Monday, July 30, 2012
Beyond Whole Foods
At the formal announcement of the Whole Foods deal last
week, Howard Hughes displayed a board showing some of the other proposed
changes in the newly christened Lakefront neighborhood of "downtown" Columbia.
In addition to two new parking garages, it appears that the existing parking
deck around Copeland's is targeted for redevelopment.
Curiously, though other existing buildings are clearly
shown, the Copelands building is not.
It also appears that the road passing through the Hug statue
area is back in. You may recall that this connecting road was opposed by the CA Board of Directors back in 2007 and subsequent plans by General Growth, Howard Hughes predecessor, showed
it taken out in response to the outcry,
I should note that the display board noted that “All plans
for future retail, housing and parking structures are approximate and for
illustrative purposes only.”
That being said it appears that this little connecting road
is now literally back in the picture.
Sunday, July 29, 2012
A Hike Taken
I was restless today. I felt the need for outdoor time. At
first we considered attending the German Festival but it was indoors.
We decided to head for the woods instead.
After a brief discussion of some of our more familiar treks,
I mentioned the Middle Patuxent Environmental Area.
Mama Wordbones had never been to the Middle Patuxent Environmental Area so it
was settled. I really wasn’t all that surprised Mama Wordbones, a lifelong HoCo
resident and former Girl Scout volunteer had never been to the MPEA. I think it may qualify as one of HoCo’s best
little secrets. Today, while on the 2.4 mile Wildlife Loop Trail for a little over an hour,
we encountered a total of six people and two dogs. There are places where the
trail shrinks to a rather narrow single track and you realize how infrequently
this place is visited.
It was a perfect day to be out there.
Since I first visited MPEA about eight years ago, the
trail network has expanded with the South Wind Trail, adding another three
miles for the younger, more adventurous types. The 1,021 acre park stretches
from Route 108 all the way down to the new Robinson Nature Center on Cedar Lane . I
suspect the trails will one day connect with the nature center too.
Getting There: Take
Route 108 (Clarksville Pike) to Trotter Road . Travel about mile and look
for the small white gravel parking area on your left. It’s easy to miss. At the
trailhead grab a guide in the unmarked black box by the information board. It
contains a map and lots of interesting information about the habitat you’ll
pass through. The park closes at dusk. I’d like to say it’s free but the truth
is that your taxes pay this so that's all the more reason you should get out and enjoy
it.
And One Last Thing: I’ve always thought those moments of nature you
get at the end of CBS Sunday Morning provide a nice wrap up,so with apologies to CBS, I offer these thirty
one seconds in the life of one of our HoCo loco rivers.
Saturday, July 28, 2012
Why We're Here
As we were getting started with our podcast at The Mall
yesterday, an elderly lady stopped to examine our show banner as she passed by.
At this point we already had our headphones on so we just nodded at her when
she then turned to consider us.
The banner did not provide enough information for her. “What
is this?” she asked.
Paul was closest to her. He took off his headset. “It’s a
podcast about local issues,” he explained.
“But why are you here?” she wanted to know.
I wanted to say “because we got thrown out of the coffee
shop.”
It was good to be back.
After taking an extended summer break we returned to The
Mall yesterday afternoon for the 70th episode of “and then there’s that…”. Appropriately enough
our guest was Michelle Jose, the Marketing Manager for the Mall. She’s got alot of things going on in her world right now, beginning next month with the
opening of the SA Elite store. This will be the first east coast store for the
new retail concept from The Sports Authority. We also talked about the plans to
open up the LL Bean plaza with new retail and the unlikelihood that there will ever
be another flash mob in The Mall.
Not inside perhaps but maybe with this new outdoor plaza…
It was a big local news week too. We talked about WholeFoods, Allen Dyer, gambling, the general plan, Clarksville , BGE, and even our
old coffee shop.
It’s been a long time since we started in Lakeside
back in 2009. We’ve been in The Mall since November of 2010.
Michelle said The Mall likes us there. We like it there too
and that’s why we’re there.
So there.
...and you can listen to the 70th episode of “and then there’s
that…” here.
Thursday, July 26, 2012
Victory Lap
This morning I asked Paul Skalny if he was going to attend
the Howard Hughes / Whole Foods announcement ceremony today.
“No. I already know what they’re going say.”
Excellent point. No sooner had HowChow broken the story late yesterday then
the story went viral. At that point events got a little ahead themselves. The Whole Foods cat was out of the bag before the announcement invites even got sent out. HowChow picked up the big clue from Marketwatch in a transcript of Whole Foods third quarter earnings call. A list of future
openings was included and Columbia ,
Maryland was among the list of newly signed leases.
Where else could it be?
Anyway, the two companies decided to go ahead and have their moment regardless. I went, not so much for the actual announcement, but more to see friends and foes
alike gathered in the same room.
The only notable absence was Alan Klein. He would have loved
it too. The’re were lots of press seeking reactions from "the people of Columbia ."
Liz Bobo attended as did Cindy Coyle and Alex Heikimian.
Cindy and Alex have not exactly been staunch supporters of the Town Center
redevelopment program. They were all smiles today though.
Ken came to bask in the moment. This is a big win for his
business cred and a nice little spot on the evening news to boot.
In a nod to Columbia
history John said that the building will still be called The Rouse Building,
though that sign will be considerably smaller than the Whole Foods sign.
I’m excited and yet somewhat saddened by the imminent transformation of
a building that its architect once described as an “elegant warehouse.” I had the
pleasure to work in the building in the early eighties. Although my office was
on the ground floor I had friends on the second and third floors too. It was an
easy place to wander around.
After the announcement this morningI slipped back down to the ground
level to take a final picture of the pigs. The pigs fountain was a focal point
of the ground floor dwellers back in the day. I wonder where it will end up.
The good news is that, as part the massive interior makeover that
John is undertaking with the lakefront building, Frank Gehry will be bought back to Columbia to get his input. John’s planning on having him take a look Merriweather as well since he designed that too. It would be very cool if Howard Hughes had some of Gehry's reactions to the new downtown taped and posted on You Tube.
As I was leaving I was handed a Whole Foods reusable shopping bag with cookies and a bottle of sparkling water. I’m keeping the
cookies and the water but I’m giving the bag to HowChow for Mrs. HowChow. I hear she’s
a big fan.
Wednesday, July 25, 2012
Whole Lotta HoCo Shakin’ Goin’ On
![]() |
Whole Foods Market , Columbia Town Center
It’s official. Whole Foods Markets has inked a deal to
occupy what amounts to the second and third floors of the former Rouse Company headquarters in
The four story building will now be a three story building but that's another story...
It’s a grand slam for John DeWolf and Howard Hughes. Back
in March he was in the bottom of the ninth with this deal.
When you couple this with the announcement of GGP’s plan to
reopen the main entrance of The Mall and the previously announced Metropolitan project, you get the sense that the long awaited
But wait there’s more…
|
It’s not just Town
Center that’s happening
either. The former Rocky Run Tap & Grill on Dobbin Road has been gutted, stripped
down to the studs as it transforms itself into the Columbia Ale House. This is
a big job, a large investment and very good news for HoCo beer drinkers.
There’s a whole lotta shakin goin on in HoCo this summer.
Tuesday, July 24, 2012
HoCo Open Mike Night
I attended the county execs Public Forum at the Robinson Nature Center
last night. I figured it would be a good opportunity to find out what was on
the minds of the HoCo locos. Ken had key department heads, including the police
and fire chiefs, on hand to address specific areas of residents concern.
So what are those areas of concerns?
I arrived a little late but from what I heard they included a
wide range of issues including speed cams, growth in North Laurel, a high school for
Elkridge, the shooting in Aurora ,
Colorado and defense spending.
It seems that no topic was considered too big for our exec.
Ken let Bill McMahon speak about the shooting. Bill lauded
the response of the Aurora
police and rescue units, pointing out that the police were on the scene within ninety seconds. Granted that was fast but for the people in that theatre, those ninety seconds probably seemed like an eternity.
Folks from the High Ridge community in Scaggsville turned
out in force to implore the exec to slow down the development occurring in their community.
They pointed out that new home developments are twice as dense as the developments
built in the nineties. One resident even suggested that the addition of townhome
projects has led to increased crime. All I could think of was “Welcome to Smart Growth.”
Ken expressed concern
and said that “he wants to look at this more.”
Marc Norman got a turn with the mike. After complementing
the exec on his stewardship of the county and the broadband initiative, he proceeded to complain about how a
certain unnamed county employee seemed to take pleasure in stymieing his
attempts to get information, specifically about the activities of his nemesis,
the Mangione family. I got the sense that Ken found Marc’s diatribe rather
tiresome. I snapped the following pictures as Marc unwound his dark conspiracy theories for the exec.
Howard Johnson, representing the Greater Elkridge Community Association, followed Marc. He thanked the exec for his help in keeping the
intermodal terminal out of Hanover
and then proceeded to make the case for more county projects, including a high
school and a traffic light at US Route 1 and Ducketts Lane . Ken reminded everyone that
the county recently purchased Belmont in
Elkridge and that construction of the first phase of Troy Hill Park in Elkridge is slated to begin this
September.
The last speaker of the evening was Ken Schafer, a resident
of Turf Valley Overlook in Ellicott City . Mr.
Schafer wants the county to place speed bumps in his community but was told that a neighbor “who is
well connected in the county” would block any attempts to get them.
Ken told Ken that “nobody is well connected” in HoCo.
That got a laugh.
Monday, July 23, 2012
General Alexander and the Hackers
General Keith Alexander, Director of NSA and Commander of
the U.S. Cyber Command will travel to Las
Vegas next week to speak at Def Con, the 20th annual hacker
conclave. According to this story by Timothy W. Coleman in Intelnews.org, the
gathering “has become a Mecca
of sorts for those interested in groundbreaking developments and nefarious
possibilities within the computer security and cyber realm.”
It could present an awkward moment for the four star general.
“Attendees are encouraged to make a scene and yell out that
they spotted a Fed. An interview of the suspect will take place and an informal
vote will be conducted, as to the likely veracity of the attendee being a
so-called Fed. It’s meant to be in good fun and if the Fed is ousted a
tee shirt is awarded to the accuser (“I spotted the fed!”) and to the Fed (“I
am the fed!”).”
I’ll bet he gets a t-shirt.
Protection Racket
Last week Bill Mackey told the HoCo Planning Board that the
Route 1 corridor, which comprises less than 10% of the county’s land area, accounts
for 30% of the county’s jobs. He said the goal of the general plan is to protect
this major economic engine.
We haven’t done a very good of this so far. Two years ago
the county council voted to rezone the largest remaining tract of industrial
land in the Route 1 corridor to Transit Oriented Development. The rezoning
allowed the 122 acre parcel to be developed with a mix of residential, office
and retail with residential comprising the lions share of the land.
As if that wasn’t bad enough, now Preston Scheffenacker Properties is asking the county to permit even more residential development on
the property at the expense of the commercial development. According to this story by Sara Toth in Explore Howard the developer “is proposing an additional
822 units be included in the plan.”
This would be in addition to 954 residential units already
approved. Left unsaid in the article is what impact these additional
residential units would have on the commercial portions of the project. My
guess is that they would be significantly scaled back to make room this
residential expansion.
So much for “protecting” this important economic engine!
Friday, July 20, 2012
HoCo Plan 2030
In his presentation of the HoCo 2030 General Plan to the
Planning Board last night, Bill Mackey shared insights to the challenges facing
the growing county. Bill is the Chief of the HoCo Planning Department Division
of Comprehensive and Community Development.
According to Bill, 41% of our current population of 287,000
is made up of minorities. This is a significant increase from 27% in 2000. We’re
getting older too. 29% of HoCo locos are from the Baby Boom generation. Today,
roughly 10% of the population is 65 or older. By 2030 that is expected to
almost double.
I don’t plan to be one of them. In 2030 I’ll be in my seventies and my general plan is to be in a place “where there ‘aint no snow” by then. Then again, if these recent warming trends continue that could
well be HoCo.
Our regional transportation network is being “challenged” by
this growth. Today, HoCo locos log 3.8 billion vehicle miles annually. 90% of trips to work, school and shopping are done by car.
To turn that statistic around we’re going to need a lot more
walkable communities than Maple Lawn and Columbia Town
Center . A bicycle superhighway and an expanded pathway network will help but likely won’t make
that much of a dent in those 3.8 billion vehicle miles.
Solving just this single issue will take innovative thinking
and bold leadership. I hope we’re up to challenge lest we drown in our own success.
Natures Flash
Last night, as the thunderstorm rolled though Ellicott City , I made my first attempt to photograph
lightning. Sitting on my front porch and steadying my camera I tried to get the
timing right.
I pretty much failed.
On the other hand I was able to capture that brief moment
when lightning’s flash illuminates the night.
This picture was taken at 10:39:27 PM
Thursday, July 19, 2012
Not an Acceptable Word
While attending my college reunion last month, my buddy Stan
got me started on Words With Friends. Though the game has been around for a few
years now, I’d never played before. Stan warned me that it was addicting. He
was right.
Like the game of Scrabble, the money letters are Q, Z and J.
Last night, playing against my old fraternity brother, I had a chance to put
the game away with the word “Nazi.”
“Nazi is not an acceptable word,” the game told me.
Indeed.
Wednesday, July 18, 2012
Taco Tuesday & Telephones
Last night was one of those rare occasions when I found myself
alone for dinner. I was actually in the mood to be around people so I drove
down to the Pure Wine Café on Main
Street and grabbed one of the last seats at the bar.
The small café was packed on a Tuesday night and I soon discovered why. It was
Taco Tuesday.
For ten bucks on Tuesdays, Pure Wine offers your pick of two
soft tacos. These are no gas stations tacos either. I had the Mediterranean
Shrimp & Chorizo and the Cajun Style Vegetarian and each was equally delicious
in their own right. They also offered a Southeast Asian Grilled Chicken, Latin
American Pork Shoulder and a Rockfish taco prepared California Style with
roasted red pepper aioli, jicama-cabbage slaw and pickled chili.
I understand now why the place was packed.
I like sitting at the bar at Pure Wine too. It’s intimate configuration
facilitates impromptu conversations with your fellow patrons. Each time I’ve
visited Pure Wine by myself I’ve ended up meeting new people and learning new
things. Last night was no exception.
Earlier yesterday I was in The Mall for a haircut and ran
into the Marshmallow Man sitting in Starbucks. He told me it was his birthday.
After wishing MM a happy birthday we talked a bit about the upcoming BOE
election. It is no secret that Marshmallow Man holds a pretty low opinion of
candidate Ann De Lacy and I happen to share that sentiment. I told him I’d be
going out of my way to promote the better candidates as we begin to get closer
to the election. As I see it, five of the six candidates look pretty solid.
Right outside of where we standing the old public phone
kiosk is being dismantled. These kiosks have been fixtures at the mall entrances
since The Mall opened in 1971 and were once the critical link for mall rats needing a ride home. They have now joined the ranks of technologies castoffs.
It would be nice if they’d replace them with something like this.
Tuesday, July 17, 2012
HHC Continuing Whole Foods Courtship
It aint over until it’s over. It appears that the deal to
bring Whole Foods Markets to the former Rouse Company headquarters building in Columbia Town Center is not dead…yet anyway. Despite the
pronouncement back in March that the deal had effectively “stalled,” John DeWolf, Howard Hughes Senior Vice President, has continued to aggressively pursue the specialty grocer.
Last month a knowledgeable source informed me that
negotiations were ongoing and now John seems to have confirmed that. A
slide presentation given to the Columbia Council in an open meeting last week included
pictures of the Rouse building with the Whole Foods logo gracing the façade. He made
it clear to the council that they were still trying to get a deal done.
So what’s the deal?
Why is this taking so long?
I was thinking that maybe Whole Foods just isn’t feeling the HoCo loco love yet. I mean look at how we gushed over Wegmans, years before they
even opened! If I were Whole Foods I’d be wanting to feel a little of that love
too.
Where’s the “I Want a
Columbia Whole Foods” facebook page?
This sounds like a job for HowChow…
Monday, July 16, 2012
Local Beer
Although it’s been in Halethorpe for over fifteen years, we
just got around to visiting the Heavy Seas brewery this weekend.
Heavy Seas is the rebranded Clipper City Brewing
Company which is the largest brewer in the region and it’s just over the
border from HoCo.
I wouldn’t say that it is easy to find. The brewery
is housed in a nondescript warehouse tucked back in an older industrial park on
the far side of the train tracks.
It’s fun too. The tour begins in the tasting room and guests
are encouraged to bring their beer along on the tour of the warehouse and brewery. Kelly,
our tour guide, was animated and enthusiastic about the brewery, beer, and Baltimore .
Sunday, July 15, 2012
Local Coffee
Last Friday, at the Colosseum Gyms' member appreciation
barbecue, I struck up a casual conversation by the deserts with Patti Griffin. Predictably
our small talk turned to work.
“What do you do for a living?” I asked.
“I work in a family business,” she replied.
It’s an old family business too. Pfefferkorn Coffee has been
roasted in Baltimore
for over a hundred years. Patti is the daughter of the family patriarch; Louis
Pfefferkorn, Sr. She told me that her grandfather once owned a sizable farm in western HoCo. “He
moved out here after selling his original farm behind what is
now Edmonson Village Shopping Center in Baltimore ." The business needed a farm for the horses for their delivery wagons. Before they
focused exclusively on coffee the family was in the grocery business.
It’s good coffee too but you can’t buy it in HoCo right now.
The last HoCo retailer that carried Pfefferkorns coffee was Yates Grocery on Main Street in Ellicott City . Last month the store owner, Betty Jacobs, announced that Yates would be closing after 127 years.
“We hope to have a couple of new retailers in Howard County
soon,” Patti told me, “and we also plan to make it available online.”
Labels:
Closings,
Ellicott City,
The History Channel,
The Retail Scene
Friday, July 13, 2012
We Interrupt This Podcast
We bagged the podcast today. This wasn't a decision we made lightly. Since November of 2009 we’ve produced 69 shows. If you do the math you’ll
find that we’ve kept to our biweekly schedule fairly religiously.
Still, things happen. It was my job to line up our guest for
this weeks show and by Tuesday I still hadn’t done that. All three of us try to
juggle doing the podcast with our real jobs and in this instance I simply didn’t
juggle very well. No one got upset. In fact, Dave and Paul eagerly gave me a pass. I
suspect they were ready for a little summer break and my dropped ball provided
the perfect opening.
So "and then there’s that…" is on vacation this week but all
of our old shows are still available online if you still need that hyper loco
HoCo fix. One of my recent faves was Episode 58 with Roger Caplan and Chris Oxenham. You can find that podcast here.
We’ll be back with Episode 70 in two weeks.
Rescue Charge
Yesterday, at Arundel Mills, I ran across this free cell
phone charging station sponsored by Toyota .
My first instinct was to dismiss this as nothing short of gimmick. I just couldn’t
imagine anyone standing there for an hour or more waiting for their phone to
recharge and it certainly wouldn’t be wise to leave a phone charging while you
went off and shopped.
Then I read the instructions. This is an emergency charger. Its
only purpose is giving your phone a temporary boost with a fifteen minute
charge. I immediately thought of my teenaged daughter. It is easy to imagine
how a day at the mall, texting and talking with abandon, could drain the juice
out of a phone and leave her incommunicado. A fifteen visit with the charging
station would be enough to restore her mobile lifeline.
It’d be nice to see one of these in every mall.
Thursday, July 12, 2012
No Post Day
I spent today playing host and driver for Peanuts birthday
activities. That left little time to drop in a few words in here at To2C. I
barely had enough discretionary time to just read the morning paper.
So instead of my usual blather and in honor of her birthday, I offer To2C readers
another installment of Peanuts Picks. My teenage daughter digs up some pretty unusual
stuff on You Tube and she is now sharing her best finds here.
Wednesday, July 11, 2012
Columbia Goes to the Dogs
It’s been a long time coming but it appears that, by this
time next year, Columbia
will have its very first dog park. According to this story by Luke Lavoie in Explore
Howard, “CA staff has recommended that a dog park be built off Rivendell Lane near
the CA Sports Park.”
Construction is expected to begin next February and will
likely be ready for HoCo canines by early spring.
It could soon be followed by a second Columbia dog park. The HoCo Department of
Parks and Recreation is working on plans to bring a dog park to the new Blandair Park
in Columbia by spring of 2014.
“The county has identified two sections of Blandair park,
one in the southwest and one in the northwest, as potential locations for a dog
park.”
Parks and Rec currently operates the only existing HoCo dog park in Ellicott City .
A big wag of the wordbones tail goes out to all those who work to make HoCo even more dog friendly.
Tuesday, July 10, 2012
Maryland vs Kansas
The governors of Maryland
and Kansas
were singled out in the national press today for being polar opposites in
their respective approaches to taxing and spending. In this article by Michael Cooper in The
New York Times the reporter writes that “the proper balance between taxing
and spending has been raging in Congress, on the presidential campaign trail
and in statehouses around the country, and no two states have settled it more
differently this year than Maryland and Kansas, whose fiscal years began July 1.”
The Kansas guv “was
persuaded that his state needed to cut its income taxes and taxes on small businesses
significantly when he studied data from the Internal Revenue Service that
showed that Kansas
was losing residents to states with lower taxes.”
Many have made the same argument about our neighboring states
but our guv takes a very different tack. He was quoted from an address he gave
last month at the Maryland Municipal League annual convention.
“How much less research and development would be good for
the innovation economy that we have an obligation and a responsibility, a duty
and an imperative, to embrace? How many fewer hungry Maryland kids can we afford to feed?
Progress is a choice: we can decide whether to make the tough choices necessary
to invest in our shared future and move forward together. Or we can be the
first generation of Marylanders to give our children a lesser quality of life
with fewer opportunities.”
Coincidentally, I also came across this story by G. Scott
Thomas in The Business Journals which ranked how well the individual states
have recovered in employment since the recession began in 2007. He writes that
nine states and DC, “have recovered all of the jobs they lost during the
recession.”
The number one state was Texas, led by a Repub guv and the
number two state was New York, led by a Dem. Below the top ten were 41 other states that have yet to recover their recession employment losses. Kansas was 21 and Maryland was 23.
At that far down in the rankings you’d have to call it a draw.
That being said, I smiled when I noticed the dateline on The
New York Times story. It was Ocean City , Md. Kansas
may rank two places higher than us in State Nonfarm Employment but it doesn’t
have a beach town to file a story from.
That’s gotta count for something.
Another Statehouse Report Card
Delegate Steven DeBoy could be the poster child for a legislator
who is able to balance economic and environmental interests in Annapolis . In yet another report card released today on
statehouse legislators, the Maryland League of Conservation Voters gave the Elkridge Dem a 100% rating. In the MBRG report card issued last
week, DeBoy received a 60% making him the highest scoring of fellow HoCo Dems
in that pro business barometer.
This time around it was the HoCo Repubs who got the bad
grades. Senator Allan Kittleman and Delegate Gail Bates both got a 0% score
from the environmental group. Perhaps Allan's defense of Eastern Shore chicken farmers didn’t sit that well with the greenies. Warren Miller fared just a little better with a 14% score.
Overall the HoCo Dems earned good grades as friends of the earth. Senator Ed Kasemeyer received 80%, while Jim Robey got a 60%. Delegate
Jimmy Malone got a 91% and Liz Bobo, 82%.
Monday, July 09, 2012
Live! But Not Real Lively
Last Friday night we headed over to Arundel Mills to check
out the new Maryland Live! casino. We were curious to see what the states
newest and largest slots parlor looked like inside.
It was dark, though that is fairly typical for a gaming
establishment. Casino operators like to separate their guests from the world
outside so windows are as rare as clocks. It hardly matters. The views from this casino in a parking garage wouldn't be that great anyway.
If you’ve ever been to Las Vegas or Atlantic City, the
sounds you hear upon entering the casino are very familiar, a cacophony of
bells and chimes from the sea of slot machines and other electronic table games.
What really struck me though were the patrons. There were a
large percentage of older, overweight people plopped down in front of slot
machines. The atmosphere may have sounded lively but most of the people we saw were
anything but. The absence of dealers and pit bosses further contributes to the indolent
atmosphere. This is a place where the machines are much livelier than the humans.
In an article by John Wagner in The Washington Post, Milton
Peterson, the developer of National Harbor in Prince
Georges County ,
referred to Maryland Live! as a “slots barn.”
I think that’s a little unfair. What Maryland Live! lacks in exterior design, it
makes up for inside. It’s not the nicest casino I’ve ever been in but it’s hardly
a barn.
Peterson’s derisive comment about “slots barns” should be
taken in context. If the guv is successful in expanding gambling in the state, National Harbor “would partner with MGM to build
an $800 million facility with a hotel, nightclub, spa and other upscale
amenities.”
That’s about $300 million more than the Cordish Company
claims they spent on Maryland Live!
We considered having dinner at one of the two restaurants in
the casino, Bobby Flays and the Cheesecake Factory. Bobby Flays is open to the
casino and all the attendant slot noise so we ruled that out. The Cheesecake
Factory was packed with a long wait just like every other Cheesecake Factory I’ve
ever visited.
We ended up going to the DuClaw Brewing Company with their great selection of
beers instead. It may not have been that much more lively but at least we didn’t have to
wait an hour or talk over a chorus of slot machines in the background.
...and the EuForia ale was so good, I had another.
...and the EuForia ale was so good, I had another.
Sunday, July 08, 2012
Sunsets and Salmon
Last nights sunset was a real beauty. We first grasped its magnificence
as we exited Route 100 at Long Gate around 8:25 PM last night. Mama Wordbones
immediately began suggesting places to pull over and take a picture. She was
thinking of you.
“You should take a picture for your blog,” she suggested.
I love it when she thinks of To2C. I wouldn’t exactly call
her a regular reader. She’s sort of blog neutral.
She was right about the sunset though. It was picture
perfect. I decided to head for high ground, Glen Mar Church on New Cut Road .
And speaking of salmon…
I’m not a fan. I enjoy an occasional piece of salmon sushi
but otherwise I find the fish unappealing. This is not good. Salmon is good for you. I always try to balance the bad stuff I put into my body with some good
stuff. Salmon is good stuff. I feel a need to like it.
That’s why I was intrigued by the salmon on a plank.
One of my joys at Wegmans is the seafood section. As someone
whose cooking skills are limited, I appreciate the pre packaged cook and serve
offerings of tuna, tilapia, and salmon to name a few. The salmon on a plank
caught my eye. For eight bucks I had to give it a try.
It was excellent.
I soaked my plank, coated the fish with spices provided and
dropped it on the grill. In about ten minutes it was ready. When I do this
again I’ll apply the spices a little more liberally. I was way too
conservative with the dry rub. They give you more than enough and it's exquisite.
There’s hope for me and salmon yet.
Labels:
Health Stuff,
The Local Scene,
The Retail Scene,
wb's Pub
Saturday, July 07, 2012
Cool Walk
The only way to enjoy the outdoors during a heat wave is
either by staying up late or getting out early. This morning I opted for the
latter as I set out at 7:30 on a four mile trek from my house to Main Street
Ellicott City and back.
As I wound my way past the Worthington Dog Park , the mercury had
already climbed past the mid seventies but there was also a light breeze. Soon,
I was in the shaded confines of New
Cut Road and it was just like any other summer day, warm but not oppressive.
Although there isn’t a sidewalk or much of shoulder on New Cut, at this time of
morning I saw just as many cyclists as I did cars.
I passed a couple of runners too.
Before long I reached the outskirts of the historic district
and worked my way down to the Bean Hollow coffee shop for a quick coffee and perusal
of the morning paper. The heat wave made the front page, above the fold.
Before heading back home, I stopped and snapped of picture
of an artist painting a picture as part of this years Paint It! Ellicott City !
For the return trip I headed up College Avenue , a decidedly steeper route
than New Cut. The developers of a housing development called Autumn River
are installing a new traffic circle on College near Sheppard Pratt. The work has been
stalled as they wait for BGE to move the old poles that are now in the
relocated road. I imagine that this work is a little low on the utilities priority list right now.
By the time I turned back into my neighborhood, the temp has climbed to the mid eighties and I was ready to reenter a climate controlled world. For me anyway, the best part of the day was over.
Friday, July 06, 2012
In This Months Business Monthly
When I sat down to write this month’s column for The
Business Monthly, the prospects for a second special session of the General
Assembly as early as next week to ram through new gambling legislation looked
pretty good. That may no long be the case. According to this report by John
Wagner in The Washington Post, the guv has decided “that is not a
realistic timeframe and wants to spend some more time seeing where House
members stand, said the source, who was not authorized to speak publicly about
the issue.”
The delay is being at least partially attributed to last Friday’s
stormus interuptus. As of this morning at least 30,000 homes in Maryland are still
without power.
That is not to say the guvs attempts to expand gambling in
the state are over. He just needs a little more time to twist some arms.
According to this story by Annie Linskey in The Sun, Governor O’Malley “intends
to announce Friday that he will continue trying to hammer out a deal to expand Maryland 's gambling
program, according to an official close to the governor.”
It’s only a matter of time. Just like four years ago, voters
are being told that expanding gambling will help our schools, stave off tax
future increases, and cure the common cold.
In other words, it’s appears to be only a matter of when, not if.
You can read this month’s column here.
Thursday, July 05, 2012
Failing Grades for HoCo Dems
Although it is probably not a report card that they care all
that much about, our HoCo statehouse Dems didn’t fare that well in the annual Roll Call report card from Maryland Business for Responsive Government (MBRG). The annual rankings call attention to legislators “attitudes toward business, jobs, economic
growth, and investment in the state…”
As I wrote in this post two years ago, MBRG ranks the
elected officials based on their votes on business legislation, including committee
votes.
“In order to compare a legislator’s score with his or her
colleagues, both Senate and House members have been ranked by percentiles. The
percentile represents where a legislator’s 2012 MBRG % rating ranks in relation
to other legislators’ ratings.”
Delegate Frank Turner scored the lowest, earning a 0% for
2012, followed by Guy Guzzone with a 1%. Delegates Jimmy Malone and Liz Bobo were
both ranked at 14% while Shane Pendergrass got 46%.
The most biz friendly HoCo Dem in the General Assembly was
Steven DeBoy at 60%. Senator Ed Kasemeyer scored 50% and Senator Jim Robey, 34%.
For Jim this was actually a huge improvement over 2010 when he was given a 2%
score.
The Repubs fared much better in the Roll Call scoring. Senator Allan Kittleman received 76%
and Delegates Warren Miller and Gail Bates each got a 72%.
Since I began paying attention, these numbers rarely fluctuate all that dramatically. As long as Maryland remains a one party state, there is probably little chance of change in the Old Line State's business
climate.
Wednesday, July 04, 2012
Early Birds
I like going down to the Town Center
lakefront before the festivities get started on July 4th. The
Columbia Association allows folks to start claiming a spot for the fireworks at
8:00 AM and by 1:30 PM the area has become a colorful mosaic of blankets and
tarps.
Late arrivals discovered that finding an opening amidst this
sea of blankets required all the concentration of a game of scrabble.
While most people stake out a spot with plans to return later
others, like Brittany and Isaac Saunders Sr, make a day out of it with their
family. Isaac told me they set up camp at noon today, even though the action
didn’t get started until three. “We live just down the street from here,” he
told me.
When asked Isaac if I could take a picture of his family for
To2C, he seized the opportunity to promote his photography business. He also
let me know that his wife was a writer in case I needed any help with the blog.
I thanked him for the offer but informed him that this was pretty much a one man operation.
Early today, there was some talk of cancelling tonight’s
celebration due to concerns about the possibility of another severe storm. As I
was heading back to my car I received a text from Notify Me Howard that the
show will go on tonight.
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