Holiday Canned Food Drive at The Lake House

November 1 – December 8, 2023

Goal – 5,000 pounds

Seabrookers contributed almost 5,910 pounds of food items last year!

One way to make our own holiday celebrations even more meaningful is to help our neighbors in need on Johns and Wadmalaw Islands. When you go grocery shopping, please purchase a couple of extra cans of food, or even better, multi-packs of canned food items, for distribution to the clients of the Sea Islands Hunger Awareness Foundation (SIHAF). Protein items like hearty or chunky soups, stews, chili, corned beef hash, tuna, and canned chicken, as well as canned vegetables and fruit, are especially appreciated. No glass or out-of-date items, please.

Donations and contributions can be delivered to The Lake House lobby beginning November 1. Place your items in the bin under the new donations sign behind the column. All donations will be weighed before they are picked up.

Grocery bags with handles are still very much needed and can be dropped off along with your food donations.

Together, we can fight hunger, one meal at a time!

-Submitted by SIPOA

Update on Johns Island Library

Due to building maintenance, the John’s Island Library, located at 3531 Maybank Highway, will experience closures and modified operating hours beginning November 8.

The branch will be closed November 8 – 10. 
All CCPL branches and offices will be closed November 10 for Veterans Day.

Branch hours beginning November 13 as follows:
Monday – Thursday: 12:00 – 8:00 pm
Friday: 9:00 am – 6:00 pm
Saturday: 9:00 am – 5:00 pm
Closed Sundays
All CCPL branches except the Main Library are closed on Sundays.

The maintenance work is expected to take several weeks to complete. Certain library areas and services may be temporarily unavailable or impacted during this time.

For more information or updates, visit ccpl.orgFacebookTwitter and/or Instagram, or contact the branch at 843-559-1945.

Tidelines Editors

(Image credit: ccpl.org)

Symphony Tour of Homes on Kiawah Island Nov 4

Each year the Charleston Symphony Orchestra League (CSOL) has offered guests new sites to wander through; for this, the 26th year of the tour, guests will once again have the opportunity to experience elegant Kiawah Island life up close and personal.

On Saturday, November 4, 2023 from 10:00 am to 4:00 pm, tour guests will depart from Freshfields Village with a brochure for a self-guided tour of four distinctive homes and a unique island recess where those on the tour can linger and rehydrate while enjoying the verdant marsh views.   

Along the tour, music will be offered by CSOL scholarship winners. Guests will also have the chance to shop at Score, the curated pop-up shop, with proceeds benefitting the CSO and the CSOL scholarship program. This year’s tour has a further added feature: Juliska is providing a private curated purchasing experience for dazzling tableware to be won in a raffle, with the winning ticket drawn at the end of the tour (winners need not be present for the drawing.) On the tour, guests can also see the 2024 Mercedes GLC 300 SUV, for which a prepaid three-year lease is the prize in this year’s CSOL Car Raffle.

The day’s adventure will be capped with a performance by the Charleston Symphony Orchestra at the West Beach Conference Center, sponsored by the Town of Kiawah Island Arts and Cultural Events Council. This concert, conducted by Yuriy Bekker and featuring Oboist Kelly Mozeik, will include music ranging from Mozart to Morricone, from Salzburg to Broadway.

Further tour details, raffle tickets, advance tour tickets and symphony concert tickets are available online through November 3 from Charleston Symphony Orchestra League .

-Submitted by Charleston Symphony Orchestra League

(Image credits: CSOL)

CLF: Embrace the Conversation Nov 3-12

Are you someone who loves books? Do you enjoy engaging in inspiring conversations about ideas? The renowned Charleston Literary Festival (CLF) returns from November 3 – 12, 2023 at various venues in Charleston. This celebration of literature, culture and creativity showcases an impressive list of authors and distinguished speakers. Tickets are still available for many sessions.

Find the full Charleston Literary Festival 2023 Program here.

Tidelines Editors

(Image credit: charlestonliteraryfestival.com)

Brown & White Pickup Nov 3

The next monthly
Brown & White Pickup is Friday, November 3, 2023.

Bulk items can be left curbside by 7:00 am. Place items including furniture, appliances, grills, lawn furniture, or other similar household items where you would normally leave your trash and recycling.

Hazardous waste such as old paint cans, electronics, batteries, fluorescent lights, and old yard or household chemicals can be taken to the Maintenance Area (adjacent to the Community Garden) that morning between 9:00 am and 2:00 pm. Hazardous materials must be handed directly to the attendant on duty. The materials cannot be left on the ground. 

Before you put your used furniture or other items on the curb for Brown & White Pickup on Friday, consider recycling them with Sea Island Habitat for Humanity Restore. Contact the store at 843-559-4009 for more information and to arrange for free pick up of large items.

Click here for the 2023 SIPOA Garbage, Recycling, Yard Debris Pickup Schedule.

Tidelines Editors

SIB November Activities

Fall migration, arrival of winter residents and much more to be thankful for.  Join SIB for activities on Seabrook or beyond our backyard.

Beyond Our Backyard: Santee Coastal WMA

When: Sunday, November 5, 2023, 8:00 am – 4:00 pm
Location: Meet at Seabrook Island Real Estate to carpool at 6:30 am or
meet at Sewee Outpost at 4853 Hwy 17, Awendaw, SC to buy breakfast, lunch and to use restrooms before proceeding to the reserve.
Dinner option after birding: Location TBD 
Max: 16 for the morning half-day portion, eight for the whole-day afternoon option  
Cost:  Free for members, $10 per guest

Join SIB to bird at Santee Coastal Reserve Wildlife Management Area (WMA), a 24,000 acre tract, operated by the SC Department of Natural Resources (DNR) and The Nature Conservancy (TNC), rich in  different habitats including long-leaf pine, bottomland swamp, upland hardwoods and former rice impoundments. The area was originally inhabited by the Sewee and the Winyah tribes. Then, several rice plantations were established here in the 1700’s.  Today, you can still see the brick ruins of the Eldorado plantation house on a hike through the upland hardwoods. In 1898, Captain Hugh Garden established the Santee Gun Club upon his acquisition of these rice plantations. Finally in 1974, the Santee Gun Club donated the property to TNC who then transferred most of it to the state of SC for management by DNR.  

Of course, a variety of habitats translates to a variety of birdlife.  On this trip, we will focus our efforts on two habitats. In the morning, we will bird the long-leaf pine forest to find the federally-listed endangered Red-cockaded Woodpecker (RCW) and, hopefully, Bachman’s Sparrow and then, in the afternoon, we will bird the entrance to the impoundments to observe multiple early arriving duck species.  

The long entrance road runs through the middle of the long-leaf pine forest in which we will find the RCWs. Our birding here will be roadside. In addition to the RCWs, we will listen for owls. Other species we may see this time of year are the Blue-headed vireo, Brown-headed Nuthatch, White-breasted Nuthatch, raptors, Pine Warbler, Eastern Bluebird, Song Sparrow, White-throated Sparrow, Savannah Sparrow, Chipping Sparrow, Swamp Sparrow, Eastern Towhee, and possibly all of the other seven species of woodpeckers in SC.  Other possibilities include Yellow-throated Warbler, Common Yellowthroat, Black-and-white Warbler, Blue-gray Gnatcatcher, , House Wren, Sedge Wren, Red-breasted Nuthatch, if we are lucky.  

The Cape Trail impoundments are closed to the public from November 1 to February 9 every year. When a group visited in May, we were able to see a number of species as we walked the entrance to this area. The mosquitoes should not be a problem this time of year making for pleasant birding. In May, when all the ducks were gone, we were still able to report 53 species.

As always, be sure to bring your binoculars/cameras, hats, sunscreen and bug spray. Bring plenty to drink and a picnic lunch to eat on the property. There are no facilities on the property.

Please register no later than November 3, 2023.  All registrants will receive a confirmation letter on November 4, the day prior to the trip

Register here.

Evening Program: Learn How to Catch a Kiwi and so Much More

Speaker: Dr. Kristina Ramstad, Associate Professor, Vertebrate Biology, University of South Carolina Aiken

When: November 10, 2023, 7:00 pm
Location:  The Lake House, Live Oak Hall
Cost: Free for members, $10 for guests 

  • 7:00 pm, Registration and refreshments
  • 7:30 pm, Program
  • 8:45 pm, Program ends

Program Description:

The geologic history of New Zealand has given rise to a myriad of unusual species that are found nowhere else on Earth. In this talk, Dr Ramstad will tell you about the historical and current ecology of New Zealand and the flightless endemic kiwi. She will present her research into inbreeding and sex-biased dispersal in the two rarest kiwi species and answer the age old question….How do you catch a kiwi?

Speaker Biography:

Dr Ramstad is a conservation geneticist. Her work draws on genomic techniques and field based ecological studies to improve our understanding and management of at-risk species.

After studying sockeye salmon in Alaska for both her MSc (University of Washington) and PhD (University of Montana) research, Dr Ramstad moved to New Zealand and spent eight years studying conservation genetics of kiwi. She took up her current role at USCA in 2015 and will tell you that her current research obsession is with the wood storks of the steamy and mysterious swamps of the US South.

Register here.

November Movie, “Wild America – Season Two – Bird Watching ”

(Episodes 5 and 6)

When: Tuesday, November 14, 2023 at 4:00 pm 
Location:  In person at Oyster Catcher Community Center (if there are at least five people) and virtually via Zoom

Wild America | S2 E3 Birds of Prey | Full Episode HD - YouTube

Birdwatching is one very popular way in which many people enjoy the wonder and fascination of our great American outdoors. More so than any other creatures, birds have captured the imagination of humans as they float on the wind, soar to great heights and make the world a more wonderful place.

Episode 5: Feathered Jewels – The fifteen species of hummingbirds that nest north of Mexico are exquisitely beautiful in their multi-colored iridescence. All are unique to the New World. European explorers were astounded by these tiny, glittering birds that zipped up and down, backwards and sideways, with wings humming and blurred. Here they are seen as never before, and we savor every last little wingbeat.

Episode 6: A Nest is Best – A bird does not need a house to make itself a happy home. They can be cup-shaped, or long and hollow, like gourds. They can be coarsely made of sticks and mud, or exquisitely woven of spider web and down. They can be found anywhere, deftly hidden or dangerously exposed. Even the eggs that fill them are not always egg-shaped. This program shows that birds do not need a house to make a home.”

Register here.

Learning Together on Ocean Winds Golf Course

When: Monday, November 13, 2023, 8:30 am – 10:30 am
Location: Meet at The Island House (golf course parking lot next to Spinnaker beach houses) for ride along the golf course in golf carts
Max: 24 (If all seats in golf carts are used) 
Cost: Free for members; $10 donation for guests – Priority will be given to prior waitlisted and members

The Seabrook Island Club closes one course a day, each week and allows SIB to use golf carts to travel the course to bird. Join us for a morning of birding by riding in golf carts for at least 9-holes on Ocean Winds golf course. We expect to see a large variety of birds including Egrets, Herons and birds of prey. We will also see and hear some of the smaller birds like Tufted Titmice, Eastern Bluebirds, Northern Cardinals, Carolina Wrens and some of the many warbler species. Since it is fall/winter, we can also expect to see Eastern Phoebes, Northern Flickers, Yellow-bellied Sapsuckers, Belted Kingfishers, Double-crested Cormorants, Bald Eagles, and more!

As always, be sure to bring your binoculars/cameras, hats and sunscreen.  Water will be provided.  

Please register no later than Friday prior to the trip.  All registrants will receive a confirmation letter on the Sunday, the day prior to the trip. If you need to cancel, please let us know so we can invite people on the waitlist to attend.

Register here.

Learning Together – Walk to Freshfields 

When: Monday, November 20, 2023,  3:00 pm – 5:00 pm
Location: Meet at The Lake House parking lot close to the lake
Max: 20         
Cost: Free for members; $10 donation for guests 

Join SIB for birding and a walk to Freshfields. Everyone may have not noticed yet, but the path to Freshfields has been spruced up a bit. There are new benches and flowers planted along the way. There are plenty of trees and birding opportunities. Birders from beginners to advanced will enjoy the variety of birds found along the way. You never know what bird will show up. We will look for our winter residents. We could see the ruby-crowned kinglet, yellow-bellied sapsucker and more. 

As always, be sure to bring your binoculars/cameras, hats and sunscreen. Bring a spotting scope if you have one. Bring plenty to drink and a snack if desired. There is a possibility that we may hit the construction going on at Freshfields, so we will just turn around and walk on the other side of the road. 

Please register no later than November 15, 2023. All registrants will receive a confirmation letter the day prior to the event.  

Register here.

Learning Together: Walk off the Bird at Camp St. Christopher

When: Friday, November 24, 2023, 8:00 am-11:00 am
Location:  Meet at the bus parking lot at St. Christopher
Max:  10
Cost: Voluntary donation to Camp St.Christopher

Come walk off the  bird by doing some birding!!! Explore the lakes, lagoons, paths and slough at St. Christopher. This event will have one to two miles of walking over uneven terrain. We  should see all the usual suspects but will also hopefully see some of our winter friends-Yellow-bellied Sapsucker, Northern Flicker, Yellow-rumped Warbler and sparrows.

Bring sun block, bug spray, a hat, water and binoculars.  We are asking our attendees to make a voluntary contribution to Camp St. Christopher to help support their efforts after a few trying years.

Please register no later than Wednesday, November 22, 2023.  All registrants will receive a confirmation letter on Thursday, November 23, 2023.  If you need to cancel, please let us know.

Register here.

-Submitted by SIB

(Image credit: SIB, Wild America)

Opportunities to Meet the Candidates

Every Sunday morning until the upcoming municipal election, Tidelines will publish a listing of “meet and greet” or other public forums scheduled by candidates. Each of the candidates has been offered the opportunity to submit information about upcoming events. The following events were submitted to Tidelines for today’s post. 

Please see below for opportunities to meet with Jeri Finke who is a candidate for Seabrook Island mayor. 

Please join me in a public Zoom session on any of the following days. These will last 40-60 minutes, are open to the first 50 to join the meeting, and will be open Q&A sessions: 

 Wednesday, November 1, at 11:00 am. Click here to join the event.

 Sunday, November 5, at 5:00 pm. Click here to join the event.

With work schedules, doctor appointments, workmen coming and going, tee/court times, and any number of social events in our active community, it’s not always easy to get out and about to a meeting. If there was anything positive to come out of the pandemic, it was the Zoom platform that helps us work around those conflicts. 

I have participated in dozens and dozens of Zoom meetings, seminars, classes, family chats, and more over the last three+ years. The platform provides a positive venue for widespread participation and dissemination of information. 

On the day of the meetings listed, click on the link above. The links will also be posted on my Website, JeriForMayor.org, in the event you misfile this Tidelines page. 

I hope to see you soon! Let’s talk … 

Jeri Finke

Please see below for opportunities to meet with Bruce Kleinman who is a candidate for Seabrook Island mayor. 

Enjoy coffee and conversation * Vote for Change, 10/30 at 9:00 am * 1912 Long Bend Dr. * RSVP no later than Sunday, 10/29 to suedostal1746@gmail.com * Don’t miss the chance to get to know the future leaders of the Town of Seabrook Island!

I encourage you to attend – “Ask Bruce Kleinman” Town Hall meeting, November 5 at 5:00 pm in Live Oak Hall at The Lake House. Reservations are not required and there will be no pre-screening of questions. Please attend, step up to the microphone and ask questions.


This is not a zoom call. Participation does not require computer literacy. There will be no link to click on and no mute button to worry about.


Let’s get together in The Lake House and exchange ideas in an in-person setting. This is a true opportunity to get to know me and to engage with me on whatever TOSI issues concern you. You can ask me about trust in our town government, short term rentals, real estate development, our town budget or any other matter before our town. My candidacy is built upon building trust and full transparency in the conduct of our town government. I am confident that we can solve all the problems facing our Town through working together for change.

Bruce Kleinman

Candidates for the TOSI municipal election were invited to submit statements about their backgrounds and vision for Seabrook Island. These can be found on the Tidelines website in the upper banner under the dropdown “TOSI Election 2023”.

Tidelines Editors

Chamber Music with Friends Nov 5

Sunday, November 5, 2023 at 3:00 pm
College of Charleston Sottile Theater

Chamber Music Charleston (CMC) welcomes violinist James Ehnes to Sottile Theatre for a program of music for violin, cello, and piano. Gifted with a rare combination of stunning virtuosity, serene lyricism, and an unfaltering musicality, James Ehnes is a favorite guest of many of the world’s most respected conductors. He has soloed with a long list of orchestras including the Boston, Chicago, London, and Vienna Symphony Orchestras, the Los Angeles, New York, Munich and Czech Philharmonic Orchestras, and the Cleveland, Philadelphia, Philharmonia and DSO Berlin orchestras.

James will be joined by his good friend and collaborator Andrew Armstrong, praised for his “breathtaking technique and sensitivity” by the New York Times, and cellist Alice Yoo, whose “warm, rich tone and impeccable phrasing” (The Strad) have made her a sought-after performer.

Program:

Gershwin: I Got Rhythm, for piano
Sarasate: Carmen Fantasy, for violin and piano
Arensky: Piano Trio No. 1 in D minor
Sill: Three Visions, for piano solo
Gliere: Eight Pieces Opus 39, for violin and cello

For tickets, click here.

Tidelines Editors

(Image credit: chambermusiccharleston.org)

Join SIB to Learn How to Catch a Kiwi and so Much More…

Speaker: Dr. Kristina Ramstad, Associate Professor, Vertebrate Biology, University of South Carolina Aiken
Date: November 10, 2023, 7:00 pm
Location: The Lake House, Live Oak Hall
Admission: Free for Members; $10 for Guests

Register here

7:00 pm – Registration and refreshments
7:30 pm – Program
8:45 pm – Program ends

Program Description:

The geologic history of New Zealand has given rise to a myriad of unusual species that are found nowhere else on Earth. In this talk, Dr Ramstad will tell you about the historical and current ecology of New Zealand and the flightless endemic kiwi. She will present her research into inbreeding and sex-biased dispersal in the two rarest kiwi species and answer the age old question….How do you catch a kiwi?

Speaker Biography:

Dr Ramstad is a conservation geneticist. Her work draws on genomic techniques and field based ecological studies to improve our understanding and management of at-risk species.

After studying sockeye salmon in Alaska for both her MSc (University of Washington) and PhD (University of Montana) research, Dr Ramstad moved to New Zealand and spent eight years studying conservation genetics of kiwi. She took up her current role at USCA in 2015 and will tell you that her current research obsession is with the wood storks of the steamy and mysterious swamps of the US South.


Be sure to register so you won’t miss this exciting event!

-Submitted by Judy Morr

(Image credit: SIB)

Prescription Take-Back Day Tomorrow, Saturday, Oct 28

Once again, Vincent’s Drug Store in Freshfields will be participating in the Drug Enforcement Administration’s (DEA) National Prescription Take-Back Day to properly dispose of unneeded medications. Bring your unused or expired medications (no liquids) to the store for proper disposal on Saturday, October 28, 2023, from 10:00 am until 2:00 pm.

If you are not currently on Seabrook Island, click here to see the location near you that is participating in DEA’s Take-Back Day.

This is the time to check your medicine cabinet for unused or expired prescriptions. Not only are they taking up space, but they can be harmful if someone else, other than the person for whom they were prescribed, accidentally takes them.

It is very important to dispose of medications safely. Throwing them in the trash is obviously not the solution. Once they are in the landfill, they can be picked up by people or animals. Flushing them down the drain can pollute the water system. The National Prescription Drug Take-Back Day provides a safe way to dispose of prescription drugs. Drop off your unused or expired medications (no liquids) at Vincent’s Drug Store in Freshfields Village on Saturday, October 29, between 10:00 am and 2:00 pm.

If you have any questions call Vincent’s at 843-243-0007.

Tidelines Editor

(Image credit: takebackday.dea.gov)

SIAG November Artist of the Month, Dick Barnola

Dick was a late bloomer when it came to anything artsy. Although always having a creative side, most of his creative outlet was in restoring and “upcycling” old homes in downtown Charleston. His most recent project was a 170-year-old classic brick Charleston single home slightly south of Broad Street. Just walking through the front door of a derelict old home got his creative juices flowing.

It was in about 1995 when a friend suggested that Dick enroll in a basic drawing class at the Gibbes Art Museum. Doing so was a real breakthrough. The course was based on the book Drawing on the Right Side of Your Brain by Betty Edwards. Yes, anyone can learn to draw! He was so enthralled that he took six other courses at the Gibbes: water color, figure drawing, advanced drawing, composition, acrylic painting and a plein air course. After retiring and moving to Seabrook in 2008, Dick finally had some free time and started painting in oils under the tutelage of Bob LeFevre.

Please join Dick for the Artist of the Month reception
Wednesday, November 1, at The Lake House from 4:30-6:00 pm.

For information on the Seabrook Island Artist Guild click here.

-Submitted by Bonnie Younginer, Seabrook Island Artist Guild

(Image credit: Dick Barnola)