Showing posts with label Gulf Shores. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Gulf Shores. Show all posts

Monday, July 20, 2009

Gulf State Park Pier - Soft Opening TODAY


July 20, 2009 - Orange Beach, AL (OBA) - The Alabama Gulf State Park Pier will have a soft opening today, July 20, 2009, at 11am.

The Grand Opening takes place at 7am on Thursday, July 23rd. Officials from the State of Alabama will be present at the grand opening ceremony.

Pier Related Links from The OBA Website:

Gulf State Park Pier Information Page

June 30, 2009 Article Announcing Pier Opening Date

Thursday, January 22, 2009

Educational Foundation Sponsors Interviewing Seminar for GSHS Seniors


Photo & Article by Clayton Wallace

Seniors at Gulf Shores High School received pointers on how to interview Jan. 8 during a presentation sponsored by the Alabama Gulf Coast Area Educational Foundation. Foundation 1st Vice President Nick Wilmott, a real estate broker, was the presenter.

“No matter where you’re going after high school, you’ll have to interview for it,” Wilmott told the students. “Whether it is college, a real estate company or the military, you’ll have to interview for the position you want.”

Approximately 50 percent of the students said they had been the subject of at least one interview already. Wilmott told them that when they go in for an interview, first impressions are very important. He likened to meeting the parents of a new boyfriend or girlfriend. “When you meet the parents of a boyfriend or girlfriend the first time, you want to make a good first impression,” he said. “You want to work as hard during an interview as you do for those parents.”

Wilmott had several more pointers for the students, including the importance of being “comfortable but professional” in their appearance, asking questions of the interviewer, eye contact during the interview, elaborating on answers to avoid one word answers and one more he considered of the utmost importance. “Never be late for an interview,” he said. “That’s a big turnoff.”

Wilmott used several members of the foundation to illustrate how not to dress for an interview. “I know we are casual down here, but t-shirts, big earrings, shorts, flip-flops and Crocs should be avoided at all costs,” he said, as Foundation members Jimmy Ryall and Mindy Stringfield casually walked through the gym wearing just those garments. He also used Foundation members Lance and Krista Alexander to illustrate appropriate clothing to wear in an interview.

Wilmott told the students that after graduation, they have the chance that comes along few times during a lifetime. “Just because you have a certain reputation in high school doesn’t mean it has to follow you,” he said. “Take this opportunity to reinvent yourself. Find out what you like and really enjoy. Then go for it.”

The Foundation is comprised of area educators and volunteers who work to raise money and otherwise assist public schools, students and teachers in Gulf Shores and Orange Beach to enhance the educational opportunities afforded them by our county Board of Education. This is accomplished through scholarships, awards and seminars.

For more information on how to become a member of the Foundation, see their website at www.agcaef.com, or call President Steve Jones at 609-5292.

Thursday, January 15, 2009

Board approves new GSHS football coach - Baldwin County NOW

Board approves new GSHS football coach - Baldwin County NOW - A Gulf Coast Information Source for South Alabama: "GULF SHORES, Ala. — The school board unanimously approved the hiring of Mark Freeman as the new athletic director and head coach at Gulf Shores High School during a special meeting held Tuesday morning."

Freeman, who will be the third head football coach in school history, was not present at the meeting.

He led Bessemer Academy to four AISA state championships and two state runner-up finishes in a six-year span from 2001-2007.

Along with four state championships, Freeman led the Rebels to seven straight area championships and coached 12 players who were finalists for the Alabama Sports Writers Association Player of the Year award.

He was named the AISA Coach of the Year and ASWA Coach of the Year four times.

Sunday, January 11, 2009

Christmas Boat Parade Winners


January 11, 2009-- Orange Beach / Gulf Shores, AL-- The 23rd annual "Nautical Night of Lights" Christmas boat parade, sponsored by the Alabama Gulf Coast Area Chamber of Commerce, featured 17 decorated boats. The parade route began at LuLu's at Homeport Marina to the Intracoastal Waterway to Zeke's Landing Marina in Orange Beach.

Each boat was judged on a combination of creativity, lighting, theme, music and crew attire.

Following the parade, participants and guests gathered at the Down Under Seafood and Oyster Bar at Zeke's Landing for the post-parade party and awards presentation.

In the "Power Boat 33 feet and Above" division, first place was awarded to Capt. Craig Kayda and crew aboard the Independence. Second place was awarded to Capt. Mark Mallet and crew aboard the Bama Lady. Third place was awarded to Capt. Seth Wilson and crew aboard the Rip Tide.

In the "Power Boat 32 feet and Under" division, first place was awarded to Capt. Mike Authemant and crew aboard Da Boat. Second place was awarded to Capt. Mike and Capt. Lori DeAngelis and crew aboard the Dolphin Queen. Third place was awarded to Capt. Bob Pitts and crew aboard Hurricane.

In the Sailboat Division, first place was awarded to Capt. Adam Langston and crew aboard On Call. Second place was awarded to Capt. Robert Clark and crew aboard Leave A Message. Third place was awarded to Capt. John Bozeman and crew on Caddy Wampus.

The Alabama Gulf Coast Area Chamber of Commerce, established in 1981, is a 1,000-member strong business organization serving Gulf Shores, Orange Beach and Fort Morgan.


Friday, December 26, 2008

Requests for aid increasing on island

Layoffs, pay cuts hit workers during holidays
Friday, December 26, 2008
By GUY BUSBY
Staff Reporter

While shoppers filled stores in the last hours before Christmas, services agencies were experiencing another holiday rush, and business for them was booming.

With more residents laid off and some still with jobs facing cuts in employment hours, requests for help along the Gulf Coast have doubled from the same time last year, said Linda Chappell of the Christian Service Center. The center, a United Way agency, operates year-round, but requests have been heavy this season, she said.

Mobile Press-Register



Monday, December 22, 2008

Tuesday, December 9, 2008

Friday, December 5, 2008

State Auditor Stacey Pickering announces more Katrina fraud arrests

Peter Howard, 48, and Robert Smith, 52, were indicted on charges of Home Repair Fraud. Howard lives in Gulf Shores, Ala. and Smith in Theodore, Ala. After being arrested by the State Auditor’s Office, both were processed by the Jackson County Sheriff’s Office. Bond was set at $10,000 each. Howard and Smith were doing business as Pelican Bay Custom Homes. The complaint filed states that Pelican Bay Custom Homes was paid $284,188 to construct a modular home on property in Pascagoula. The owner claims that the modular home was delivered but never assembled. Howard and Smith were both arrested by the State Auditor’s Office in June 2008 for felony false pretense after taking a deposit for a modular home that was never constructed.

Click here for the full article.

Monday, December 1, 2008

Alabama Grown at Lulu's

Monday, December 01, 2008
By RYAN DEZEMBER
Staff Reporter

GULF SHORES — Getting local seafood was never a problem for Lulu's at Homeport Marina.

And since this spring, the restaurant has bought its beef from a family farm near Clayton, Ala. Now, Lulu's management is thinking about how it might acquire produce from Alabama's fields.

Each year, for example, the restaurant buys about 61,000 tomatoes — 39,000 green, 22,000 red — at a price of about 65 cents apiece, general manager Johnny Fisher said. That works out to nearly $40,000 worth of tomatoes.

"So," he wondered, "would that be enough to get someone to build a hothouse and start growing tomatoes?"

"I would say so — yes," said Don Wambles, director of the Farmers Market Authority, a state agency charged with promoting Alabama-grown foods.

For the last two years, the agency has pursued an initiative to match farmers with chefs. It now helps about 40 restaurateurs find locally grown ingredients.

Mobile Press-Register




Sunday, November 30, 2008

Cheeseburger in paradise

A sizzling experiment that could help save Alabama's small farms (And it tastes good)

Sunday, November 30, 2008
By RYAN DEZEMBER
Staff Reporter

CLAYTON, Ala. — In January of last year, the phone rang at Boutwell Farms, an upstart family operation near the Georgia line, specializing in organic grains, free-range pork and grass-fed beef.

On the line was Johnny Fisher, general manager of Lulu's at Homeport Marina, the well-known, 450-seat Gulf Shores restaurant.

Fisher, wanting to wean Lulu's off of the nondescript patties at the center of its most popular menu item, was searching for beef that was tastier, healthier and regionally produced. And he needed enough of it each year to make more than 70,000 cheeseburgers.

Mobile Press-Register



Wednesday, November 26, 2008

Rare Tiger Cubs Visit South Baldwin Regional Imaging Center


Nov. 26, 2008 - Gulf Shores, AL -- Apata & Yeti, Snowy White Bengal Tiger cubs, paid a brief visit to the South Baldwin Regional Imaging Center in Gulf Shores yesterday. Courtesy of the Alabama Gulf Coast Zoo (The Little Zoo That Could).

Click here for more photos, to read about these beautiful & rare tigers and to learn how you can have your own "Tiger Encounter".



Monday, November 24, 2008

Gulf Coast, Ala.: A mecca of food, water, quiet beaches


By Christine Tibbetts

Water, water every which-way around Alabama’s Gulf coast gave my October beach vacation more dimensions than imagined.

Going to the beach generally offers up an inter coastal waterway as well as an ocean but this stretch of Alabama also has five bays plus the big Mobile Bay, several lakes and a lagoon named Little which looked pretty big to me.

Want to stay on the water? Better be specific when you book a condo or rent a house since there are so many kinds of water to enjoy.

Best I could tell, they all lend to sitting and staring, strolling and resting up to get ready for the next meal. The food is every bit as abundant as the waters and even though I concentrated on seafood every lunch and dinner, I saw plenty of beef choices on the menus.

Gulf Shores and Orange Beach are the big town names in Alabama’s enormous Baldwin County; Magnolia Springs is the tiny treasure and I never got to Foley to check it out.

I did get out in the waters, looking at the Gulf and bays from two of the many boating options.

Full article in the Tifton Gazette



Ala. coast summer room revenue about equal to 2007


By GARRY MITCHELL , 11.24.08, 10:20 AM EST

Alabama Gulf coast tourism officials are bracing for the effects of the financial meltdown on next year's vacation season, but were grateful this year's summer lodging revenue held close to the 2007 record.

They also don't expect to see a significant drop-off in "snowbird" arrivals this January.

About half of the visitors to Alabama beach resorts this summer came from the Southeast - more than a third of them from Alabama - and, despite high fuel prices on the drive down, they spent about the same on lodging as last summer.

Full Article on Forbes.com



Tuesday, September 23, 2008

Wednesday, September 10, 2008

Gulf Shores council hires new city administrator

Steve Garman's previous jobs include city manager posts in Pensacola and Decatur, Ill.

Wednesday, September 10, 2008

GULF SHORES — By a unanimous vote Monday, 66-year-old Steve Garman, a former city manager in Pensacola and Decatur, Ill., was hired as the city's next administrator.

Garman said Tuesday that he will arrive in Gulf Shores today to begin looking for a place to live while he sells his home in central Illinois. He will report to City Hall on Oct. 1 and spend a month learning the ropes of his new job, taking over the day-to-day management of Gulf Shores when the next administration assumes office in early November, said Councilman and Mayor-elect Robert Craft.

"I'm very pleased the council asked me to join them," Garman said. "I'm excited to get started."

Mobile Press-Register



Friday, July 25, 2008

Beach school boards will disband for now

Hollinger, Craft say resolution paves way for reconciliation
Friday, July 25, 2008
By JOSH BEAN
Staff Reporter

LOXLEY — The appointed school boards in Gulf Shores and Orange Beach will be dissolved, according to a resolution approved Thursday by the Baldwin County Board of Education, and the countywide system affirms the cities' ability to restart the city panels at some point in the future.

The two municipal school boards could be disbanded by the end of August, said Gulf Shores Councilman Robert Craft, who has been intimately involved in negotiations with the county school system over the last 15 months.

"I think this is the end of the Island School System," Craft said Thursday night.

Mobile Press-Register



Saturday, June 7, 2008

Three gill nets hauled from Little Lagoon

Officers charge Foley man with illegal fishing
Saturday, June 07, 2008
By RYAN DEZEMBER
Staff Reporter

State conservation officers this week confiscated three gill nets in Gulf Shores' Little Lagoon, where the practice is banned, and charged two men with illegal fishing, authorities said.

Conservation enforcement officer Mark Phillips said Friday that the local Marine Resources office was tipped off about a gill netter plying Little Lagoon early Tuesday. When one officer spotted a truck belonging to the suspect parked along the estuary, others put their boat in and went searching for the fishermen at about 4 a.m.

"We eased the boat down to the west end and we saw the boat's spotlight," Phillip said.

Four people — three men and a woman — were aboard a 20-foot skiff tending to a 1,500-foot-long gill net, Phillips said. The officers made them haul in the net and pluck the fish — mostly croakers — from it before they were apprehended, Phillips said.

Mobile Press-Register




Wednesday, May 14, 2008

Beach cities search for administrators

Orange Beach expects to interview next week, Gulf Shores' consultant culling candidates
Wednesday, May 14, 2008
By RYAN DEZEMBER
Staff Reporter

More than 50 people have applied to become Orange Beach's next city administrator, and Mayor Pete Blalock said elected officials hope to begin interviewing the top applicants as early as next week.

Meanwhile, in Gulf Shores, Mayor G.W. "Billy" Duke III said city officials are waiting on a consultant they've hired to bring them a docket of qualified candidates to vet for that city's administrator job.

On Monday evening, the Orange Beach City Council met in executive session to discuss some of the more promising prospects to replace Jeff Moon, who left last month to take a city manager's position in the Atlanta suburb of Woodstock.

Moon was hired by Orange Beach in 2001 after holding ad ministrative posts in Riverdale, Ga., and Daleville, which is near Dothan.

Blalock said the council was still whittling down the field of applicants and would probably choose five or six to interview.

The Orange Beach mayor said the City Council may hire someone before the Aug. 26 municipal elections, if the right person is available. But, Blalock said, if elected officials complete the interview process and no one stands out, they may turn to a headhunting firm, as neighboring Gulf Shores has, to cull candidates.

Mobile Press-Register



Monday, April 28, 2008

The Hangout harks back to pre-condo days at Gulf

By KATHY JUMPER
Real Estate Editor

Developer Shaul Zislin wanted to bring back the beach the one before condominiums lined the Gulf, when one-piece swimsuits were sexy, the only beer served was root beer, burgers were 25 cents, the DJ was a jukebox and cars had muscles.

His latest venture, The Hangout on the beach at Alabama 59 and 182, pays tribute to the original, open air Hangout that graced the Gulf Shores beach scene in the late 1950s and early 1960s.

"You can't believe all the calls I've had from people who remember The Hangout," he said as he pointed to a worn, red buoy on the wall given to the restaurant by one of the original lifeguards. There's even a Hangout reunion scheduled there next weekend.

The 17,000-square-foot restaurant, which sits on 2.5 prime acres, opens Friday. The restaurant will employ 250 and features three outdoor bars, a 50-foot tower with a large movie screen for nostalgic beach movies and an outdoor stage for live entertainment.

Click here to read the full article from the Mobile Press-Register.




Friday, April 25, 2008

Food Detective: Lulu's Signature L.A. Caviar Fits Her Restaurant To A Pea


Food Detective: Getting recipes from area restaurants for your favorite dishes

[Lulu's At Homeport Marina, 200 East 25th Ave., Gulf Shores, 251-967-5858.]

An e-mailed request turned the Food Detective's attention to south Alabama in search of a recipe for a black-eyed pea dip.

The quest was prompted by an unsigned note from a reader who told about his family's recent "wonderful weekend in Gulf Shores" when they had "a chance to go to the new Lulu's location along the intracoastal waterway."

"I know it's been there for a couple of years now, but this was the first time for us, and we couldn't have had a better time," he wrote. "I couldn't get enough of the L.A. caviar, so simple, but so delicious. "Do you happen to have the recipe for that? I would be most grateful."


As luck would have it, Lulu's owner, Lucy Buffett, was willing to share the recipe for one of her eatery's signature items that she often makes at home.

Click here to read the full article from the Birmingham News.