Showing posts with label Colin Burch. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Colin Burch. Show all posts

Saturday, November 16, 2013

Poem

This poem first was published online in the Winter 2012 edition of New Mirage Journal, but unfortunately for me, the site appears to have gone away. So, I'll post it here, with one edit: "glittering" originally was "glittered."

 

Regarding Joy and Grace

By Colin Foote Burch


Spinning, apropos or no,
Grooving on glittering club floors
Or shimmying on scorched highway medians:

You will be like the sunflower
Willfully set in the crack
Of the dirty city sidewalk,

Grateful the dark lattice dome crumbled
And now we have sky --
Blue, unbounded sky.

Digg this

Saturday, February 9, 2013

Get Lily the Great Imperial Stout today at The Pig

Until Feb. 18, New South Brewing's foray into high-gravity beer will only be available at the growler station at Piggly Wiggly in The Market Common, Myrtle Beach.

Read about it in the latest Beerman column.

See other beer-related news on Technorati:

Digg this

Saturday, April 9, 2011

Hey! You!

Why can't you be more like the people in the advertisements?

Digg this

Friday, August 20, 2010

About that handle in a CCU restroom . . .

On campus today, I opened the door to exit a CCU restroom. The handle came off in pieces that scattered on the floor.

The door closed.

I couldn't re-open the door.

I wondered how long I would have to wait before someone else would have to go to the toilet, so I might be liberated from the restroom.

Eventually, I rigged the handle to work well enough to open the door.

I escaped the restroom.

I went to my office and sat at my computer. I wondered if someone else might be experiencing the same thing I just went through.

I called the Facilities phone number.

With a very friendly voice, the lady on the other end advised me with a few bureaucratic phrases.

I thanked her and hung up.

I still have no idea what she said.

If you're presently stuck in the restroom, I'm really sorry.

Digg this

Tuesday, May 18, 2010

Dogfish Head swims into the Grand Strand market; or, what I did at Mellow Mushroom last night

Today, I went to the Piggly Wiggly at The Market Common and bought a four-pack of Dogfish Head 90 Minute IPA.

I also saw Midas Touch, Palo Santo Marron, and Immort Ale, the first two of which I had tried the night before.

That's when I had chatted with Claus Hagelman, indie guru for Dogfish Head Brewery, at Mellow Mushroom about his company's beers and its move into the Myrtle Beach market. (I also talked with some of the Yahnis Co. guys, who will be distributing the Dogfish Head products in our area.)

The samples I tasted Monday evening blew my mind -- new favorites, and new respect for Dogfish Head.

I'll write about Dogfish Head's move into the Myrtle Beach market for the April 3 edition of the Weekly Surge, and I'll be blogging about these new-to-us brews in the upcoming days. Stick around and check back.

Digg this

Friday, September 4, 2009

'Blind Faith' now available!

Hi everyone! That ridiculous-looking blindfolded guy on the cover of the Weekly Surge is -- wait for it -- me.

The cover story, "Blind Faith: Beerman's Local Brew Crew Taste-Tests Budget Beers," will let you know how to get the best possible cheap beers this Labor Day weekend.

Pick up your free copy of the Weekly Surge at area grocery stores and publication racks.

Digg this

Friday, June 1, 2007

New South's Blonde Bombshell at T-Bonz


I tried New South's Blonde Bombshell tonight at T-Bonz in Barefoot Landing, North Myrtle Beach.


Blonde Bombshell is crisp, smooth, well-balance, light-to-medium in body, and so drinkable your quick stop at happy-hour will end with the barkeep pushing you out at closing time.


I had dropped in on May 14, just three days after T-Bonz had first tapped this seasonal brew, and I ordered a pint, only to see the suds sputter -- the last keg had just done dry. I was stood up by the Blonde Bombshell.


Tonight, the joke was on me -- I ordered my second, and guess what? The tap started sputtering suds again.


This time, however, there was another keg in the back.
-Colin Burch

Digg this

Thursday, March 29, 2007

LiturgicalCredo.com

Alas, the first edition of LiturgicalCredo.com has been completed and posted at www.liturgicalcredo.com.

The idea behind this online journal is to publish good writing that relates directly or indirectly to history, traditions, liturgy, creeds, and a sacramental way of seeing the world, including artistic and literary works.

Here's what I've got in this first edition:

An interview with acclaimed British historian Lesley Chamberlain

Thoughts on bread-baking and spirituality from author Peter Reinhart

A poem by Rhett Iseman Trull, editor of Cave Wall, a journal of art and poetry

A painting by Andrew Burch, whose work has been shown in Carolina galleries

An essay on the importance of the creeds in the Christian faith

An essay on historical continuity in liturgy with special reference to the founding of LiturgicalCredo.com

Check it out, and enjoy!

Digg this

Friday, March 16, 2007

Whiskey for Saint Patrick's Day

I had a $15 shot of Irish whiskey last Monday night, preparing for my Saint Patrick's Day column. Midleton Very Rare was an amazing sipping experience. Kristi, who is a Jack Daniels drinker, liked Midleton better than the other Irish whiskeys we tried that evening.
Speaking of which, we also tried Bushmills, Michael Collins, and Power's.
Read about the Irish whiskey adventure here: http://www.weeklysurge.com/beer.html . A link to previous columns is on the same page.
Happy Saint Patrick's Day,
Colin









Digg this

Tuesday, March 13, 2007

Myrtle Beach Moment, No. 6

Two of the most unique names in Myrtle Beach commercial real estate: Stokes Graves and Rusty Helm...




Digg this

Monday, March 5, 2007

Polanyi and the Art of Knowing

My review of Mark T. Mitchell's book Michael Polanyi: The Art of Knowing appears in the new issue of Appraisal, the journal of the Society for Post-Critical and Personalist Studies in the U.K.

Mitchell writes, "Polanyi points a way out of the dark forest of rational scepticism and systematic doubt. He shows us how we might once again speak meaningfully of the good, the true and the beautiful. And he shows us how we might recover an understanding of the importance of the places we inhabit and the persons with whom we live."

To read the review, click the following link for a PDF of the book review section, and then scroll down to the mid-point of page 6: http://www.spcps.org.uk/3-10%20Reviews.pdf .

-Colin Burch

Digg this

Friday, March 2, 2007

Gluten-free beer: Is the end near?

Redbridge is a beer made from sorghum, a type of grass that was used to make syrup in the Old South. Redbridge is for people who are living a "gluten-free lifestyle." So it is made with no wheat or barley.
When I saw this near beer at the package store, I thought the apocalyptic Left Behind series might be onto something.
But when I tasted it... well, click here and find out: http://www.weeklysurge.com/2007Archives/022207%20archives/beer022207.html

-Colin

Digg this

Thursday, March 1, 2007

Farewell to The Living Room

During the first week of January 2001, Kristi and I opened The Living Room Coffee Bar & Used Books here in Myrtle Beach.
We sold it March 2004 to Diane Parker, and we became patrons of The Living Room, always being proud that we started the place and it was still going, never mind losing money on it.
Recently, Diane was due to renew her lease. The property owners drew up a new lease agreement that included a 20-percent hike in her monthly rent. She couldn't do it, and we understand why -- it's not big bucks, just big hearts, that run a social, community-minded place.
The Living Room closed for good on Saturday, Feb. 24.
The following is an article written for the Neighbors section of The Sun News by Tory Tall, a regular and one of The Living Room's biggest fans going back to our first days of operation. (After Tory's column, I'll paste the article that ran on The Living Room's last day, which appeared on the front of the Money section in The Sun News.)

TORY TALL COASTAL NOTEBOOK
Coffee house will be missed; customers call it second home

It was standing room only Saturday night as folks gathered for The Living Room's last hurrah. Open mike participants were in rare form as they serenaded the crowd with everything from edgy guitar tunes to "Georgia on My Mind." Let me just say that bongos and kazoos were involved.
As evidenced by the farewell notes left by despondent customers, the establishment had become a second home for many.
"I will miss this warm, lovely Living Room - my living room away from home - where sweet people served me the best coffee on the beach and shared their life with me. Big hugs," penned Patti C.
"I'm going to miss all of you because it's good to be recognized in this busy world, and not only for being a customer," wrote an anonymous author.
Almost every note made a reference to this sense of connection.
The lyrics from the TV show, "Cheers" - "where everybody knows your name, and they're always glad you came" - may not have been what proprietress Diane Parker used as a business model, but it's certainly what she created.
"I wanted my staff to greet each customer with a smile because we care about people and know that our customers are the heart of our business," she said. "A small business helps develop a sense of community and that small-town feeling we all want."
She created that and so much more.
Just as Parker will miss seeing everybody, she and her fantastic, albeit eclectic, staff will be much missed. Have no doubt that you, like the man in one of your favorite parables, have made a difference to a whole lot of starfish.
The loss of the Living Room should be a cautionary tale, as it is only one of the many small businesses that have been unable to withstand market pressures in our local community. Although I appreciate the convenience of ordering from Amazon in my PJs and paying less for Steamfresh veggies at Wal-Mart, I miss independent bookstores like the Whale's Tale, locally owned restaurants like Corbin's and Little's, and record shops like Sounds Familiar, where personal attention was the standard.
I am deeply grateful for those places like New Life Natural Foods, Studio 77, Sun City Cafe and Anything Joe's, among others, that are still able to fight the good fight. Hard work isn't enough to keep places like these safe from the fate that befell the Living Room - they need your patronage.
If you want to wear your support on your bumper, order the sticker that says "Independents Do It Without Chains" from Malaprop's Bookstore in Asheville, N.C., and for further inspiration, read "Big-Box Swindle: The True Cost of Mega-Retailers and the Fight for America's Independent Businesses."
Contact freelance writer TORY TALL at museinc@verizon.net or 602-1194.

=====
Living Room leaving MB
By Lisa Fleisher
The Sun News
Local artist Harry Love will have to find somewhere else to hang his paintings. Musician Otis Windley will say goodbye to the grand piano and the crowds he's entertained. A local Spanish club will have to find a new place to chat.
Countless devoted customers who have come to feel at home at The Living Room Coffee Bar & Used Books are saying goodbye to the Myrtle Beach coffee shop and used bookstore, which will shut its doors today.
Patrons say there's nothing in the Myrtle Beach area quite like the place, where paintings and sketches hung for sale on the walls, shelves of used books filled the back half of the coffeehouse and mismatched, yet charming furniture filled the front.
"Oh, we're heartbroken," said Joan Rigby, of Southampton, Ontario, Canada. "We started coming for the good coffee, and then we heard the new music, and that was it."
Diane Parker, 54, took over the business three years ago from the previous owners when she moved here from Raleigh, N.C., where she was a dental hygienist.
"I always wanted to own my own business," she said. "That just was one of the things I needed to tick off in my life's journey."
Parker said she has to close because the business was getting too much for her to run and she could not find a buyer. Her three-year lease had expired, and the rent was about to jump 20 percent.
Live music will play tonight until the last patron leaves.
This year was the first in the black for the six-year-old business, Parker said.
To make the business work, she introduced live music nights, set up chairs and tables, wheeled in her own grand piano and revamped the book and menu selection. She added homemade quiches, chicken salads and brownies.
"The first day I made a mocha I was so proud," she said, leaning in to whisper her dirty little secret: she's not a coffee drinker.
She knew nothing about espresso either, but she trusted her employees to make it happen.
"Once you've been through life and gone to enough restaurants, you know customer service, you know what you like, and more, you know what you don't like," she said. "It's just a matter of knowing how to run a business."
With such a large retired population to cater to, Parker said she had to educate customers who had not grown up with a Starbucks on every corner about what a latte and a cappuccino were.
Parker tried to establish an atmosphere where customers felt they could milk their lattes for hours while relaxing in a comfy chair surfing the Net on their laptops for free.
After her husband died in 1999, Parker said she wanted to give back. She went on mission trips. Then, with The Living Room, she tried to create a community gathering place.
"It's probably been more than I expected it to be," she said. "I get e-mails from people all the time thanking me that I have this place here."
What really formed the close-knit community were the open-mike nights on Thursdays, she said, and jazz on Fridays.
Slam poets and amateur musicians would perform in a space where they said they felt safe and appreciated. Fridays would get so crowded, latecomers knew they had to bring their own chairs.
Even in the daytime, a lone guitarist or fiddler often sat on a chair outside, entertaining themselves and passersby.
Dan Allen, 38, a local electrician who taught himself violin as a teenager, would play on his lunch breaks from the nearby construction site of the Beach First center on 38th Avenue North and Robert M. Grissom Parkway.
He writes and plays his own songs. "They've never really run me off," he said, laughing.
He'll miss the fair trade coffee and the vegetarian food, he said.
This past week, customers picked through the hundreds of books still on the shelves and enjoyed their last chocolate scones.
"We like your store a lot," one customer told Parker.
"So do we," she said. "So do we."
If you go
What Last night of music
When Tonight at 6
Where The Living Room, 1285 38th Ave. N. in Plantation Point Plaza
Contact LISA FLEISHER at 626-0317 or lfleisher@thesunnews.com.

Digg this

Monday, February 26, 2007

Myrtle Beach Moment, No. 5

This notice appears on the playground at the YMCA in Myrtle Beach.
If I'm reading this correctly, it seems that supervising parents have to bring some appropriate play with them, but they need not worry about it before the school is closed.
Furthermore, inappropriate play is OK before the school is closed; however, I cannot tell if the inappropriate play is OK with or without parental supervision, only that it is allowable during hours of school operation.

Digg this

Monday, February 19, 2007

At local Hooters, beer goggles aren't enough


Two Hooters locations here in Myrtle Beach, and another in North Myrtle Beach, have added full-liquor bars, joining 51 others nationwide. Until now, Hooters served beer, wine, wine coolers, champagne and soft drinks.

Of course, the move to liquor makes perfect sense. Beer-drinking men are so well-behaved around busty girls in short shorts, why not let them get drunk quicker?

I talk about the Hooters' development in this week's Beerman column: http://www.weeklysurge.com/beer.html .

Digg this
 
Links Add to Technorati Favorites