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CALENDAR OF EVENTS AND ENTERTAINMENT Feb 13

CALENDAR OF EVENTS AND ENTERTAINMENT Feb. 13 Walton Sun Mardi Gras Street Party Enjoy the Mardi Gras street party by AJ’s Seafood & Oyster Bar down on the Destin harbor at noon Feb. 13. Entertainment from Louisiana’s own Dikki Du & The Zydeco Krewe starts at noon on the big stage and the staff will be throwing beads and moon pies for all to catch. Crawfish boil will be ready along with other festive eats, including Jambalya, Crawfish Étouffée, Gumbo & Poboys, with hurricane drink specials. Hospitality Job Fair Hilton Sandestin Beach Golf Resort & Spa is hosting a job fair to fill full-time and part-time positions from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. Feb. 13 at the Human Resources Office, 4000 S. Sandestin Blvd. in Miramar Beach. Opportunities include housekeeping attendants, food and beverage, guest services, culinary, security, spa, bellman/valet and more. An impressive benefits package for employees at Hilton Sandestin includes a 401K program, health benefits, free daily meal service,

CALENDAR OF EVENTS AND ENTERTAINMENT Jan 23

CALENDAR OF EVENTS AND ENTERTAINMENT Jan. 23 Walton Sun Mardi Gras Parade The Krewe de Yak’s 7th Annual Mardi Gras Parade and Festival will be held Jan. 23 on Circle Drive in DeFuniak Spring. The Street fair and Car Show will begin at 11 a.m. and GrasFest will once again be the place to be for food, fun, and family-friendly entertainment celebrating the Carnival season. The Grand Parade will roll at 3 p.m.  For more information, call 850-419-5977 or emailtkrewedeyak@gmail.com. ECTC: Florida Girls Emerald Coast Theatre Company (ECTC) presents Florida Girls at 7:30 p.m. Jan. 23, 28-30 and at 2 p.m. Jan. 24 at ECTC’s space upstairs at 560 Grand Boulevard in Grand Boulevard at Sandestin in Miramar Beach. Purchase tickets at https://tickets.vendini.com.

Restoring longleaf pines, keystone of once vast ecosystems | News, Sports, Jobs

JANET McCONNAUGHEY Associated Press AP Photo/Janet McConnaughey Silviciulturist Keith Coursey stands in a thicket of gallberries — one of the shrubs that would block the sun from grasses and wildflowers in longleaf pine forests without regular fires — in front of a stand of 80- to 85-foot-tall longleaf pines in the DeSoto National Forest on Wednesday, Nov. 18, 2020. DESOTO NATIONAL FOREST, Miss. When European settlers came to North America, fire-dependent savannas anchored by lofty pines with footlong needles covered much of what became the southern United States. Yet by the 1990s, logging and clear-cutting for farms and development had all but eliminated longleaf pines and the grasslands beneath where hundreds of plant and animal species flourished.

Restoring longleaf pines, keystone of once vast ecosystems

DESOTO NATIONAL FOREST, Miss.    When European settlers came to North America, fire-dependent savannas anchored by lofty pines with footlong needles covered much of what became the southern United States. Yet by the 1990s, logging and clear-cutting for farms and development had all but eliminated longleaf pines and the grasslands beneath where hundreds of plant and animal species flourished. Now, thanks to a pair of modern day Johnny Appleseeds, landowners, government agencies and nonprofits are working in nine coastal states from Virginia to Texas to bring back pines named for the long needles prized by Native Americans for weaving baskets. Longleaf pines now cover as much as 7,300 square miles (19,000 square kilometers) and more than one-quarter of that has been planted since 2010.

Restoring longleaf pines, keystone of once vast ecosyst

DESOTO NATIONAL FOREST, Miss. (AP) When European settlers came to North America, fire-dependent savannas anchored by lofty pines with footlong needles covered much of what became the southern United States. Yet by the 1990s, logging and clear-cutting for farms and development had all but eliminated longleaf pines and the grasslands beneath where hundreds of plant and animal species flourished. Now, thanks to a pair of modern day Johnny Appleseeds, landowners, government agencies and nonprofits are working in nine coastal states from Virginia to Texas to bring back pines named for the long needles prized by Native Americans for weaving baskets.

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