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BUOY OH BUOY
BITS OF THE BEACH
BILL DURYEA
TIMES STAFF WRITER
A BAY AREA BUSINESS COUPLE SALVAGES DEBRIS FROM THE KEYS THAT CAN BUOY ANY ATMOSPHERE.
TAMPA-- Every month or so, Kim and Joe Brown pile into the family flatbed truck, he one that's decorated with multi-colored stencils of fern fronds, and drive down to Key West.
There, they inevitably find what they're looking for: a few thousand discarded plastic foam crab and lobster buoys, maybe a battered surf board or a life preserver. After a week or so, they strap the whole load down, turn the truck around and head home to Fletcher Avenue at Interstate-75, where they have lived for nearly 25 years.
If you've driven by there recently, and you'd know if you'd had, then you have a pretty good idea, of what the Brown's do with the buoys once they get them off the truck.
They wrap them around metal poles, until they resemble marshmellow Christmas trees. They festoon them outside the gift and bait shop they run. They line their parking lot with them.
"It can drive you crazy," Kim Brown said as she stared at a mound of them. "There's got to be something else to do with them. I was thinking maybe I'd cut them in half and make them into little planters."
Occasionaly, a restaurant owner who fancies a nautical theme will relieve them of a few thousand buoys. Sometimes a home owner from New Tampa wants a dozen for his new poolside bar.
But generally speaking, the treasures of the Key West trips come in at a rate far faster than they go out. Doesn't matter a bit to the Browns.
"I have a pretty good life. I don't have to bust my butt," Kim Brown said. "I don't make a lot of money, but when someone likes my stuff, that's cool."
In a corner of Tampa dominated by late-arriving corporate parks and hotel chains, they live a life of enviable self-sufficiency. If they appear eccentric, it is only by the relentlessly conformist standards of their neighbors. If the decor appears kitschy, maybe it's because we've lost touch with what's truly authentic.
On a recent morning, Kim Brown was giving an impromptu tour to a surprise visitor. She was wearing a loose-fitting white shirt and a long gray cotton skirt. Walking around in her tanned bare feet and sunglasses she seemed glamorous and unfussy. She casually mentions her age, 46, without a trace of self-consciousness.
.
"Those rings, they came from a Cuban refugee raft," she says, indicating a clump of artifacts outside thet baitshop. " When I can, I take a picture of the man or the woman and that becomes part of the story of what we sell."
She grabbed a bass lure dangling from the inside of a metal cylinder and gave it a good tug. It clanged loudly. "We make the bells out of dive tanks that were going to be thrown away," she says.
"I've got a real nice anchor. It's over 100 years old. That came from a Cuban who got it caught in his lobster traps."
"The Lobster guys are lucky," she says with real admiration in her voice. "They find this stuff all the time, just floating out there."
Kim grew up near Lowry Park Zoo. Her husband was raised out on Anderson Road. They met in 1981, the circumstances of which are one of a few stories she's reluctant to tell in detail. At the time she was boarding horses across the road in what is now the Hidden River Corporate Park.
"When I met Joe, he was in a suit and tie. He always had a thousand dollars on his back," she said. He was in the materials handling business, but it wasn't long for that corporate life.
They saw some land was available for sale on Morris Bridge Road, the part where it bends in the southwest corner of I-75 and Fletcher. The acre or so had a worm farm on it when they bought it. The previous owner had a Coca-Cola cooler out front, and fishermen on their way to the Hillsborough River would come by and fill a can with worms, leave a little money in a cup. All on the honour system.
"That tapered off. Fishng wasn't simple anymore. You couldn't just get a cane pole and a can of worms and go catch some dinner," Kim says. "Now you've got to have permits and expensive reels and the latest lure."
"That's why we kind of went back to our art."
In the early 1990's they made their first trip down to the keys. They began to meet fishermen. They stayed in their homes, ate dinner with them. Joined in the parties at the beginning of stone crab season.
It wasn't long before they saw all the buoys overflowing the trash cans. Buoys generally last a few years. Turtles gnaw them. Storms scatter them. Sun and salt bleach them.
"Hey, we can do something with those," Kim remembers saying. "We make something out of nothing."
The gift shop, known as Hong Kong Willie, is full of stuff that was perilously close to oblivion before the Browns identified some hidden potential.
Kim makes "coconut grams". They're painted coconuts with a space clearly marked for the address. There's not much room for the message. But the U.S. Postal Service will actually deliver them, Kim says.
The gift shop's ceiling is packed with coffee sacks. Glass bottles that have been heated in the Brown's kilns sit on shelves slumped like Dali clocks. Gnarled pieces of polished Lignum Vitae are scattered about; Kim's son Derek, 22, is responsible for that work.
Nothing has a price, because prices depend on too many variables for it to be worth specifying. (A string of five buoys will cost you $12.99, though the price drops for bulk purchases.) But whenever possible a piece will come with a picture of the shop, or of the person who provided the piece, to commemorate the item's passage
through history.
"This telephone was on Duval Street," Kim says. "It's got all these names and numbers written on the side. And a picture of a raccoon on the front. Who knows why?"
The demand for items such as this is unpredictable. Ditto the 1961 mailbox with the rusted front. But the Browns' customers tend to share their enthusiasm.
"I bought 1,200 buoys a month ago," said Jimmy Ciaccio, owner of Gaspar's, a restaurant on 56th Street in Temple Terrace that has a brand new patio with an aggressive Key West theme.
"I must have 3,000 of them around here," Ciaccio says as he walks the deck, talking a torrent. "I got a raft, those traps, they all came from Joe. I've bought a lot of novelty stuff from them. That's what they're all about and that's what we're all about. And there's always a story behind everything. I love that. He gave me that thing, it's like a piece of wood or something I don't know what it is, but it's from Key West. We've got that chemistry."
If there were a few more customers as fervid as Ciaccio, Kim Brown might not be toying with the idea of getting into the food business. But there aren't and she is.
"Not everybody wants a buoy or a bell," Kim says. "But everyone wants to drink a cup of coffee. I don't want to be a Starbucks but maybe a little coffee shop. Maybe a good Cuban sandwich."
"But then you get into hiring and firing. I've got friends in the retaurant business. I see how hard they work. It's never-ending," she says, beginning to argue with herself. "I just don't want to work that hard."
She circles back to a calm contentment with life as it is currently defined.
"We're happy. We don't want to sell. We're not rich, but we pay our bills.
.
BUOY OH BUOY
BITS OF THE BEACH
BILL DURYEA
TIMES STAFF WRITER
A BAY AREA BUSINESS COUPLE SALVAGES DEBRIS FROM THE KEYS THAT CAN BUOY ANY ATMOSPHERE.
TAMPA-- Every month or so, Kim and Joe Brown pile into the family flatbed truck, he one that's decorated with multi-colored stencils of fern fronds, and drive down to Key West.
There, they inevitably find what they're looking for: a few thousand discarded plastic foam crab and lobster buoys, maybe a battered surf board or a life preserver. After a week or so, they strap the whole load down, turn the truck around and head home to Fletcher Avenue at Interstate-75, where they have lived for nearly 25 years.
If you've driven by there recently, and you'd know if you'd had, then you have a pretty good idea, of what the Brown's do with the buoys once they get them off the truck.
They wrap them around metal poles, until they resemble marshmellow Christmas trees. They festoon them outside the gift and bait shop they run. They line their parking lot with them.
"It can drive you crazy," Kim Brown said as she stared at a mound of them. "There's got to be something else to do with them. I was thinking maybe I'd cut them in half and make them into little planters."
Occasionaly, a restaurant owner who fancies a nautical theme will relieve them of a few thousand buoys. Sometimes a home owner from New Tampa wants a dozen for his new poolside bar.
But generally speaking, the treasures of the Key West trips come in at a rate far faster than they go out. Doesn't matter a bit to the Browns.
"I have a pretty good life. I don't have to bust my butt," Kim Brown said. "I don't make a lot of money, but when someone likes my stuff, that's cool."
In a corner of Tampa dominated by late-arriving corporate parks and hotel chains, they live a life of enviable self-sufficiency. If they appear eccentric, it is only by the relentlessly conformist standards of their neighbors. If the decor appears kitschy, maybe it's because we've lost touch with what's truly authentic.
On a recent morning, Kim Brown was giving an impromptu tour to a surprise visitor. She was wearing a loose-fitting white shirt and a long gray cotton skirt. Walking around in her tanned bare feet and sunglasses she seemed glamorous and unfussy. She casually mentions her age, 46, without a trace of self-consciousness.
.
"Those rings, they came from a Cuban refugee raft," she says, indicating a clump of artifacts outside thet baitshop. " When I can, I take a picture of the man or the woman and that becomes part of the story of what we sell."
She grabbed a bass lure dangling from the inside of a metal cylinder and gave it a good tug. It clanged loudly. "We make the bells out of dive tanks that were going to be thrown away," she says.
"I've got a real nice anchor. It's over 100 years old. That came from a Cuban who got it caught in his lobster traps."
"The Lobster guys are lucky," she says with real admiration in her voice. "They find this stuff all the time, just floating out there."
Kim grew up near Lowry Park Zoo. Her husband was raised out on Anderson Road. They met in 1981, the circumstances of which are one of a few stories she's reluctant to tell in detail. At the time she was boarding horses across the road in what is now the Hidden River Corporate Park.
"When I met Joe, he was in a suit and tie. He always had a thousand dollars on his back," she said. He was in the materials handling business, but it wasn't long for that corporate life.
They saw some land was available for sale on Morris Bridge Road, the part where it bends in the southwest corner of I-75 and Fletcher. The acre or so had a worm farm on it when they bought it. The previous owner had a Coca-Cola cooler out front, and fishermen on their way to the Hillsborough River would come by and fill a can with worms, leave a little money in a cup. All on the honour system.
"That tapered off. Fishng wasn't simple anymore. You couldn't just get a cane pole and a can of worms and go catch some dinner," Kim says. "Now you've got to have permits and expensive reels and the latest lure."
"That's why we kind of went back to our art."
In the early 1990's they made their first trip down to the keys. They began to meet fishermen. They stayed in their homes, ate dinner with them. Joined in the parties at the beginning of stone crab season.
It wasn't long before they saw all the buoys overflowing the trash cans. Buoys generally last a few years. Turtles gnaw them. Storms scatter them. Sun and salt bleach them.
"Hey, we can do something with those," Kim remembers saying. "We make something out of nothing."
The gift shop, known as Hong Kong Willie, is full of stuff that was perilously close to oblivion before the Browns identified some hidden potential.
Kim makes "coconut grams". They're painted coconuts with a space clearly marked for the address. There's not much room for the message. But the U.S. Postal Service will actually deliver them, Kim says.
The gift shop's ceiling is packed with coffee sacks. Glass bottles that have been heated in the Brown's kilns sit on shelves slumped like Dali clocks. Gnarled pieces of polished Lignum Vitae are scattered about; Kim's son Derek, 22, is responsible for that work.
Nothing has a price, because prices depend on too many variables for it to be worth specifying. (A string of five buoys will cost you $12.99, though the price drops for bulk purchases.) But whenever possible a piece will come with a picture of the shop, or of the person who provided the piece, to commemorate the item's passage
through history.
"This telephone was on Duval Street," Kim says. "It's got all these names and numbers written on the side. And a picture of a raccoon on the front. Who knows why?"
The demand for items such as this is unpredictable. Ditto the 1961 mailbox with the rusted front. But the Browns' customers tend to share their enthusiasm.
"I bought 1,200 buoys a month ago," said Jimmy Ciaccio, owner of Gaspar's, a restaurant on 56th Street in Temple Terrace that has a brand new patio with an aggressive Key West theme.
"I must have 3,000 of them around here," Ciaccio says as he walks the deck, talking a torrent. "I got a raft, those traps, they all came from Joe. I've bought a lot of novelty stuff from them. That's what they're all about and that's what we're all about. And there's always a story behind everything. I love that. He gave me that thing, it's like a piece of wood or something I don't know what it is, but it's from Key West. We've got that chemistry."
If there were a few more customers as fervid as Ciaccio, Kim Brown might not be toying with the idea of getting into the food business. But there aren't and she is.
"Not everybody wants a buoy or a bell," Kim says. "But everyone wants to drink a cup of coffee. I don't want to be a Starbucks but maybe a little coffee shop. Maybe a good Cuban sandwich."
"But then you get into hiring and firing. I've got friends in the retaurant business. I see how hard they work. It's never-ending," she says, beginning to argue with herself. "I just don't want to work that hard."
She circles back to a calm contentment with life as it is currently defined.
"We're happy. We don't want to sell. We're not rich, but we pay our bills.
.