. The show is of Fine Art and a celebration of life.” thoughtfully curated throughout the year to offer an extraordinary art collection as well What: Celebration of Fine Art as kind, giving and enthusiastic artists willWhen: Various times ing to share their gifts with the visitors. We through March 24 also have a cafe and courtyard where people Where: Southwest corner of Hayden Road and the Loop 101 can relax.” Cost: $10; free for children 12 and Relax is a key phrase to the Celebration younger of Fine Art. Comfortable chairs greet guests Info: celebrateart.com upon entry, and the setup works. Potje heard

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Honoring Tom Jones

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R&B/soul revue benefits United Way BY CHRISTINA FUOCO-KARASINSKI Roger’s Tom Jones knows how to put on a show. To raise funds for the United Way Valley of the Sun Chapter, the band is bringing along The Motown Blossoms, Amber Dirks and Nisha Kataria for a gig at the Tempe Center for the Arts on Sunday, March 17. “We’ve been doing the Tom Jones tribute for a couple of decades,” Roger says. “We had the good fortune of doing performances in Asia, Europe and America. We had a little thing at the Luxor in Las Vegas not too long ago. “This time, we’ve teamed with the Motown Blossoms. They are three ladies bringing all those Motown hits, which people like. It’s a nice combination, if you say.” The Motown Blossoms perform a string of classic Detroit hits by The Marvelettes, The Supremes, Aretha Franklin, The Shirelles, Martha Reeves and The Vandellas.

Amber Dirks A national and international recording artist, Amber Dirks has performed solo and occasionally with Sister Sledge. “I’ve been able to travel the world be-

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cause still, to this day, Sister Sledge is a well-respected group,” Dirks says. “We have sold out many audiences and big events since 1994.” Dirks was born in Holland and raised in New York before her family moved to Phoenix, where she attended Washington High School. She speaks fluent Dutch. At the Piper Repertory Theatre, Dirks will sing solo hits like “Dominate My Love” and “This is My Life,” along with covers of Gladys Knight songs. “These rehearsals (with Roger’s Tom Jones) have been so much fun,” Dirks says. “They’ve been phenomenal. I wish I could be in the audience and just watch. There’s tremendous talent here.”

Roger’s Tom Jones and the Motown Blossoms headline the Tempe Center for the Arts on Sunday, March 17. (Photo courtesy Roger’s Tom Jones)

Nisha Kataria Nisha Kataria is pop’s unsung hero. The Phoenician has been singing since she could walk, she says, but in her teens, she learned how to moonwalk. When she was 17, she visited the Arizona State Fair with her family. As Kataria walked through the parking lot, she sang a short tune, which was heard by a Michael Jackson acquaintance. Her father gave him a live demo and subsequently handed it to Jackson’s manager. After singing “I Will Always Love You” for Jackson’s manager, she was introduced to the King of Pop. “I skipped

school and drove to California to Neverland Ranch and it all felt like a dream,” she says. “I went in alone, with my family outside, and Michael hugged me. He was very warm. We had a nice conversation and he asked me to sing to him. “I stood up and sang ‘I Will Always Love You;’ a good portion of it was a cappella. He applauded me. He says I had the voice of an angel. Not a lot of people could do what I did – stand up and sing to the king of pop.” He decided he wanted to make Kataria “a star.” Jackson moved Kartaria and her mother into a guest suite at Neverland. “It was nothing short of a dream,” she says. “In between recordings, we would enjoy Disneyland, life, horseback riding and going to the movies. We recorded a song that is unreleased called ‘Wonderful World of Candy.’ I wish I had that track in my hand. I would be golden.” Kataria only knows the masters are in Jackson’s house – somewhere. “I don’t know where it could be,” she www.LovinLife.com


says. “He wanted the public to see me for the first time next to him. The entire plan was stopped when he went in for the case and was acquitted and then his untimely passing.” After Jackson’s death, Kataria performed in Germany and in the United Kingdom with Westlife. “I was launched overseas, and I was growing a nice following,” she says. She gave it up to return to Phoenix and open a dog grooming boutique called Doggie in the Mirror, a play on Jackson’s “Man in the Mirror,” in Uptown Phoenix. “Dogs are my favorite creatures on the planet and music is my first love,” says Kataria, who was born in Canada but attended Shadow Mountain High School in Phoenix. “Music and doggies go so well together. We have a music video screen, a golden gate that says ‘Doggieland’ instead of ‘Neverland.’ “Michael has blessed me in so many ways. Even to this day I’m still paying homage to him; not only his legacy but our legacy. His

It was something to cherish for the rest of my life. I don’t say that lightly. - Nisha Kataria legacy is staying alive through my doggie boutique.” Kataria, 32, is slowly returning to music after pausing to open Doggie in the Mirror. “It was something to cherish for the rest of my life,” Kataria says. “I don’t say that lightly.”

MORE INFO

What: Roger’s Tom Jones with special guests When: 3 p.m. Sunday, March 17 Where: Tempe Center for the Arts, 700 W. Rio Salado Parkway, Tempe Cost: $29 and $40 Info: 480-350-2822, tempecenterforthearts.com

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by Donna Pettman

ANSWERS ON PAGE 54

ACROSS 1 4 8 12 13 14 15 17 18 19 20 22 24 25 29 30 31 32 34 35 36

Beavers’ structure Second letter Wild and crazy Indivisible Mideast airline Sheltered Gin, e.g. Grad rags? First murderer Iron Suitor Paddock parent Long-running Broadway musical Pheasant or grouse Fuss Dental filling Ultramodern (Pref.) Backyard attraction Somewhere out there Feedbag fodder Surprise big-time

37 40 41 42 46 47 48 49 50 51

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1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 16

“What’s up, --?” Literary collection 16th-century cartographer Start Verve Highland hat Brewery product Capital of Croatia Shaving cream additive Information Longings Speaker’s spot

DOWN

19 20 21 22 23 25 26 27 28 30 33 34 36 37 38 39 40 42 43 44 45

Quarry Wound cover Gully Soda shop orders Asian nurse Summertime pest Notorious Caboose’s place Collegian quarters Construction piece Gizmo Winged Garden intruder 3-Down’s creations Leering look Adolescent Luminary “Humbug!” Expert Lingerie item Conclusion

Resources to Help You Care for Mom and Dad

Each numbered row contains two clues and two answers. The two answers differ from each other by only one letter, which has already been inserted. For example, if you exchange the A from MASTER for an I, you get MISTER. Do not change the order of the letters.

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SCRAMBLERS Unscramble the letters within each rectangle to form four ordinary words.

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Travel In Search of Kirsch, Stout, Wine and Whisky BY ED BOITANO

Dettling Kirschwelt

Glenora Distillery

For many, kirsch is simply a sharp-tasting Located on Nova Scotia’s spectacular Guinness liqueur that is used in a pot of fondue. Céilidh Trail the Glenora Distillery is the St. James’ Gate Brewery, For the Swiss it is its national drink. For first single malt whisky distillery in North Dublin, Ireland me it was an excuse to tour the Dettling America. The distillery rests on a rural 300“Beer is proof that God loves us Kirschwelt distillery. To be and wants us to be happy.” honest, just the hour-long – Benjamin Franklin boat ride from Lucerne to the idyllic village of tour, I was told to expect Brunnen on Lake Lucerne something special, for there would have been worth it. was to be a céilidh in the disBut the location of Dettling tillery’s pub. A céilidh is a traKirschwelt was not chosen ditional Gaelic musical social for its setting on the lake; gathering that originated in rather for its proximity to Scotland. Céilidhs flourished A trip to Dublin is not complete without a visit to the Guinness Storehouse. (Photos courtesy Guinness Storehouse) native black mountain cherin Nova Scotia, where ScotDettling Kirschwelt ries. tish immigrants meet with fragrance that’s paradise to the Guinness Lake Lucerne, Switzerland friends for an evening of connoisseur. Kirsch, once called Kirsch“Alcohol may be man’s worst enemy, song, dance and, generally, wasser in Switzerland The best way to learn about Guinness is but the Bible says love your enemy.” strong drink. Everyone in the a trip to the Guinness Storehouse, located (cherry water), is a clear – Frank Sinatra room is invited to participate at the original 64-acre St. James’ Gate Brewbrandy made from double in the fun. distillation of the juice of ery in the heart of Dublin. The journey beDettling offers a hands-on approach to his world-famous Dettling Kirschwelt Kirsch. I was pleasantly surprised small black cherries. The Arnold gins at the bottom of the world’s largest (Photo by Deb Roskamp) to see one of the men shar- pint glass and continues up through seven five-generation Dettling Kirschwelt was established in 1867 and has acre site with buildings housing malt, kiln, ing my table stand up and sing a song in floors filled with interactive experiences the distinction of being the only large dis- milling production, warehouses, bottling Gaelic. It was the perfect setting to enjoy that fuse the long brewing heritage with tillery in the world to specialize exclusively and lodging facilities, constructed in a tra- a wee dram of Glenora’s water of life. I de- Ireland’s rich history as you walk through in the use of cherries. ditional style, similar to distilleries found cided it best, though, to book a room for each stage of the brewing. And, yes, the The 45-minute visitor’s center tour is an in Scotland. Tours are offered, as well as a the night in Glenora’s inn. tour ends at the rooftop at the Gravity Bar insightful journey into all-things kirsch. sampling of their 12-year-old heather and with 360-degree views across the city’s The taste is indescribable and, like the fin- honey tasting “uisge beatha” (Gaelic for Guinness magnificent skyline with a complimentary “water of life”). est cognacs, must be felt and tasted. I left “Guinness is good for you” might be the pint of the black stuff. Single malt is a whisky produced ex- ultimate self-fulfilling prophecy. When ArDettling Kirschwelt with a solid kirsch education, and glad I was taking a boat back clusively from malted barley that is not thur Guinness borrowed money from his Roskamp Vineyard to the city of Lucerne, rather than driving. blended with another whisky. After my wealthy aunt in 1759 to establish a brewery, The stars above and the lights below best it was with the strict condition that it be a describe Roskamp Vineyard’s enchanthealthy beverage, unlike the gin mills that ing position on top of Snipes Mountain in Glenora Distillery were ravaging 18th century Dublin. Washington State’s Yakima Valley. With the Single Malt Whisky, Nova Scotia Arthur took it a step further, even sugmajesty of Mount Rainier and Mount Ad“Always carry a flagon of whisky in case of snakebite gesting that his brew was so healthy that ams in the distance, the vineyard was the and furthermore always carry a small snake.” pregnant women should drink a pint of it brainchild of Herman Roskamp (1922-2002) – W.C. Fields daily. Although the theory has never been and his wife, Gay. They diligently dedicated proven, a perfectly poured pint of the black themselves to the labor-intensive work and stuff has always worked wonders for me. patience of creating a world-class vineyard Guinness brews more than 20 varieties of from scratch. beer but is best known for its stout – an The Yakima Valley has long been an extra dark, almost black, top-fermenting abundant produce belt for the Pacific beer, made with highly roasted malts. On Northwest – not to mention its golden the days of its roasting, Dublin takes on a hops are exported to the Guinness brewery in Dublin. It only made sense that vineyards Nova Scotia’s Glenora’s Distillery is the first single malt

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whisky distillery in North America. (Photo by Deb Roskamp)

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Roskamp Vineyard in all its glory. (Photo courtesy Gary Brouwer)

would soon follow. Mr. Roskamp knew his vineyard would be a smashing success, for the Yakima Valley is blessed with 300 days of annual sunshine and enjoys the same latitude as the great wine-producing regions of France. When the Washington wine explosion hit the market, Roskamp Vineyard was at the forefront, with his grapes widely sought after from major wineries. Recently, two Roskamp Vineyard wines received national attention: The Co Dinn 2014 Roskamp Vineyard Block Two Syrah,

Roskamp Vineyard Sunnyside, Yakima Valley, Washington State “Good wine is a good familiar creature if it be well used.” - William Shakespeare

which emotes an intense and distinctive bouquet of dark raspberry, herb and plum, and the premium Co Dinn 2015 Roskamp Vineyard Chardonnay that features a unique delicacy and complexity. Today, Washington State is the second-largest wine producer in the United States. Mr. Roskamp was selected as Yakima Valley’s rookie wine grower in 2001 at the age of 78 years old.

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THE SPRING TRAVEL PLANNER

To advertise in this section, contact Ed Boitano at 818.985.8132 or Ed@TravelingBoy.com

OUR GUIDE TO THE BEST INTERNATIONAL & DOMESTIC TOURS, TREKS & DESTINATIONS v Compiled by Ed Boitano INTERNATIONAL CruiseOne offers cruise and land vacations to the world’s most exotic destinations, including the St. Lawrence River, Mexican Riviera, Alaska, the Mediterranean, Hawaii and Caribbean. Programs range from family reunions at sea and honeymoon cruises to river cruising and land vacations. Each independently owned and operated business combines the latest technology with old-fashioned customer service. Ask about our land packages in Ottawa and Quebec City, and cruise packages on the St. Lawrence River. Contact Joni Notagiacomo in Los Angeles at (800) 600-4548 or www.luv2cruz.com DISCOVER THE CUISINE, CULTURE AND BEAUTY OF FRANCE – Explore the Champs-Elysees, Notre Dame, and the Louvre, before journeying through Normandy and the Loire Valley, sampling local wines, cheeses, and history along the way. Join Dignity Travel on this small group tour designed for people who use a wheelchair or have difficulties walking long distances. We will discover France while cruising on the river Seine, visiting the beaches of Normandy and exploring the chateaus in the Loire Valley. Reservation deadline for this tour is Mar. 15, 2019. (877) 337-4272 or www.Dignitytravel.biz ElderTreks is the world’s first adventure travel company designed exclusively for people 50 and over. Established in 1987, ElderTreks offers active,

off-the-beaten-path, small-group adventures by both land and sea in over 100 countries. ElderTreks offers wildlife and tribal African safaris, active hiking trips to the Rockies, Himalayas and Andes, expeditions by icebreakers to the Arctic and Antarctic and cultural journeys throughout Cuba, Asia, and South America. Join ElderTreks on one of our small group adventures for travelers 50 plus. (800) 741-7956 or www.ElderTreks.com

NEW YEARS BALL IN VIENNA – Herzerl Tours invites you to celebrate the 2020 New Year’s in Vienna like the Imperial Family! If you ever had a dream to celebrate a very special New Year’s Eve in truly royal splendor, WESTERN EXPERIENCES then this is for you. First, waltz lessons in Vienna’s most renowned dancing school, then the New Year’s Eve Ball “Hofburg Ball” at the Imperial Palace COLORADO TRAILS RANCH, COLORADO — What you need is (the winter residence of the Habsburgs) – swaying to the strains of Johann a week unwinding and exploring the wonders of our first class guest ranch. Strauss’ waltz music. Seven day arrangements for two people or more. A Colorado Trails Ranch is not far from Durango, in lovely Southwest Colorado. once-in-a-lifetime experience! Contact Susanne Servin at 1- (800) 684ElderTreks' Cuba adventures offer 8488; sms@herzerltours.com or unique cultural experiences to this Caribbean gem. www.herzerltours.com Explore UNESCO World Heritage Sites, colonial

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Renew your spirit amidst the dramatic cliff walls and red rocks. Explore the dinosaur and anthropology museums. Breathtaking scenery awaits you on a hike, trail ride or O’Keeffe Landscape Tour visiting the actual sites that inspired Georgia O’Keeffe, Ansel Adams and others.

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travel to Antarctica and the Arctic. Why? Since 1991, our staff has participated in voyages to the Antarctic and Arctic regions, every year. We know the ships, trips and polar travel options, itineraries, dates and prices. We evaluate the quality of the ships, operations, tour programs and companies, and provide polar cruise ship information and expedition trip reviews. Then we talk to you about your travel preferences and book the best vacation for you. (888) 484-2244 or www.PolarCruises.com

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Set in the spectacular panoramas of the San Juan Mountains, our dude ranch resort offers lifetime experiences for singles, groups and entire families. There isn’t one difficult activity in our perfectly personalized programs. All our cabins are new over the past four years. We specialize in providing a super venue for multi-generational family get-togethers, taking care of all the planning. You just sit back and enjoy your family. The food is delicious, the comfort is wonderful and you’ll feel like a well cared member of the family. (800) 323-3833 or www.ColoradoTrails.com RANCH VACATION BRIDGEPORT, CA— Hunewill Ranch is located in the Eastern Sierra just two hours south of Reno, NV. Family owned and operated since 1861. Great horseback riding, gorgeous hiking trails, stream and lake fishing, evening activities, child friendly. Working cattle ranch. Relax while the amazing kitchen crew and friendly maid staff take care of the cooking and cleaning. Rates include meals, lodging, horseback riding, & all activities. Suited to families, singles and couples. Enjoy an exciting, friendly, fun vacation with home style meals, wide open space, great riding. Make lasting friendships. (760) 932-7710 or www.hunewillranch.com

NEW MEXICO GHOST RANCH - Take an adventure drive and see the landscape that inspired Georgia O’Keeffe, Ansel Adams and others. Renew your spirit amidst the dramatic cliff walls and red rocks. Explore the dinosaur and anthropology museums. Breathe in scenery on a hike, trail ride or an O’Keeffe Landscape Tour and visit the actual sites she painted. Overnight lodging is available. Call 505.685.1000 or visit GhostRanch.org

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hours from Yellowstone and 3.5 hours from Jackson and the Grand Tetons. Take your time and enjoy the journey. When you get to Logan you’ll feel like you’ve stepped back in time to classic Americana. It’s only a 10 minute drive from the downtown theater district to hiking, fishing, or picnicking in the Wasatch Cache National Forest. Explore Logan Canyon National Scenic Byway. Enjoy our Foodie Trek, outdoor adventures, hands-on living history experiences, and fine arts. Just 90 minutes north of Salt Lake City. (800) 882-4433 or www.explorelogan.com

LAS VEGAS OASIS LAS VEGAS RV RESORT — Experience the exciting environment of Las Vegas’ most spectacular RV resort. The Oasis Las Vegas, with its tropical “Casablanca” theme, helps guests relax in sunny Las Vegas by day and see the bright city lights by night. The resort is conveniently located just south of the Las Vegas Strip, only five minutes from the main hotels. If you are seeking an RV resort that offers numerous champagne-class amenities, affordable luxury and superb customer service, contact us today. (800) 566-4707 or www.oasislasvegasrvresort.com

SEDONA BEST WESTERN PLUS INN OF SEDONA — The award-winning design of this hotel, nestled in the famous red rocks of Sedona, echoes the natural features of the surrounding desert terrain, showcasing the panoramic views from the hilltop location with four large terraced balcony walks, and quintessential desert-inspired style complete with an outdoor pool and fire pit seating. The complimentary ‘About Town’ shuttle will get you to and from your Sedona adventures. www. InnofSedona.com; (928) 282-3072 or (800) 292-6344.

UTAH LOGAN, UTAH — This beautiful high mountain valley offers unparalleled access to world class performing arts on the edge of the great outdoors. Fly into Salt Lake City or enjoy the drive through this diverse state. Logan is only 4.5

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RUBY’S INN is located at the entrance to Bryce Canyon National Park and offers the closest lodging with everything from luxury hotel rooms to RV parks and campgrounds. Ruby’s Inn is open year-round with a General Store that provides fuel, groceries, camping gear, clothing and gifts. To plan your vacation, visit www.RubysInn.com or call (866) 866-6616. SunRiver - ST. GEORGE is southern Utah’s premier master-planned active adult lifestyle community. Built in an unspoiled, rural location, SunRiver St. George provides a quiet, superbly planned community with occupancy limited to at least one resident 55 or older. From the golf course layout and community center design to the floor plans of our sensational SunRiver St. George homes, the active adult lifestyle is our central point of focus. SunRiver St. George is “building a lifestyle, not just homes.” (435) 688-1000 or www.SunRiver.com Los Alamos

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picturesque harbors, shopping, restaurants serving the freshest seafood and kind hospitality round out your experience in “the real Alaska.” Kodiak - the only way to see Alaska. (800) 789-4782 or www.Kodiak.org

CHENA HOT SPRINGS is Alaska’s only year-round natural hot springs resort. Located approximately 60 miles northeast of Fairbanks, guests can choose from 80 rooms, 8 dry cabins, full service restaurant and bar. Activities include: hot springs passes, snow coach aurora borealis viewing, Aurora Ice Museum, Chena Kennel dog sled experience and summer cart rides, winter gear rental, bicycle rental, cross-country skiing, horseback riding, ATV tours, and flight-seeing over the Arctic Circle. Chena Hot Springs resort enjoys a clean, healthy and beautiful natural environment and continues to welcome people from all over the world to bathe in the curative powers of the hot waters. (907) 451-8104 or www.chenahotsprings.com

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Long Beach

Tamayo and Matta to Cruz-Diez, Los Carpinteros and Tunga.

The long and short of California’s seaside town

Dining

Michael’s Downtown Italian Kitchen 210 E. Third Street michaelsdt.com

BY CHRISTINA FUOCO-KARASINSKI

(Photos courtesy of Long Beach Convention Center)

From the Hilton Long Beach windows, container shipping ports loom over the shore. There’s more to the nation’s second busiest container port than industry Long Beach is vibrant, with a wealth of museums, murals and a relaxing waterfront. After a 5 1/2-hour drive, all we wanted to do was chill by the beach and listen to the seagulls. This isn’t Los Angeles or San Diego, it goes much deeper than that. From eclectic neighborhoods to sandy beaches, Long Beach is home to a 1930s ocean liner, adorable sea lions and fun ocean animals.

Where to stay

Hilton Long Beach 333 E. Ocean Boulevard westinlongbeachhotel.com Within 5 minutes of being at the Hilton

Long Beach, I had already made a fool of myself. Heads up: You have to use your room card to access the elevator’s controls. Otherwise, the elevators close on guests. Don’t worry, you won’t get trapped. Anyway, public service announcement aside, the modern-looking Hilton Long Beach allows visitors to see every side of the city. A selection of the 469 guest rooms and 31 suites overlook the marina and www.LovinLife.com

tranquility of the Pacific Ocean. It is mere blocks from beaches, shopping, theaters and bistros. Insider tip: Talk to the servers during Sunday brunch. They’re knowledgeable about the city, spewing tips here and there about what out-of-town guests should visit. The hotel is pet-friendly.

Sights to see

The Aquarium of the Pacific 100 Aquarium Way aquariumofthepacific.org The Aquarium of the Pacific features more than 11,000 animals in over 50 spectacular exhibits. The facility may not be fancy like OdySea in Scottsdale, but it gets to the point. The courageous can mingle with sharks and rays, or check out jellyfish. (I was stung by a jellyfish when I was 9 and it traumatized me, but this was still cool.) The world’s largest ocean aquarium boasts a replica life-sized whale hanging from ceiling. The behind-the-scenes tour is a must, but so is the gift shop, where the trinkets, T-shirts and penguin umbrellas (yes, it’s a thing!) are affordable. We came home with bags of souvenirs from the aquarium. Travel there on the last day of your trip, so you can save a little cash for the rest of the stay.

Harbor Breeze Cruises 100 Aquarium Way Dock 2 562.432.4900, tickets.harbor-cruises.com We knew we were in good hands and the captain pointed out Parker’s Lighthouse, a recipient of Wine Spectator’s award of excellence. It’s known for its mesquite-grilled

fresh seafood and spectacular views. (More on that later.) Beyond that, we explored Long Beach’s coastline, while our apt host schooled us on the harbor’s history and the skyline. But more importantly, we saw California sea lions up close on buoys. The adorable mammals seemed just as interested in us as we were in them. The cruise also gives an idyllic view of the Queen Mary, an art-deco ocean liner in its 41st year in Long Beach. Docked alongside it was Carnival Inspiration, the closest I’ve ever been to a fantasy class cruise ship.

The Queen Mary 1126 Queens Highway queenmary.com We were whisked back in time to the days of art deco ocean liners, men in tuxedos and women in flowing gowns on The Queen Mary. Celebrating 41 years in Long Beach, The Queen Mary is a top attraction with historic tours and special exhibits. While we were there, The Queen Mary housed a Princess Diana exhibit that was bound to make even the most heartless person weep. The ship has 347 spacious staterooms with elegant suites, fine restaurants and Sunday brunch, a spa, shops, ocean views and meeting facilities aboard and alongside for 20 to 5,000 guests.

The Museum of Latin-American Art (MOLAA) 628 Alamitos Avenue molaa.org Founded in 1996, The Museum of Latin American Art is a cultural gem. The only museum in the United States dedicated to modern and contemporary Latin American art, the MOLAA is stunning, as is the 15,000-square-foot sculpture garden. The gallery hosts works from the likes of

Michael Dene has a must when traveling to Long Beach. The restaurateur found the perfect way to wood-fire pizza with freshly made mozzarella. That’s nothing new to Dene, as he and his staff take locally sourced ingredients and create stellar dishes like Bolognese with tagliatelle pasta with prime hand-grown beef, pork and veal sauce; and gnocchi served in a gorgonzola sauce that was impeccable. The appetizer was king here: braised beef, veal and pork meatballs smothered in red sauce that were flavorful. Also on the menu are salads, grain bowls and, of course, great wine to pair with meals.

Breakfast Bar 70 Atlantic Street 562.726.1700, the-breakfast-bar.com Breakfast Bar serves breakfast and lunch, along with an assortment of wines and beers, in the heart of downtown Long Beach. Family owned by Josh and Pamela Beadel, who have both worked and lived in downtown Long Beach for more than 10 years, the Breakfast Bar’s tasty menu abounds with special dishes from their family traditions and recipes. The menu is as special as it is personal. For example, a Breakfast Bar favorite is Uncle Marcee’s Omelet Casserole, which is individually baked and served with a potato pancake and fruit. Because I’m a plain Jane, I tried the French toast, thick-cut sourdough French toast served with two eggs cooked anyway (I had scrambled) and a choice of two bacons, two sausage links, two turkey sausage or one sausage patty. The guests at the table next to us were from Boston and were delightful. The husband had meatloaf steak and eggs and it smelled amazing. It was house-spiced and thick-cut meatloaf made with beef, pork and soyrizo, and topped with two eggs cooked any way. It was served with potato pancake and house rosemary bread. The long and short of it is Long Beach is more than Sublime, bike-friendly streets and the ocean. It’s a respite from the Arizona heat and a place to put our feet up. MARCH 2019

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An Oasis in the Desert

Historic Castle Hot Springs has made its grand comeback BY SHERRY JACKSON

In the early 1900s, Castle Hot Springs, located north of Phoenix, was a luxury retreat in the desert southwest. An oasis nestled up against the towering Bradshaw mountains where the rich and famous would come to play. Families like the Vanderbilts, Roosevelts and Kennedys and western writer Zane Grey were all guests. In the 1940s, the property served as a military rehabilitation center where future president John F. Kennedy spent three months recovering from wounds. But the resort started losing its allure in the 1960s and was closed to the public after a fire in 1976 took out the Palm House, one of the resort’s prominent buildings. The property went through a revolving door of new owners over the years. Owners pictured the resort with several different uses such as a high-end spa, a conference

center and boutique hotel. But the remote location presented added challenges – and costs – and plans fell through until the property was purchased in 2014 by local business owners Mike and Cindy Watts. The 1,110-acre, high-end resort recently made its grand re-debut. “We want this to be a very unique, different place,” says Steven Sampson, director of sales and marketing for Westroc Hospitality, the company managing the property. Westroc also manages the Sanctuary at Camelback Mountain, Hotel Valley Ho and Mountain Shadows resorts. Sampson says the effort is a “legacy” for the Watts and Castle Hot Springs has an emotional attachment for Westroc’s owner, Russell “Rusty” Lyon, Jr. “The new owners are committed to restoring it to its grandeur,” Sampson says.

In the 1940s, Castle Hot Springs’ property served as a military rehabilitation center where future president John F. Kennedy spent three months recovering from wounds. (Photos special to LLAF)

The main attraction, a hot spring bubbling up from deep undergroung, cascades from the mountain into several pools and streams on the property. Yavapai and Apache Indians used the springs for medicinal purposes and in the 1880s the property served as a sanitarium, touting the springs’ health benefits. Guests would travel via stagecoach, or later train, to take in the healing waters. A 4-foot deep, natural swimming hole with crystal clear water sits at the base of the springs and is a short walk up from the main lodge. Twelve bungalows on the property are also connected to the hot springs with water pumped into an outdoor private tub in each unit. The 9-foot deep, 125,000-gallon swimming pool, once the largest in Arizona before Big Surf came along, gets its water from the springs as well. With more than 500 palm trees onsite, many over 100 years old, the resort provides a shady haven against the Arizona sun. Peace and tranquility are the mantra here. There is no traffic or ambient city noise and the night sky is full of twinkling stars. Castle Hot Springs is meant to be a wellness re-

treat to detox and disconnect. Limited cell service and no televisions allow guests to digitally detox from the world, Sampson says. The renovation wasn’t without its setbacks. With an initial planned opening this fall, a late July monsoon flooded the entire canyon as a 5-foot high wall of water rushed down the mountain slopes, flooding the main road and halting renovations for a few months. A second target date of New Year’s Eve 2018 had also been set, but Sampson says the team decided it would rather delay a couple more months to make sure everything is up to par. “You only get one chance to make a good first impression,” he says. But now, those renovations are winding down as the opening date approaches. Castle Hot Springs has 12 bungalows with an indoor/outdoor fireplace and private outdoor soaking tub; 17 Sky View Cabins, each with its own telescope and skylight for stargazing and private outdoor soaking tub; four rooms above the lodge house/ reception area and one restored, historic cottage, where Rockefeller once stayed, offering three bedrooms and two baths. A new Stone House serves as a chapel and has separate spaces for executive meetings or social events. Another piece of history at the resort: Arizona’s first telephone, installed by territorial governor Nathan Oakes Murphy in the late 1890s, has also been restored, and guests can make calls from the rotary dial located in the lodge’s bar.

With more than 500 palm trees on-site, the resort provides a shady haven against the Arizona sun.

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The journey to the resort is part of the charm and challenge. Take I-17 to Highway 74 toward Lake Pleasant. That’s where things get a little tricky. After turning on Castle Hot Springs Road, the road is only paved for about 4 miles. The remaining 7 miles is a dusty, dirt road that traverses washes, with an occasional wild burro spotting. But Sampson says they’ll accommodate guests with either personal car service from the airport, specific directions and instructions if guests are driving themselves, or, the resort also has a helipad and its own helicopters. Castle Hot Springs will only be open seasonally, October to May. To assist employees with the remoteness of the resort, an “employee vil- Special moments, like weddings, are captured at Castle Hot Springs’ chapel. lage” will allow some personnel to live on-site. most recently from Mountain Shadows, spring water to the brewery, where they The resort’s culinary offerings are on have created recipes from the over 150 va- brew a Castle Hot Springs Lithium Lager. par or exceed any other high-end resort. rieties of rare organic fruits and vegetables Future resort plans include converting an Breakfast, lunch and dinner will be har- grown on-site. There’s an outdoor pizza original barn and stables into an on-site craft brewery later this year. vested from the large organic garden and oven, smoker and grill. The resort works with guests to provide The resort has partnered with local Helio greenhouse located just outside the restaurant. Ian Beger, the resort’s agronomist, Basin Brewing Company to brew its own experiential activities and custom-tailored and Executive Chef Christopher Brugman, beer. Castle Hot Springs takes its natural excursions geared to their interests. Horse-

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back riding, ATV rides, yoga on the great lawn, astronomy lectures, photography workshops and culinary demonstrations are just some of the offerings being considered. A wellness village, with massage cabanas, offers on-site spa services. Rates begin at $1,200 a night for a Sky View Cabin and $1,600 a night for a spring bungalow. The price is per couple and includes all meals and gratuities and is definitely geared toward a “very affluent” crowd. Kids aren’t allowed, and it’s not exactly kid-friendly, anyway. Sampson expects the private and remote location to be a draw to celebrity clientele looking to get away. “It’s a bucket list destination for some,” he says.” It will be a zen, tranquil resort for all.”

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Dining Chef to the Stars

Chef Robin Murphy has worked with Madonna, Mariah Carey, Arizona Cardinals and The Police during her career. Below, the Batman sandwich is a staple at Starfire Grille. (Special to LLAF)

Robin Murphy adds her flair to Starfire Grille BY KRISTINE CANNON From microphone-wielding stars to pigskin-throwing players and golf club-swinging clients, chef and Scottsdale resident Robin Murphy has cooked for them all. “It was through Arizona Catering, between 2004 and 2010,” she says. “They have a Live Nation’s contract, so every musical person that came to this town, we would cater to all of them.” Murphy, who was also the executive chef for the Arizona Cardinals during this time, even hit the road with The Police for 19 months. “It was back and forth, back and forth – the same songs over and over,” she says with a laugh. “They did invite me to Europe, but I declined that. I didn’t see the inside of my house for months.” Other notable, A-list celebrities with whom she has worked include Madonna, who preferred healthy meals for herself and her entire crew of 350 people, and Mariah Carey. “Mariah Carey likes everything that’s white – white food only – and you had to decorate the room with white everything – couches, chairs,” Murphy recalls, adding that she always served the celebrities in their dressing rooms. Rascal Flatts, however, was her favorite client. “I’m a country-western kind of girl,” she says. “I always like down-home food, fried chicken; they were easier.”

Following years of traveling back and forth between Phoenix and San Diego, Los Angeles and Las Vegas, and seeing more than her fair share of concerts, Murphy moved on to work for Michael’s Catering, which caters to the Waste Management Phoenix Open, and then on to Terravita Golf and Country Club in Scottsdale as executive chef. Now, Murphy has taken on a new challenge in her career: transitioning from fine dining to elevated comfort food cuisine as the executive chef of the newly renovated Starfire Golf Club’s Starfire Grille. “I’ve fine-dined everywhere, but I also like a good dive bar and great dive bar food,” she says. “I now know what I like to do and what I like to do is fun.” Murphy joined the team in August. Starfire Grille has all the traditional golf food, including chicken salad, egg salad and tuna salad sandwiches. But Murphy has completely revamped the menu, putting her own twist on it. One notable sandwich item on the menu is the BATMAN, an elevated BLT that features bacon, arugula, tomato, mozzarella and avocado aioli on naan bread. “The funniest thing about the Batman is I was on my 110th hour in one week, and I sat down and wrote this crazy sandwich. My boss at the time told me, ‘OK, I think you’re getting a little tired,’ but as soon as I made it the next day, it sold like that,” Murphy says.

So she brought that sandwich, what she describes as a healthier BLT, to Starfire Grille, and it’s just as popular with diners. Also new to the menu and steadily gaining popularity with guests are the pizzas made in the restaurant’s brand-new wood-fired oven. Diners can opt for the tomato and basil, meat lovers or everything pizza, or they can build their own. Pizzas range from $10 to $13. Starfire Golf Club General Manager Matt Lupton says the wood-fired pizza oven was strategically added to attract more families and a younger demographic. “I’m trying to think of ways to keep it interesting and get younger people out here, people who are non-golfers, and make it more relaxed, more comfortable,” he says. “It’s more family oriented.” Starfire Grille now offers a substantial happy hour menu as well. The menu consists of beef sliders, buffalo and teriyaki wings, a chicken quesadilla, street tacos with your choice of meat, a meatball skillet, crispy calamari, an onion ring stack and steamed clams and mussels. Prices range from $5 to $10. “These items sell pretty well from 3 to 6 p.m.,” Murphy says. “I think a lot of chefs are going toward that happy hour because that’s where your business is right now.” Lupton says Starfire’s focus is on food and beverage this year. A wood-fired pizza oven was added to attract more families and a younger demographic.

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“We have a whole new food and beverage staff, from the front of the house to the kitchen staff,” he says. “I feel we have the best team we’ve had since I’ve been here.” Lupton has worked at Starfire Golf Club for seven years. One strategy he has adopted to attract more new customers is hosting themed nights that fuse food and golf. Specialty nights include everything from “pizza and putting” nights and wine and cheese boards and half-priced bottles of wine on Wednesday nights to “beers, balls and bratwurst” out at the driving range. On Sunday nights, they offer family-style salad, two pizzas and a dessert for $25. “We’re going to keep things interesting and fresh and up to date,” he says. “There are different things going, and it’s not the same thing every week, so keep checking back to see what we’re doing.” And that also includes wine dinners, a first for Starfire Grille. “Matt’s let me just run myself wild with it all,” Murphy says. They plan to host them in the future. In addition to the new menu, Starfire’s golf course was transformed into a King 18hole course and a Mulligan 9-hole course, and the driving range was expanded to over 300 yards. The $750,000 renovation was completed and unveiled last November. “It brings a lot of players out here that didn’t play here before,” Lupton says of the renovations. “The Mulligan 9 has been great for families, kids, beginners. I have a 6-year-old, so last night we came out to play.” In other words, come for the wood-fired pizzas, stay for the golf.

Starfire Grille at Starfire Golf Club 11500 N. Hayden Road, Scottsdale, starfiregolfclub.com

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Taste of Lebanon

MVPita in Northeast Mesa relies on a mother’s recipes BY CHRISTINA FUOCO-KARASINSKI Siblings Christian and Michelle Warde are paying tribute to their mom the best way they know how: through food. MVPita – at the southwest corner of Power and Brown roads – serves fresh Mediterranean food like salads, hummus and, of course, pitas, using their mother’s recipes. “Our mom has always The MVPita Sampler comes with hummus, gyro, chicken shwarma and falafel. wanted to own a res- (Photos by Kimberly Carrillo) taurant,” Christian says. “This is authentic Lebanese cuisine all from when we talk about her restaurant. our mom’s recipes.” “See, our mom was the main person in Their mother, Tania Warde, still resides the kitchen at home. My favorite part was in Illinois, from where the siblings moved the dolmas.” three years ago. Dolmas have ingredients like meat and “She’s trying to move out here,” he says. spiced rice wrapped in vine or cabbage “We just want to set this up and get every- leaves. body on their feet. Tears come to her eyes “She used to stuff them with meat, ARIZONA’S MOST

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rice and spice,” Christian continues. “Over here, they’re vegetarian style. It was my favorite thing growing up. Everybody loves to cook and eat in our family. Unfortunately, we opened the restaurant away from the family.” One of MVPita’s top sellers is the gyro pita, a shaved mixture of lamb and beef cooked on a roLyndsey Hendrix, Christian Warde and Michelle Warde are behind MVPita. tisserie ($6.49). “Everything is good here,” Christian quickly adds about MVPita. “Customers can MVPita 1066 N. Power Road, pick multiple proteins instead of just one. Suite 103, Mesa It’s tough on the kitchen, but the kitchen is 480-247-9399, mvpita.com hard working and we like to work together to knock out orders.” Christian and Michelle are 28 and 24, respectively. Christian refers to them as a “young family who’s looking to strive.” “We thought if the food was good, the people would come,” he says. “That’s how we looked at it. We started a new chapter in life moving to Arizona.” The food at MVPita isn’t just about Lebanon. Its cheeseburger – a burger topped with gyro meat, both marinated in house – has won numerous awards. But Lebanese food is where it’s at, he says. “We have gyros for $3.99 Mondays and Tuesdays, which is a sweet deal for people trying to save money,” he says. “We’re trying to become the $5 gyro spot every day. Our prices are probably the best prices in town. They’re very reasonable. You get a lot of bang for fresh, quality food.” Top: The house salad is a popular side dish. Middle: The MVP veggie sampler has hummus, baba, tabouleh salad, dolma and falafel, and is served with two Arabic pitas. Bottom: At MVPita, guests can dine on chicken or steak kabobs.

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What’s Cooking?

Spring Training sausage and peppers BY JAN D’ATRI You never really know exactly when something becomes a ritual, but we know for certain that Cactus League in Arizona is one of our most cherished rites of spring. Since 1900, folks have been escaping the chill and heading out west to soak up our desert warmth, hear the crack of the bat and dive into a ballpark dog or maybe peanuts and Cracker Jack. We love Spring Training and everything that goes with it! So, this month, it’s a tribute to one of our all-time favorites on the field and off, the grilled Italian sausage sandwich with peppers and onions. Festival style, we call it – the darling of sporting events, carnivals and street fairs. I am often asked advice on how to cook sausage, and I’ve got to admit, that’s one thing I can do pretty well. Here’s why. In 1957, my family opened an Italian sausage factory in Lake Tahoe using a recipe developed by my father, who was a butcher by trade. As a little girl, I remember the tiny frying pan in the break room constantly in use, as dad grilled one link after each 75-pound batch of sausage to test for quality. The meat plant was cold, cold, cold, and that little frying pan – with its minimal output of heat – was my ever-present buddy! Then, in 1990, I decided to carry on the D’Atri sausage tradition by opening my own factories in Phoenix and Tempe, using the same tried and true 50-year-old family recipe. For several years, our product was featured at most of the Valley’s ballparks and at the 1996 Super Bowl in Tempe. Needless to say, I love to cook sausage on an outdoor grill or in a frying pan on the cook top. The problem is we often make grilling sausage a lot harder than it should

Photo courtesy Jan D’Atri

be. We boil, burn and burst it instead of getting that perfect brownish-black coating of caramelized goodness. So let me share a few tips that have helped me to grill great Italian sausages! No. 1 Look for an Italian sausage with the classic course grind. You should see little bits of fat, which will render off and add flavor. No. 2 Don’t boil Italian sausage. You’re losing flavor that way. Instead, pre-heat the oven to 350 degrees. Place sausage links on a baking sheet. Cook for about 15 minutes until links turn a grayish color. Finish them on the grill, about 5 minutes. This ensures the links are cooked inside and caramelized on the outside. No. 3 To cook sausage in the frying pan, start with a small amount of water, about 1/4 cup per four links. On high heat, cook sausage until water has evaporated. (At this point, sausage will be light in color.) Gently puncture sausage in a few places to release juices. Reduce heat to medium high and cook sausage until caramelized. Turn occasionally for even cooking. You can also cook the sausage with a little bit of oil in the pan. No. 4 Slice sweet yellow onions pinwheelstyle and strips of green or red peppers. (I do two-parts onion to one-part peppers.) In a frying pan or flat grill, cook in a small amount of olive oil or butter until soft and tender. Try these tips and you’ll hit it out of the park every time!

Watch my One-Minute Kitchen Video for Sausage & Peppers here: jandatri.com/recipe/italian-sausage-peppers-onions www.LovinLife.com

MARCH 2019

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Columns

Aging Today

Everybody does it BY BOB ROTH

Managing Partner of Cypress Homecare Solutions

A note of caution to my devoted readers: If you normally sit down to my column while having a meal or snacking, these two activities should be enjoyed independent of one another today. March is National Colorectal Cancer Awareness Month, so I will dish the scoop on poop. So, don’t get flushed, pull up a stool and let’s engage in (productive) potty talk. While I admit it is a bit unrefined and the 8-year-old little boy in me is most certainly giggling, there really is no easier way to discover what’s happening inside your body than seeing what comes out of it. It is important to pay attention to your bathroom habits. Equally important is not obsessing over them.

One of the biggest misconceptions circulated by a popular TV doctor is there is an ideal result, S-shaped and enters the water like an Olympic diver with minimal splash. The take away was anything else could indicate some kind of problem. This blanket statement is just incorrect. Everyone’s GI tract operates differently based on genetics, hydration, dietary habits, medication and other ongoing health issues. On any given day something may be slightly off and certain foods just don’t agree with you. If occasionally you don’t drink enough water, are on a new medication or are traveling, your rhythm is off for a short time and usually reverts back to normal in a few days. Don’t get your boxers

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MARCH 2019

in a bunch; needless worrying is just that. Better bowel health heeds me to shout out to our inner caveman, a recurring theme. Our paleolithic progenitors could check off the first four bullet points of this list of suggestions. • Exercise regularly. • Strive to drink 2 quarts of water daily. • Eat unprocessed, natural foods including fiber-rich vegetables. • Avoid artificial sweeteners, fructose, chemical additives, MSG, excessive caffeine. • Boost your intestinal flora by adding naturally fermented foods to your diet-sauerkraut, pickles and kefir, for example. • Add a probiotic supplement if you’re not getting enough good bacteria from your diet. • If you use medication every day, ask your prescribing doctor if it could be affecting your bowel movements. • Take action to minimize stress. Interestingly, the stone age squat is the ideal anatomical position for when nature calls. We may have won the birth lottery for living in the modern era of indoor plumbing, but your body is designed to eliminate while squatting. Sitting on a modern toilet is designed to place your knees at a 90-degree angle to your abdomen while squatting places your knees much closer to your torso. Today’s toilet position is unnatural. Squatting changes the relationship of your intestinal organs and musculature, which allows for complete emptying without straining. I strongly recommend placing a stool on the floor designed to fit around the base of the toilet known as the Squatty Potty. I am pretty sure the inventor of this simpleyet-brilliant device is reading this column while sipping a tropical drink on a raft somewhere fabulous. All levity aside, it is important to be aware of how your GI tract normally functions and what typical bowel activity is for you. If you notice a prolonged change, that’s when you need to closely monitor what’s happening. In addition, if you are feeling pain or other pronounced symptoms, it’s time to call your doctor.

erally brown in color because of bile, which is produced in the liver. If the stool is black, it can be a sign of internal bleeding. Stool color also changes depending on the kind of foods you eat. (Before you panic, did you eat a beet salad at that trendy restaurant?) Change in stool consistency. Everyone has bouts of diarrhea from time to time. But if you are used to having solid bowel movements and now have diarrhea frequently, it could be a sign of something more serious – especially if you also have abdominal pain, bleeding and weight loss. Constipation. This typically can be due to lack of proper hydration or side effects from a medication. If your symptoms don’t improve in a few days after an increase in fluids, see your doctor. If you have any questions or if you are exhibiting some of the signs that I have outlined above you, please contact your primary care provider. Another great resource for you to consider is stoolanalyzer.com. What a shame this topic gets such a bum rap, glad we got to the bottom of it.

Signs of bowel trouble that you should not ignore: Blood in your stool: If you see even a small amount of blood in your feces on a recurring basis, see a doctor. Color change: Bowel movements are genwww.LovinLife.com


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MARCH 2019

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2019

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MARCH 2019

Hospice Is Hope

The truth about hospice BY LIN SUE COONEY I’ve had a number of friends reach out to me in the past month, asking about hospice care for a loved one. It made me realize many of us don’t really understand how it works – or we have misconceptions about what hospice is and what it definitely is not. First and foremost, it’s meant to be beautiful support for people facing an end-oflife journey. A terminal diagnosis is never easy to cope with, but it’s less scary with someone walking alongside you. Our goal is to support patient and family and help them make the most of the time that’s left.

decision. Your hospice benefit is waiting for you, whenever you need it again.

You don’t lose your doctor

All hospices are not the same

Hospice is about choice. If you have a doctor you like and trust and want involved in your care, you can have that. Hospice teams work alongside your primary care physician to develop the best plan of care for you. Together we support your goals and desires – it’s your journey.

Hospices vary in their level of experience and expertise. Medicare allows you to choose your own hospice, but if you don’t make a choice, someone – a hospital, a doctor, a facility will choose for you. Fortunately, if you’re ever dissatisfied with a hospice, all it takes is a phone call to change to another.

Don’t worry about cost Medicare Part A covers hospice care, medical equipment and medications needed to treat your illness. If you’re too young for Medicare, most insurance plans cover hospice. And if you don’t have insurance – not-for-profit Hospice of the Valley will care for you regardless of ability to pay. We turn no one away – that’s been our mission for 42 years – an important distinction from for-profit hospices.

Hospice care comes to you Our care teams come to you, wherever you live, to deliver hospice care. We are unique in that we also have 10 inpatient hospice homes, which are used to help with short-term symptom management or provide family members a break from the stress of caregiving.

You are free to change your mind You’re always free to leave hospice care to pursue additional treatments or try a new therapy. There is no rule requiring you to stay on hospice. Patients come on and sign off whenever they choose – it’s their

Hospice does not hasten death Hospice care is about controlling pain and keeping patients comfortable, not hurrying death. Our mission is to enhance every moment you have left. Often when patients stop curative treatment and start receiving hospice care, something amazing happens. The social support and nursing care stabilize their condition and quality of life actually improves. Multiple studies show that receiving hospice sooner in the disease process can often extend life. Imagine coming on hospice to live longer! Families feel supported, too, with education and counseling. Many tell us later that had they known how wonderful the care was, they would have chosen hospice care sooner. There’s no crystal ball when it comes to deciding exactly when to choose hospice, but once you do, be assured that the focus is on giving you back some control on this difficult journey, and maximizing comfort and dignity in your life.

www.LovinLife.com


The Healthy Geezer

Vision changes may be signs of eye disease BY FRED CICETTI

Q

Q. What kind of glasses should you get for low vision?

Low vision is a significant reduction in visual function that can’t be corrected by regular glasses, contact lenses, medicine or surgery. Low vision can range from moderate impairment – such as tunnel vision or blind spots – to almost total blindness. One out of every 20 people has low vision. About 135 million people around the world suffer from this impairment. Irreversible vision loss is most common among people over age 65. However, losing vision is not just part of getting older. Some normal changes occur as we get older. These changes usually don’t lead to low vision. Low vision can be caused by diseases, disorders and injuries that affect the eye. Many people with low vision have age-related macular degeneration, cataracts or glaucoma. Almost 45 percent of all cases of low vision are caused by age-related macular degeneration, which progressively destroys the central retina (macula) at the back of your eye. The retina is to your eye what film is to a camera. If you think you may have low vision, con-

sult an eye care professional who can tell the difference between normal changes in the aging eye and those caused by disease. There are many signs that indicate possible vision loss. Under normal circumstances, do you have trouble recognizing faces of people you know? Is it difficult for you to read, sew or match the color of your clothes? Do lights seem dimmer than they used to? Vision changes like these could be early warning signs of eye disease. Usually, the earlier your problem is diagnosed, the better your chances are for successful treatment and maintaining your vision. Regular eye exams should be part of your routine health care. However, if you think your vision has changed, you should see your eye care professional as soon as possible. A specialist in low vision is an optometrist or ophthalmologist who is trained to evaluate vision. This professional can prescribe visual devices and teach people how to use them. Devices and rehabilitation programs can help you adapt to vision loss. They may help you maintain your lifestyle. These devices include: adjustable lighting; large-print publications; magnifying devices; closedcircuit televisions; electronic reading machines; computer systems with voicerecognition; telescopes; and telephones, clocks and watches with large numbers. Rehabilitation programs offer a wide range of services such as low-vision evaluations and special training to use adaptive devices. They also offer guidance for making changes in your home as well as group support from others with low vision. Fred Cicetti is a freelance writer who has covered health topics since 1963. If you have a question for him, email fred@healthygeezer.com.

www.LovinLife.com

MARCH 2019

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Biz Box Three easy ways to place an ad:

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Appealing to your Good Nature I'm hoping you and I can make a small but significant difference for our veterans and community members that are less fortunate, homeless or in shelters. Should you have gently used clothing to donate to appreciative people, I would be more than happy to pick up and distribute. Just give me a call. Thank You! Jim Schmidt 480.296.3900

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Your newspaper. Your community. Your planet. Please recycle me. |

53


Valley Nursery Directory Looking for somewhere close to home for your fall gardening needs? From saplings and shovels to fertilizer and flower seeds, everything a greenthumb desires can be found at nurseries all around the Valley.

d a n I’m a I’m also a salesperson in print. I talk to about, oh, 95,000 prospective customers every month. How many prospective customers do you talk to a month?

The readers are here! Where’s your ad? 480-898-6309

SeniorLivingChecklist.com | 623.512.4567

Puzzle Answers FROM PUZZLES ON PAGE 32

19250 S. Ellsworth Rd., Queen Creek 480-987-3308

Greenfield Citrus Nursery

All Season Wholesale Growers

3775 W. Chandler Blvd., Chandler 480-648-2555

6623 S. 32nd St. #4, Phoenix 602-276-0230

Ambius Plants

4014 E. Broadway Rd. #408, Phoenix 800-581-9946

Arcadia Color Garden Nursery

Moon Valley Nurseries Moon Valley Nurseries

1875 S. Arizona Ave., Chandler 480-648-0603

Sea of Green Hydroponics

1828 N. 52nd St., Phoenix, 602-955-4500

1828 E. University Dr. #11, Tempe 480-967-2045

3815 E. Southern Ave., Phoenix 602-437-5194

3160 S. Country Club Dr., Mesa 480-892-1469

4647 E. Camelback Rd., Phoenix 602-952-8080

2900 S. Country Club Dr., Mesa 480-497- 2525

Arid Solutions Nursery

SummerWinds Nursery

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Treeland Nurseries, Inc.

Dream With Colors

Tropica Mango Rare and Exotic Tropical Fruit Tree Nursery

Moon Valley Nurseries

V&P Nurseries, Inc.

3635 E. Southern Ave., Phoenix 602-454-9371 14225 N. 7th St., Phoenix, 602-904-5792

Phoenix Desert Nursery

10520 E. Apache Trail, Apache Junction 602-576-6948 21919 E. Germann Rd., Queen Creek 480-917-9847

3525 E. Southern Ave., Phoenix 602-243-7064

Whitfill Nursery

6420 S. 28th St., Phoenix, 602-304-0551

West Valley

6441 S. 32nd St., Phoenix, 602-434-5641

A & P Nursery

17826 N. Tatum Blvd., Phoenix 602-867-1822

Elgin Nursery & Tree Farm

Plant Stand of Arizona

Shamus O Leary Tropicals SummerWinds Nursery

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2558 Lehi Rd., Mesa, 480-830-8000

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1619 S. Arizona Ave., Chandler 480-963-1061

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Western Tree Co.

3401 E. Southern Ave., Phoenix 602-243-6125

Whitfill Nursery

824 E. Glendale Ave., Phoenix 602-944-8479

Whitfill Nursery

820 N. Cooper Rd., Gilbert, 480-892-2712

2645 W. Baseline Rd., Mesa, AZ 480-839-5362

8606 W. McDowell Rd., Phoenix 623-936-1100

Moon Valley Nurseries

11320 W. Indian School Rd., Avondale 623-242-0370

SummerWinds Nursery

6426 W. Bell Rd., Glendale, 623-979-5296

2647 E. Southern Ave., Phoenix 602-268-9096

Scottsdale Harper’s Landscape Co. and Gardening Centre 2529 N. Hayden Rd., Scottsdale 480-946-3481

Moon Valley Nurseries

18047 N. Tatum Blvd., Phoenix 480-374-3964

East Valley A & P Nursery

6129 E. Brown Rd., Mesa, 480-396-8800

A & P Plant Nurseries

2601 E. Baseline Rd., Gilbert 480-892-7939

Arbor Care

5235 S. Kyrene Rd., Tempe, 480-491-5123

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Is Your Roof

A Little Ruff? Your Residential and Commercial Roofing Contractor Has You Covered!

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ROC #’s: 061127 - 287012 - 198009 - 082024 - 318282

MARCH 2019

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u O Y n a C h t r a Where On e ? e m i t Y u B Y l aCtual IGINAL THE VALLEY’S OR NURSERY GROWER DIRECT

Waiting s r ea y e t s a W y h W groW for young trees to When We can install mature specimens to uit and fr e iv g , e d a h s e id v o pr asis! create an instant o

SHADE TREES Monster 48” Box Trees 1000’s to Choose From

1500

$

From

• Ash • Elm • Mesquite • Palo Verde • Pistachio • Pines

UP TO 25’ TALL

Planted & Guaranteed • Compare at $3000+

PALMS Arizona’s Best Selection Grower-Direct From Our Farms Dates • Bismarkia California and Mexican Fan Cycads • Blues And More!

CITRUS TREES BIG 5-6 Year Old Many With Fruit!

Includes Dwarf Trees: Lemon • Lime Grapefruit • Oranges

119

$

15 GAL.

CASH & CARRY

• Lemon • Lime • Tangerine • Tangelo • Oranges • Grapefruit & more!

PLANTED & GUARANTEED

ORCHARD SPECIAL Three 5-6 Year Old Trees

HUGE 24” Box

299

$

399 GIANT

$

36” Box

699

$

WORTH THE DRIVE FROM ANYWHERE! VALLEYWIDE DELIVERY JUST $75! MAIN TREE FARM 2647 E. Southern Ave. (Phx) 602-268-9096

EAST VALLEY Cooper (Stapley) & Guadalupe 480-892-2712

NORTH PHX /SCOTTSDALE 824 E. Glendale Ave. 602-944-8479

SALE ENDS 3/31/19

Price is good with ad only.

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