OUR LENS | Exceptional work by the St. Petersburg Times staff
Tampa Bay frost
OUR LENS | Exceptional work by the St. Petersburg Times staff
Lara Cerri | Portfolio
OUR LENS | Exceptional work by the St. Petersburg Times staff
Farming a home landscape
When Matt Fahy’s family moved to Largo six years ago from St. Louis, there was nothing but clumps of weedy grass in the center of their circular driveway. Three years ago he put in a flower bed and started a compost pile. Then trees: Jamaican cherry, moringa, key lime. He brought in piles of composted manure from a local stable and ordered free mulch from the city. He piled it two feet thick. With a background in construction, it was simple enough for Fahy to build raised beds and a greenhouse out of old dock wood, pier posts and windows. Most of the materials came from dumpsters. He planted sweet potatoes to hold the dirt in place.
Soon the family was eating home grown brussels sprouts, long beans, watermelon and yellow squash. About 60 percent of his family’s diet comes from the gardens that surround his home. Not just the back yard, but side yards, and yes, the front. Sunflowers stretch skyward under the bedroom window. Backyard beds hold cabbage, tomatillos, peppers, sweet potatoes, Okinawa spinach, a plum tree.
Wife Cindi Hetz helps with some tasks, such as using a paintbrush to manually pollinate from male flower to female flower. Daughter Max helps as only a 5-year-old can. Matt will garden late into the night. He’ll tap on the window and tell his wife to turn on the light. “I feel a need to blend in with my environment,” he says. “I don’t just live here. This is a home for the birds and the bugs, and I’m supposed to be sharing this place.”

Sitting amongst the bounty of the edible landscape in their front yard is (from left) Matt Fahy, his wife Cindi Hetz, and daughter Maxine Fahy, 5, on Thursday, May 13. "This is the easiest, cheapest way for me to start my own green movement," says Fahy. "I can't afford solar panels, or an electric car or a solar water heater. I can get a whole lot of free mulch, trade with my friends, dumpster dive." ... Read more
OUR LENS | Exceptional work by the St. Petersburg Times staff
Winter's new home, MacDill Airfest, Transitions golf tournament

Panama the dolphin swims past windows in a newly refurbished tank at the Clearwater Marine Aquarium Tuesday. Winter the tail-less dolphin and her tankmate Panama have been introduced into their new tank. The new exhibit is 40 feet around and 18 feet deep, compared to the previous one that was 25 x 18 and 14 feet deep. The larger size will allow Winter more room to work with her prosthetic tail. In addition, for the first time, guests will be able to regularly watch Winter and surrogate mom Panama swim through underwater windows. The tank also will serve as a stranding tank should the aquarium get an injured dolphin, in which case Winter and Panama would be moved back to their old tank. [JIM DAMASKE, Times] ... Read more
OUR LENS | Exceptional work by the St. Petersburg Times staff
Rays spring training, Cavalia, eagle ray discovery

Mathieu Bianchi, atop Igor, looks up to Marie Elaine Mongeau during a media preview for Cavalia at the Florida State Fairgrounds on Thursday. The vivid, dreamlike scenes feature a unique interaction between human and horse, with live music performed during the show. Cavalia has been seen by more than 2.5 million people worldwide. The show opens Friday, March 12. For showtimes and ticket pricing, visit cavalia.net. SEE MORE PHOTOS FROM CAVALIA [DANIEL WALLACE, Times] ... Read more
OUR LENS | Exceptional work by the St. Petersburg Times staff
Contra dancing
OUR LENS | Exceptional work by the St. Petersburg Times staff
Sunset flight, bald eagle adoption, oil protest

A passenger jet gains altitude over Tampa against a backdrop of the setting sun. Flights around the country have seen delays this week. [DANIEL WALLACE, Times] ... Read more
OUR LENS | Exceptional work by the St. Petersburg Times staff
Fountain rainbow, Gasparilla beads, stable chores (10 images)

Juliana Hornsby, 2, runs through the Children's Mist Fountain during the grand opening of the Curtis Hixon Waterfront Park in downtown Tampa on Sunday afternoon. It's also the newest segment of the Tampa Riverwalk. The multi-colored building in the background is the Children's Museum. [WILLIE J. ALLEN JR., Times] ... Read more
OUR LENS | Exceptional work by the St. Petersburg Times staff
Tebow's final game, Florida sunrise, foam mounds

It may look like snow, but that's fire-retardant foam that Juan Gonzalez is cleaning up on 5th Ave. S. in St. Petersburg in front of All Children's Hospital Friday morning. The foam came from testing the system that is designed to put out a fire on the roof's helipad in the event of a fire or fuel spill, according to the hospital's safety director Larry Green. "This is a sophisticated system with jets that cover the helipad in a 2-minute time frame," said Green. The non-hazardous, water-based foam was cleaned up by crews throughout the course of the morning. It will be the last time the system is tested, said Green. Last month a similar test sent foam floating through downtown St. Petersburg, prompting phone calls to the fire department from the curious. [LARA CERRI Times] ... Read more
OUR LENS | Exceptional work by the St. Petersburg Times staff
Farming with a memory

The sun has been up for less than an hour, and Joann Beasley is heading to the fields. ... Read more


