Friday, December 24, 2021

Ruins on the Nile and wrecks in the Red Sea

 Photos and article by Tony Mangia

The only thing better than knocking something off your bucket list is banging out two life goals in a single trip. Which is what I happily achieved on my first visit to Egypt


Of course, number one was physically seeing the Great Pyramid of Giza (aka the Pyramid of Cheops) up close and in real life. 



Rolling up and glimpsing the magnificent Giza pyramid complex for the first time is an experience one can never forget — even though I didn’t expect the 481-foot high Cheops and the slightly lower Kahafre and relatively small Menkaura  to be so curiously close to the streets of Cairo. And all of the history books and National Geographic photos cannot do justice to seeing these spectacular 4600 year-old tombs rising from the desert ground—a splendid combination of human ability and enduring history—in person. 



Before my trip I had been forewarned about the aggressive and incessant pestering of camel ride and souvenir vendors among unauthorized “tour guides” all around the pyramid complex and other tourist points of interest. It was stressed to me that these hustlers latch on to you and can make the whole experience more of an ordeal than a pleasure. That was reason enough to go with a tour group for eight days. I usually travel alone or with volunteer groups, but I’d recommend having a certified guide in Egypt if not for the historical insight then as a barrier against the constant hassling which can easily ruin what should be enlightening journey. Besides, there are a lot of tombs and museums with long distances between them, something that a weeklong tour group can help simplify.




After booking a jam-packed 8-day tour throughout Egypt (with G-Adventures) and then seeing the swarms of men hounding tourists at the Pyramids and the Sphinx, I was glad I did.



Departing Cairo, our tour group took an overnight train to Aswan and then an early morning, three-hour drive through the desert to the Abu Simbel Temple, among other World Heritage sites, before sailing down the Nile River (the Nile actually flows north to the Mediterranean) to Luxor overnight on a traditional falluca sailboat, where we were able to go off on our own to local restaurants and markets. But be wary of who you deal with. One woman in our group was gung ho about going home with Egyptian saffron. She ended up buying a bag of the pricey, orangey spice from a shifty vendor and it was fake. Who knew there was a counterfeit spice ring anywhere in the world?   


In Luxor we saw the breathtaking Al-Dier Al-Bahari Temple in the Valley of the Kings. It’s built into a mountain and a marvel to behold, but, admittedly, there are only so many mummies and hieroglyphics a person can admire for eight days. So, despite the enthusiasm of Said, our well-versed guide, the ancient points of interest had me longing for a more modern day ruin jotted down on my bucket list — namely wreck diving in the Red Sea. Specifically, the renowned SS Thistlegorm.



So after saying goodbye to Cairo with a wide angle view of the city atop the 614-foot Cairo Tower, I took off for Sharm El Sheikh from Cairo (an hour flight) and taxied to an overnight stay at the Stella Di Mare Hotel —a luxurious resort (popular with Russian vacationers) for an unbelievably low $109US night! I only wish I had more time to enjoy the resorts amenities like the spa and parasailing instead of just an overnight stopover. 


Sharm El Sheikh is a sandy, blue-water beach destination near the southernmost tip of the Sinai Peninsula. Besides the beaches and pools, snorkeling and diving seem to be the other big draws. There are plenty of restaurants and clubs outside the numerous resorts and I even spotted a couple of casinos during my taxi ride from the airport.


I had booked a 4-day. 3-night “mini-safari” liveaboard dive cruise with the Snefro Fleet based at the New Marina (El Wataneya) port in Sharm El Sheikh through liveaboard.com — a reputable booking agency whom I had booked a weeklong diving trip in Thailand a few years back. A comfy twin berth cabin inside the 100-foot Snefro Spirt would be my home after we set sail.



The north region of the Red Sea is renowned for its clear blue waters, coral reefs and diverse marine life. Divers can expect to see dolphins, turtles, and plenty of white tip sharks. The best time to dive here is between February and May, but the diving is fine year round. Lucky divers have a good chance to spot hammerheads, manta rays and the giant whale shark — which had become, almost literally, the “White Whale” of my scuba quests—during the peak seasons.


Low season for diving in Sharm el Sheikh is usually December through January, so I was happy to catch the tail end of the fall by booking my liveaboard the last week of October before the water cools and the currents get pretty strong.


Most of our diving would be in and around the Ras Mohammad National Park — a protected marine reef about 15 miles southwest of Sharm el Sheikh. It is a a nearly 200 square mile reef sanctuary (the largest reef in Africa) of tropical azure water teeming with over 1,000 species of fish — many which are endemic and only found in this area of the world. There is a $25US park fee (collected on the liveaboard) that is necessary to dive here.



It was was kind of misleading to advertise a 4-day, 3-night (Sunday-Wednesday) live aboard deal when it was more like a 3-day, 3-night tour after I was informed, at booking mind you, that my Snefro shuttle bus pickup from the hotel wouldn’t be until 6 pm that Sunday night. So I lounged around the pool most of the day to kill the time.


A representative from the Snefro picked myself and the rest of my fellow divers up from our respective hotels and dropped us off at the loading dock at New Marina.  The international roster of dive mates included a father and daughter from Israel, a mother and daughter from Spain, a young couple from Denmark, a couple of solo divers from Canada, two dudes from Saudi Arabia plus another American and myself.  We all had various levels of diving experience and I found myself as sort of in the middle with nearly 100 dives under my weight belt. My crew chief (Samuel) said the COVID bans and restrictions had somewhat diminished tourism and diving in Sharm el Sheik, but business was still brisk. The smallish amount of divers on the boat  was nice since it allowed everyone to have our own cabins (although I paid for mine) and would mean less tank bumping and equipment mixups while gearing up on the deck. The friendly and helpful crew of the Snefro Spirit work hard and take many precautions regarding COVID by regularly sanitizing the decks, the cabins and rental equipment that you keep for yourself the whole trip. And masking, at least in a dive sense, means you use the same scuba eyewear without a communal mask wash basin.



We had orientation (which included a questionnaire on diving experience, equipment rentals and personal medical information) the first night before a sumptuous dinner (including my favorites: aish baladi (pita) with soft mish cheese and a baklava-type desert) where the crew and guests got familiar with each other.


I have to admit, that before my first liveaboard in Thailand, I was intimidated by the thought of the ship being filled with Jacques Cousteau-type adventurers, crusty crewmen and snobby know-it-alls, but I was wrong. It’s quite comfortable (at least a three-star experience) and was filled with pleasant neophyte, expert and middle-level divers like myself. It was one of the best travel and diving experiences of my life.



This is the beauty of liveaboards. There are all levels of divers mixed with the experienced dive masters on board. The liveaboard can provide equipment rentals, wetsuits and dive computers, A complete setup is approx. $150US (including air or nitro tanks) for the trip — saving you the hassle of lugging of equipment through airports. They even offer certification classes for higher levels and nitrox diving while you are there on the boat for an extra fee. My cost was $697US for a private cabin, three daily meals, snacks, beverages, towels and sufficient free wi-fi. Alcoholic beverages were available at a reasonable price and gratuities (a surprisingly modest $50US) were appreciated for at the end of the trip. 


While most extra services — even a private dive guide — can be arranged on board, there are a few things you will need to provide before boarding the boat.


First and foremost is your diving certification card.  Depending on the type of diving (wreck or deep) you will most likely need to be an advanced open water diver. The Snefro also wanted to see your dive log book with a minimum of twenty dives. Most liveaboards will require separate dive insurance ($150,000 emergency evacuation/hyperbolic tank coverage) which you can combine with your regular travel insurance. I always bring my own dive computer because I am familiar with it and most overseas loaners are in the metric system — which for the life of me I still can’t figure out.  



Diving with a knife or gloves in Ras Mohammad is forbidden and the trusty, rusty knife I always take and strap to my calf brought me nothing but bag check aggravation at every security point throughout Egypt. If I wasn’t so attached to the thing I would have left it at the first airport X-ray machine!


And a reminder during COVID, omicron or whatever is out there nowadays, find out if your liveaboard requires vaccination cards or negative PCR test results. The Snefro wanted a printed negative PCR test with a QR code (the same document you entered Egypt with), but other boats, airlines and resorts might have stricter rules. Nowadays, most liveaboards have liberal rescheduling policies in case you are unable to travel because of COVID (with medical proof) or other pandemic restrictions. And make sure you have a “full visa” and not just a Sinai resort stamp in your passport when diving here.


On the Snefro Spirit, you will be presented, on board, with a questionnaire about your diving experience and general health before that night’s dinner. Make sure you have a doctor’s note giving you the okay to dive if you do have a medical condition… or you could — if it truly isn’t a health hazard — just fib on the answers lest you want to go through a whole well-being rigmarole.


I made the mistake of checking “YES” on the  “Are you taking any prescription drugs?” line which, for COVID or other reasons unbeknownst to me, must have raised a red flag within their liability policies. I won’t go into all of the frustrating details, but my minor prescription drug would turn into a missed dive the next morning and verbal examination by a local doctor on a return trip to the marina before I was allowed to don a BCD.


Nonetheless, the first day of diving for everyone else started with clear blue skies — the only cloud being the medical cumulonimbus hovering over my head — above calm, azure water. The dive guides Samuel, Peter and Osama took small groups out for a check dive at Das Katy reef, mainly to get everyone familiar with their gear and a dry run for guides to get an idea of the levels of dive experience each person had. 


I was relegated to the sun deck while enviously watching everyone take the first plunge because of my medical predicament. After their dive, we returned to dry dock and, after a quick interview about my prescription, a local physician stamped a form and cleared me to finally put on the fins.

Saturday, May 29, 2021

Why has Tim Tebow's comeback become more than a roster issue?

 By Tony Mangia


The news that Tim Tebow had a familiar new neighbor move in next to him came as no shock to many who know that the the Jacksonville native has always had a close relationship with his former University of Florida coach Urban Meyer. But, after that happy news made the rounds, reports that the new Jacksonville Jaguars head coach was giving Tebow a shot with the team as a tight end hit social media and the controversy began.


Suddenly there was less chatter about Meyer borrowing a leaf blower and more noise about fanning the flames of division, politics and conspiracy.



It didn’t take long for the pundits, prophets and naysayers around the NFL including most fans to voice disbelief that Tebow signed with the Jaguars. The Christian footballer doesn’t have a prayer they say.


Many considered it a publicity stunt and don’t expect someone who hasn't played in a regular-season game since 2012 to even have a chance at making the team. 


It wouldn’t be the first time Tebow — a Heisman winner and one of the greatest college quarterbacks of all time — was considered a gimmick or some sort of marketing one-trick pony. Who could forget Tebow replacing Denver Broncos starter Kyle Orton in 2011 and making the term “Wildcat Offense”  almost as popular as the "Tebow Kneel.”




Tebow’s legendary, but brief, NFL career was diminished after an uneventful year with the New York Jets and then spending five years as a
 minor leaguer with the New York Mets where he was one of Triple-A’s biggest names — albeit without ever getting called up to The Show.

He heard the same derisive screams as an average home run hitter …  but with exceptional gate drawing power.




Besides being a devout Christian, philanthropic do-gooder and all-round nice guy, Tebow is blessed with the size, physical abilities and mental toughness to compete and thrive in many sports.  And the last time I heard, those were all excellent attributes for a professional athlete to have.


So why all of the hate for Tebow?  Isn’t a feel good story about an athlete getting another shot the basis of almost every sports cliche?  How many sports movies would be made if this wasn’t the case?


The question for Tebow seems to be less about if he'll make the cut on Jacksonville's 53-man roster than why is he even getting a shot. It’s like when the name Tim Tebow pops up in various training camps, the social media trolls come out.


It’s one thing to shake your head about someone playing out-of-position, their time away from the game or even his advancing age of 33, but is there some other underlying reason people turn Tebow into a lightning rod of doubt and ridicule?


Maybe it's his Billy Graham homilies or the P.T. Barnum aura — which seemed to have surrounded Tebow his whole life in professional sports — riling people up? Or, more reasonably, the argument that he is taking the roster spot from a younger, position-ready player. 


Some, like ESPN’s Stephen A. Smith, have gone as far as signaling it as white privilege.


Smith suggested that Meyer bringing Tebow to the Jags is just another example of “someone of a different ilk, a different ethnicity, getting opportunities that we know we would never get.”


“That’s where the words white privilege come in,” he tried to explain before exclaiming, “There’s no way to eradicate white privilege without white individuals giving up some of their privilege.”


The talking head quickly backtracked by mentioning that he didn’t believe Tebow was signed because he was white, but that race still played a role in how it even happened.


“I’m not saying he did it for Tim Tebow because he was white or anything like that. It has nothing to do with their race in regards to that. I’m simply saying when you see an opportunity like that happen, it is clear that it happens for white folks, and it doesn’t happen for everybody else,” Smith said, continuing to stir the flames of division.


Smith insinuated the same thing about the Brooklyn Nets hiring neophyte head coach Steve Nash last year.


“There is no way around it,” Smith said. “This is white privilege. This doesn’t happen for a black man.”


Smith’s point of view might work in the real world, but not in the pre-pandemic, already bubble world of professional athletes.


When was the last time LeBron James was chastised for anything? James seems to get a pass on everything from breaking NBA’s COVID safety protocols, threatening police officers on Twitter to being a complacent shill for the NBA's partnership with Communist China.


Former NFL great, Eric Dickerson, also voiced his opinion of Tebow's comeback as, "Bullshit."


After a gossip site reporter compared Tebow's opportunity to another kneeler's, Colin Kaepernick, the Hall of Famer steamed.


"Of course [Kaepernick] is getting punished," said Dickerson. "He's black."


But how many rants did you hear when 32-year-old malcontent Dez Bryant signed with the Ravens after his layoff?


If anything, Tebow’s comeback should be inspiring.


Even Brandon Jacobs wants to make a comeback … as a defensive end. The former Giants running back tweeted the announcement last week.


"I am really serious about coming back as a defensive end," he posted. “I can still run, I am strong and there's no way Tebow is a better athlete than I am. I just need a shot that's it!! If I can't cut it I'll take it like a man. Just give me one chance that's all!!"


Despite the politicization, who knows where this could lead? Maybe we’ll see a few more 40-something quarterbacks in the Super Bowl?

And all the ranting in the world won’t squash the fact that Tebow has already signed a contract and gained a spot on Jacksonville’s 90-man roster this spring. The next question becomes whether he’ll land on the 53-man team this season.


One NFL player who is excited to see Tebow on the practice field is rookie quarterback Trevor Lawrence.


"I never met Tim until last week, so I didn't really know him," said the new Jaguars QB. "But I was intrigued by his character, his work ethic and what he's been able to do throughout his life on the field and off the field." 



It is doubtful the once Friar Tuck- coiffed Tebow (Bet y’all forgot that timeline) will take any snaps from under the center this summer, but his experience and guidance could only help the rocker-haired rookie. 



The presence of Tebow, a two-time National College Champion, will also draw some of the media spotlight away from Lawrence, a one-time champion at Clemson.  


That could end up being Tebow’s biggest contribution to the team.

Friday, May 7, 2021

Florida Folk Artist Kevin Clucas: One Man's Refuse Is Another Man's Re-purpose

 Article and photos by Tony Mangia

It was about four years ago when I had the pleasure of meeting Kevin Clucas while on my daily bicycle ride through Port Charlotte. I remember buying a manual lawn edger for two dollars at his garage sale, and then being delighted when he threw in a wooden flamingo head as a bonus. Almost every day afterwards, while peddling to and from Kiwanis Park, I sometimes noticed him tucked away behind parked cars and working at a bench in his drive way. The drone of jigsaws or the hum of electric sanders occasionally interrupting the faint sounds of reggae or bluegrass wafting through the air around him as I cruised by. We gave each other an occasional friendly wave — the kind that strangers who see each other, but don’t really know a lot about, give in a neighborly fashion. 


One day I happened to spot a couple of brightly colored fish hanging from a rack on the grass beside him.  And, as an unofficial collector of marine life replicas  —which I hang from a lanai wall  in my house — my curiosity got the better of me. That wonderful school of interesting looking fishes gave me a reason to stop and find out more.



Kevin goes by the nickname Trap —and signs his work likewise. Trap is a moniker Kevin, working as “car-man” for the Santa Fe Railroad in Chicago, simply picked up after being near a supervisor who accidentally slipped on the job and jokingly asked Kevin, “Are you trying to trap me?” in front of some co-workers. Like a lot of things around the workplace, that’s all it took for a new lifetime sobriquet.  


One afternoon, Trap, wearing what seems his trademark white Santa Fe Railroad cap, took the time to energetically tell me about his projects. I soon became his first paying customer after humbly asking to purchase a hand-painted wood cutout of a dolphin with a blue marble-like eyeball that had caught my attention.


The tri-colored, ever-staring fish became a permanent feature on my own wall of sea creatures.



Over the years, I always saw Trap out in his driveway putting bigger and more eccentric fish wall decorations on the rack. I occasionally stopped to chat about his handiwork — which I would describe as Florida Folk Art. It was a rare day I didn’t see Trap’s familiar white cap lowered as he sanded or cut common discarded items into works of art in his el fresco workshop.


During that time, I watched his craft evolve from dazzling painted fish cutouts made from old planks and discarded shelves to more elaborate fish figures carved out of branches, tree stumps or whatever materials he can scavenge and put together. 





I liken some of Trap’s more colorful. imaginative and playful creations to a sort of three-dimensional Aquatic Boterismo — or what I imagine Botero might have produced … if his models were fish.



According to Trap, he began fashioning these works of art after retiring from his old job of checking the mechanics of railroad cars and coming to Florida full time in 2016. 


Where the desire to work in this expressive medium came from, he has no idea.


“I never had any art experience,” Trap claimed in his Great Lakes twang. “And I am not what you would consider a fisherman.”


It seems that any sort of formal training came from working the rails of the Santa Fe…ba-dum-tshh.



The humble artist claims he used to refinish furniture as a hobby and cites the fishing culture surrounding Charlotte Harbor as a possible influence on his choice of subjects.


“I just like to think of myself as a re-purposer,” he jokes about his use of discarded items. 


In other words, to paraphrase the old saying, one man’s refuse is another man’s re-purpose.  


Trap has the gift of turning even the most mundane of rejected objects into fabulous visual entities which can be proudly shown and appreciated. It’s easy to imagine blue waters, tropical settings and diving locales while gazing at his work and then wonder how he looks at a particularly plain object and comes up with his sometimes whimsical and exotic ideas.


My favorite is a sperm whale he constructed out of an old mesh-metal ironing board.




Always looking for different material to utilize wherever he can find it, Trap roots through neighbors’ front lawn discards finding table parts, siding planks and even using sections from an an old barbecue smoker. In the vivid coral reef of Trap’s mind, I imagine he could find a purpose (porpoise?) in anything from wood to metal to plastic.


An angel fish made from an old washboard is just another testament to that creativity.




“I always use natural wood and no particle board,” Trap stressed about his most commonly used material.


And while most of his components come gratis from scrap piles or friends’ contributions, Trap shows me a stack of prized Aspen planks he purchased for $50 piled outside his garage.


“These are great for woodworking,” he beamed while wiping some stain off his fingers onto his paint-smudged cargo shorts.



Trap usually works eight to ten hours a day in front of his garage. It’s where these abandoned, inanimate items come to life as sea denizens in his abstract and vibrant style.


“I usually work on one project at a time, “ he said. “ But I have a short attention span and might get distracted to one or two other pieces.”



Trap and his wife, Jackie, disagree on how many of those pieces he has completed. The artist lowballs it at about 40, while Jackie says it’s well above 100.


“We have fifty-five in-laws who have probably gotten one,” she laughed.


Trap usually gives his mostly hand-tooled designs names like Abalone Annie or Anjail” (An angel fish with stripes that resemble prison bars) and named a lime-colored fish for Jackie’s mom, Limey Lily. He is currently working on “The Woodorado Series” a comical wording pertaining to his new series of wood-carved el dorado fish.



His favorite piece? Hurricane Harry, a nearly five-foot wood sailfish priced together from ornate chair legs that Trap made for his father. 



I like to call myself Trap’s first paying customer, but either way, his handiwork is finding its way into many other people’s homes. Funkie Junkie (with shops in Punta Gorda and Port Charlotte) recently started displaying his work on consignment and Trap has become an in-demand artisan who has sold about a dozen pieces in only a few months — with some going for as much as three hundred dollars.





Many of the more elaborate pieces take at least three full days of careful cutting, intricate carving and specialized coating or painting. Trap had lately started on making snakes from trimmed, wavy-shaped tree branches a friend happened to find and drop off, but since then, he has returned to marvelously immortalizing his first interest and inspiration — fish.


“I never thought I’d make money doing this,” Trap told me. “I just wanted to make something out of nothing.”


Sometimes nothing becomes something magical.



—Trap’s artwork can be followed and purchased at: Kev’s Coastal Creations on Facebook



Friday, March 19, 2021

Arcadia All-Florida Championship Rodeo Is A Bucking Success

Photos and article by Tony Mangia

In its 93rd year of hosting rodeo competitions and its first year as a ProRodeo Tour event, the Arcadia All-Florida Championship Rodeo drew some of the sport's biggest names and paid out a total purse of over $178,000 during a four-day event at the magnificent Mosaic Arena.


Billed as the “Grandaddy of ‘Em All,” Arcadia is already a popular stop on the rodeo tour, but this year’s PRCA roundup included Tuf Cooper and Clayton Bigelow, both of whom have Gold Buckles, as well as Wyatt Casper, who was last year's Reserve World Champion. 


Mixed in among all of the big names who came to southwest Florida were a lot of up-and-coming steer wrestlers, tie-down ropers and team ropers who found themselves at or near the top of leaderboards that were filled with Wrangler NFR qualifiers. 


This year’s winners were:


Bareback riding—Clayton Bigelow on Frontier Rodeo’s Ace of Spades


SaddleBronc Riding—(tie) Wyatt Casper on Frontier’s Miss Ellie and Cody DeMoss on Frontier Rodeo’s High Roller


Bull Riding—Clayton Sellars on Championship Pro Rodeo’s Excessive Force


Team Roping—(Tie) Cody Snow/Wesley Thorp and Jake Orman/Brye Crates


Tie-down Roping—Tuf Case Cooper


Barrel Racing—Kelly Bruner


Steer wrestling—(Tie) Talon Roseland and Tory Johnson