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Showing posts with label Linda Blondheim News. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Linda Blondheim News. Show all posts

Sunday, August 08, 2010

New Magazine Article


Landscape Paintings

Friends,
Enjoy this article published in the Haile Village Journal by Sarah Carey.



For more information or to obtain a photo of Linda Blondheim, e-mail: skcarey1@gmail.com
July 2010

Landscapes reflect artist's passion for capturing region's history
GAINESVILLE – Painter Linda Blondheim's work is a vibrant spectrum of North Florida life and land, rendered impressionistically in all four seasons, at all hours of the day and night.
From postcard-sized paintings produced quickly, when studio time is limited, to larger pieces that hang in homes throughout the country, Blondheim's work always contains undercurrents of yesterday.
Widely renowned for her Southern landscapes, Blondheim is respected by patrons and fellow artists alike for her commitment to land and water conservation in Florida and for her generosity of spirit, as well as for the painting skills she's honed for more than 30 years. Always original, Blondheim's paintings make thoughtful and interpretive use of color and composition and reflect her deep familiarity with “Old Florida” scenery as well as other venues in North Carolina and the Deep South.
Typical Blondheim landscape scenes range from public and privately owned pastures and farm fields that remain home to livestock and horses in the region, to coastal marshlands and pristine ocean and rivers. Her work captures Florida's rich agricultural history as well as its entrenched reputation as a tropical haven for visitors from Northern climes.
An honors graduate of the University of Tampa, Blondheim performed postgraduate studies in fine art at the University of South Florida before embarking on her painting career. She honed her reputation as an oil painter, but has recently shifted to working primarily in acrylics, although she still likes to occasionally use other mediums for effect and variety.
Local residents have likely seen her work at Paddiwhack, her primary Gainesville gallery, as well as recently in solo exhibitions at Books, Inc., the Vam York Theatre, Melrose Bay Gallery, and the Ice House Gallery in McIntosh.
It was in that gallery that 12 years ago, McIntosh resident Lindy McCollum Brounley, a communications specialist at UF, spotted a particular Blondheim painting...and fell in love.
“It was a vibrantly painted landscape of a stand of sabal palms in a grass prairie,” Brounley said. “Like most all of Linda's Florida landscapes, it evoked a powerful sense of 'home' within me.”
Brounley's mother purchased the painting and gave it to her daughter for her birthday that year.
Since then, Brounley and her husband have collected four additional Blondheim landscapes of Florida locations that are meaningful to them. As a Christmas gift for her mother this past year, Brounley purchased a painting of a dirt road hugging the treeline at the edge of a hilly, plowed field outside of Evinston, Fla.
“For us, Linda's paintings of our beautiful North Florida landscapes document the rural lifestyle and its unique ecological treasures that we love and hope to preserve,” Brounley said.
Although Blondheim has deliberately downsized her gallery presence in recent years, she has simultaneously expanded her Web presence, reaching out to patrons and potential patrons through a blog, Facebook and Twitter, in addition to the more conventional Web site.
“At one time, I would have never considered reducing my gallery presence, as that was how I felt artists became known, and I was not as confident in my own ability to attract sales in other ways,” Blondheim said.
To survive in today's market, she has had to devise more creative ways of marketing a broader selection of work at different price points to appeal to a range of clients – individuals who never thought they could afford to buy an original painting but quickly learn that Blondheim's art is actually quite affordable, as well as art lovers who pay top dollar for their favorite scenes.
Much of Blondheim's subject matter is captured off the beaten path and resonates with both Florida natives and others who have come to call Florida home. Among her favorite places to paint locally are Fair Oaks Farm, owned by attorney Rick Knellinger, and the Wood family's historic farm, both located in Evinston.
Blondheim visits Evinston whenever she can, particularly between October and April, before the summer's brutal heat sets in.
“I have been fortunate to have Linda spend considerable time and effort at Fair Oaks documenting the farrn in gorgeous paintings which preserve for all time, the nurturing nature of a vanishing landscape,” said Fair Oaks owner Knellinger, who has accumulated several Blondheim paintings in the past two years. “She wanders the fields finding views through which she captures the spirit of the farm and those who toil here.”
The Wood farm, which has been designated a Century Pioneer Family Farm by the state of Florida, is located on the shores of Orange Lake and holds a special place in Blondheim's heart because of her years-long relationship with the Wood family. Ashley Wood, a retired communications director formerly with the University of Florida's Food and Agricultural Sciences, said Blondheim is always welcome to visit the family's farms, lands and yards.
“It's always great to hear from our Evinston-area neighbors when we have a 'Linda Blondheim sighting', because we are so pleased to have her creative talents that so wonderfully capture the lands and environment that we all love, appreciate and work to protect,” said Wood, who has known Blondheim since she was hired right out of high school in the early 1970s to work in the IFAS print shop.
“She was there for about a year or so before she went back to school for her degree and career as an artist,” he said. “I recall seeing her several years later at the Santa Fe Spring Arts show where she was showing her work and talent for possibly the first time.”
Since then, Wood said Blondheim had developed into “one of the best, if not the best, plein air artists of Florida.”
“She can so uniquely interpret the North Florida environment, the wonderful Florida clouds and sky, the statuesque oaks and palms and the Southern landscapes,” Wood said.
Blondheim was the poster artist for the 2010 Evinston Paint-out, one of six invitational events she will have participated in this year – and that's a downsized schedule for the Lacrosse resident whose studio 11 miles from Gainesville is her late father's converted shed.
A founder of Plein Air Florida, Blondheim once travelled throughout the Eastern Seaboard to participate in numerous paint-outs, but she has come to a point in her life and career where she prefers to stay closer to home,so she can concentrate on studio work and be more available to her 87-year-old mother and to other family members.
That's one reason why she has devoted more time recently to Internet marketing, even gradually reducing her in-studio teaching and workshops in favor of “E-classes” she offers to her current students. Many of Blondheim's students are already aspiring artists seeking to reach their next level of achievement through professional consultation, but some have never previously picked up a paint brush and seek Blondheim's help to pursue their dream of learning how to paint.
“The logistics of travel, and the sheer physical demands of setting up, taking down and painting non-stop in unpredictable conditions can be very stressful, but most importantly I have come to feel that my strengths are better realized in the studio,” Blondheim said.
This year, she painted at events in Wekiva Springs State Park, Epcot Center in Orlando, Bartram Trail in St. John's County, and Winter Park as well as Evinston. The Canaveral National Seashore National Paint-out looms in November.
A self-described workaholic, Blondheim's friends know that she is also a “foodie” – an excellent cook who wouldn't consider having guests to her studio without putting out a spread of homemade munchies and dip, along with the requisite lemonade.
Her studio chili parties are something of a tradition for Blondheim fans. Patrons and others who are on her mailing list receive invitations to these get-togethers, which are Blondheim's way of showing appreciation to her friends and patrons.
At Art Salons – a concept Blondheim came up with for hosting groups of art aficionados at her studio – she whips up a fabulous lunch that might consist of spaghetti, salad and carrot cake.
Blondheim once worked as the personal chef for former McIntosh resident Louise Courtelis, a University of Florida philanthropist and former owner of Town and Country Farm. Courtelis and her daughter, Kiki, both of whom now reside in Kentucky, own several Blondheim paintings and have consistently supported her and her work over the years.
Town of Tioga resident Liz Brown discovered Blondheim's work after being invited to an Art Salon by her friend, Lindy Brounley.
“Lindy knew that my teenage daughter, Gracie, is an aspiring artist, and suggested that I bring Gracie as well,” Brown said. “We had no idea what to expect, and frankly I was a little intimidated. Would I be the only guest who knew nothing about art? Of course, I had been to art museums, and I had some haphazardly chosen art in my home, but I had never spent much time trying to learn about art.”
She added that what transpired was a lovely afternoon of lunching, laughing, and learning about one artist’s process and philosophy.
“Linda opened her studio and her home to us, fed our minds and hearts with her beautiful Florida landscapes, and our tummies with her delicious food,” said Brown, a staff attorney in the U.S. Attorney's office. “I grew up in the Florida Panhandle where 'beach scenes' are ubiquitous, but Linda’s paintings were like nothing I had seen before. Linda has a gift for capturing the essence of her subjects, so that you can smell the salt air, feel the cool spring water, and hear the palm fronds moving in the breeze.”
Blondheim asked the Art Salon participants to view the paintings in her studio, and to share which painting they liked best and why.
“There was no pressure to sound like an art expert, just an opportunity to reflect on why we are attracted to certain images,” Brown said. “Linda discussed how and why she chooses her subjects, demonstrated how she makes a painting, and answered our questions about collecting art and what advice she would give to a young artist-in-training.
“Then she told us that that she started giving her own children art to collect when they were young, and in that spirit I later bought Gracie some small florals that she especially admired to remind her of our afternoon in Linda’s studio,” Brown added. “This past Christmas, I put one of Linda’s paintings of Poe Springs on my 'wish list,' and I now enjoy looking at that refreshing scene at the end of a long, hot, day.”
Although Blondheim has deep roots in Alachua County, having been born and raised here, she can never mentally stay in one place too long. She constantly evaluates her business and marketing plans, while never losing sight of her personal need to evolve as a painter -- perfecting her techniques in a specific medium, for example, or experimenting with a fresh approach to value study.
“What I especially admire about Linda is her commitment to expanding her skills as a painter, ever immersing herself in the study of aesthetics while experimenting with color, mediums and other various techniques,” said Sharon Crute, an Ocala artist renowned for her dynamic equine paintings. “In this ongoing endeavor, Linda generously shares her acquired knowledge with her peers. As an equine artist, she urged me step out of my horse genre and take a try with plein air painting, something I would never have considered. This is how much she remains fully engaged as an artist.”
For more information about Linda Blondheim's work, or to purchase a painting, go to www.lindablondheim.com. Oh, and there will be a cake party (red velvet, sour cream pound and carrot cake are already on the menu) at her studio on September 25. Anyone interested is more than welcome to attend.

-30-
The cake party locationhas been changed to Melrose Bay Gallery, State Road 26, Melrose, Florida

Thursday, July 02, 2009

Linda Blondheim Art Studio Newsletter July 2, 2009



Back Field Trees
20x24 inches
acrylic on birch panel
1500.00
shipping 95.00
Purchase HERE

Linda Blondheim Art Studio
Landscapes of The South
http://www.lindablondheim.com
lindablondheim@gmail.com
Studio: 386.462.5726
Please forward my newsletters to your friends. I need to grow my business. I'll
reward you with a tiny abstract painting.
Don't forget that I offer 10% of the sale cash referral rewards when you send a
new patron to me who purchases a painting.
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July/2009
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Foodscapes


Back Field Trees

20x24 inches
acrylic on birch panel


As many of you know, I was a chef and caterer for about 13 years. Aside from the
actual cooking and recipes, I had a keen interest in food presentation. I won a
national contest in my day for a dessert tray with chocolate truffles in a chocolate
bag. I also used to hire out to local restaurants for the food show once a year,
called "Puttin on the Ritz" At that time there was no Food Network and foodies
were not as well known.
I still do occasional food presentation, though my focus is on my art. Once a chef
always a chef, my interest in food is just as passionate as it ever was.
Food Presentation is all about design, color and texture, just as good painting
is. Here are some little tips:
When planning a buffet table presentation, use a color theme or texture theme for
containers. Be consistent with the themes for continuity and harmony.
Examples include:
vintage old fashioned platters and bowls, table cloth, napkins, old quilts, etc.
Silver, gold, bronze and other metallics Lots of bling in cloth and napkins, silver
or gold beading, silver or gold flatware and fine linen.
Baskets, flower pots, rattan trays, wooden bowls and platters with tropical themed
cloth and napkins.
The important thing is to use consistency throughout the theme.
One of the things I enjoy doing is using vegetables and fruits for containers for
sauces and dips and using fresh fruit and vegetables as center pieces rather than
flowers. A clear glass vase full of fennel, tall green beans or asparagus makes
a beautiful and exotic center piece.


When you go to a specialty market like Fresh Market, you will see incredibly beautiful
fruits and vegetables which will make exotic table accessories.


My crudite trays were legendary because they were filled with lush and beautiful
vegetables and fruits, not just cut up into convenient servings, but also left
whole and halved so that the natural elements were on display. Just as in my love
of natural Florida, my fruits and vegetables were close to the land where they were
grown. I wanted my food clients to see them in their entirety with all the color
and texture intact. Sprinkled in and through the fruits and vegetables were delicately
cut roses from beets and turnips, graceful swans from melons, and tiny quail families
cut from a variety of pears.


The crudite should be a marriage of easy to eat bite sized pieces, fruits and vegetables
in their natural state, and the bling of beautiful transformations from fruit to
the exotic flowers and animals. A good tablescape will fit the mood of the party
from casual to elegant, making food easy to see and eat. It should be alive with
texture, color and flavor and most of all, it should be fun!! Be sure to create
different heights for the presentation. Like the landscape, there will be little
hills and valleys along the way. A Foodscape will mimic the beauty of nature's landscape
with rivers and fields of food.
I should teach Foodscapes classes!! (Garde Manger) A garde manger is a cold food/pantry
chef.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Garde_Manger
http://www.ccsf.edu/Library/alice/subjguides/garnishing.html
http://www.ehow.com/how_5063671_become-garde-manger-chef.htmlhttp://www.jbprince.com/pantry/garde-manger.asphttp://www.gardemanger.com/history.html
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What Features do Patrons Want?

Dark Palms

14x18 inches
oil on canvas

What are the features patrons ask for from artists' online galleries?
Convenience
An easy return policy
Choosing paintings in their own space
Regional pick up or delivery
Security in quality of materials
Testimonials from other patrons
Reasonable shipping fees
Careful packaging
Holiday Wrapping and Gift Cards- Direct Shipping as gifts.
Studio Gift Certificates for your friends.
Convenient sizes for ready made framing.
Convenient, no interest or extra fees layaway.
Risk Free Purchasing
I am selling more of my paintings through my web site than ever before. This is
becoming a trend for many artists and patrons. It is very easy and convenient for
art lovers to pick a painting and have it arrive at their door. I have been asking
my patrons about the features they most want in their Internet shopping experience
and I am providing these features for all of my patrons. The features they requested
above, are all available from my studio and web site.


Most of all they want the security of knowing that they can purchase a painting
and then return it if the color or size is not right for their home. I have extended
my return policy to 10 days from the date a client receives a painting. You have
ten days to decide on a painting and return it to me, no questions asked. I will
happily send your money back, or hopefully make an exchange for another painting
which will work better for your interior space. Most of my friends are more than
happy with their choice, but I'm fully prepared to assist them if it is not a good
fit.



I make it very easy to purchase right from my web site with convenient http://www.paypal.com
[http://rs6.net/tn.jsp?t=66zp97cab.0.0.ejtjo9cab.0&ts=S0404&p=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.paypal.com%2F&id=preview]
buttons on my site under each painting.

I now sell all of my paintings through my web site unframed, saving you money on
shipping costs. All of the paintings are in standard ready made frame sizes, making
it easy to purchase frames yourself at stores like Hobby Lobby and Michaels.

I will be happy to deliver and show large paintings in the North Central Florida
region to Lake City, Gainesville and Ocala with my Gallery To Go service.

Don't forget my Layaway service with free storage and no extra fees or interest
on layaway purchases.

Schedule an Art Lover Salon at my studio or at Paddiwhack Gallery in Gainesville,
FL

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Southern Memories

Tall Palms

12x16 inches
oil on Masonite panel

Mt Pleasant, South Carolina


When I was a child my great and wonderful Uncle George lived in a suburb community
of Charleston on an ancient civil war era plantation. I remember that it had a long
driveway with big trees on either side. Uncle George was my childhood hero. In my
young eyes, he could do no wrong. I really think the reason I love the land so
much is due to that early experience on his land. He had horses, a donkey named
Jenny, and a goat. There was a pony too. He also had a big worm bed. He used to
sell worms and people would come to fish at his pond. He had a large family and
they were older than me but two of my cousins were college aged when I was a teenager.
The place was always filled with kids of all ages and it was a very exciting place
to be for me. My cousin Carol had a huge collection of Johnie Mathis records and
we would while away the hours listening and talking about boys. To this day I love
his songs. Her brother Neal would take us into the woods and scare all of us with
ghost stories. I spent happy hours with my cousins Hank and Ann, roaming around.
We enjoyed fresh seafood from the bay and low country food on our visits. I remember
that he had a wonderful cook who turned out huge pots of food for us. My favorite
was a red rice with shrimp and ham. I remember that dish so well I can almost taste
it.

I remember the Isle of Palms, campfires on the beach and long hours playing Spades
and Hearts on the screened porch into the night. Grownups talking about babies,
recipes, fishing and politics. Just as now, the world was going to hell in a handbasket
in those days too ;>)


We have started a game night at our house once a week in honor of those happy days.
I recommend it to all of you. Get together and play Monopoly, Poker, Canasta or
other games you remember and love from your childhood. Remember those slower happy
times and cherish them, but don't think they were better. They weren't. Every day
should be the best day of your life. Celebrate it each morning as I do.

http://www.sciway.net/city/mtpleasant.html
http://www.resortquestisleofpalms.com/about.htm
http://www.sciway.net/city/history/charleston.html
http://www.charleston.com/
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How About a Recipe?

Red Rice with Ham and Shrimp


This is my version of that wonderful recipe from my childhood.

2 cups rice
1 can diced tomatoes
2 T tomato paste
2 T butter
1 T chopped parsley
1 small onion diced
1 green pepper diced
2 stalks celery diced
2 carrots diced
1/2 tsp thyme
1 bay leaf
1 ham steak diced
1 pound shrimp sauteed in butter about 1/2 done
2 cups chicken stock
1 3/4 cup water
1 Tsp brown sugar
salt and cracked black pepper to taste.
Toasted Pine Nuts for garnish

Melt butter an saute vegetables with dry rice until all the rice is coated and vegetables
start to become limp. Add the rest of ingredients and stir until combined. Cover
with lid on low heat for about 25 minutes.

Enjoy!

Cook's Tip

The secret to excellent rice is a rice cooker. They are fantastic and worth the
nominal cost. For good Southern rice use Uncle Ben's converted rice in the box.
Never open the rice to stir after the initial stir. It should be gently fluffed
with a fork after it is completely cooked. If you want to use brown rice, use about
3/4 brown with 1/4 white long grained to make it lighter and fluffier. Brown rice
takes much longer to cook. For crunchier texture, cook rice first and then stir
in diced vegetables just before it is served.

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The Melrose Show is Almost Ready

Yesterday I took a drive over to Melrose Florida to deliver my work for the show.
The gallery space is bright and cheery with lovely cream colored walls and a wood
floor. The paintings will be hung by their expert hanging committee. The menu is
planned, and now all I have to do is go and enjoy seeing the many friends who will
drop in. This is a diverse show for me with work from coastal marshes to the beloved
farms and ranches where I paint most of the time. I hope you will enjoy it as much
as I have in producing it over the last year.
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I'm so glad you read my newsletter. Thank you for the support.
Love,


Join Our Mailing List [http://visitor.constantcontact.com/email.jsp?m=1102546521380&id=preview]
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July Special Celebrates Plein Air
My plein air studies are featured for July. You can find them on the small paintings
page at the bottom, on my web site.
8x10's- 110.00 ( Normally 125.00)
6x8's- 65.00 (Normally 80.00)
To purchase the special, email me lindablondheim@gmail.com and write special in
the subject line.
Offer expires July 31,2009

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Friday, June 19, 2009

Notes From the Studio



Paynes Prairie State Park
20x24 inches
oil on birch panel
Wired and Ready to Hang Unframed
1600.00

See my paintings HERE

My Place in the Art World

I got to thinking today how lucky I am to be just a country painter from the South. With so many artists climbing the ladder to fame and recognition, I realized that I'm ok with where I really am. I live in the country where the birds sing, the Armadillos rustle around in the bushes, and I see a deer or two on the paths where I like to walk with Studio Dog. I have an unassuming little block studio behind an old mobile home and I want for little in life other than the latest new easel or paint box.

I spend my time painting on the ranches,rivers, sand dunes and in the Smokey Mountains now and then. This is what I do and I'm happy for it.

I do admire big named artists and artists who wish for fame and work hard to get it, but I don't really want to. I have found myself in my beloved north Florida. I put my trust in the people who love the land here in the South as much as I do and I know they support me and my work. I am committed to working hard in the studio and in the fields to produce the best work I am capable of. I trust that others will identify with my work and my love for my subjects and wish to support me by owning my paintings.

I leave the quest for fame and celebrity to artists with more ambition. I'm just glad to be here in my little place.

Saturday, May 30, 2009

Latest Press Release- North Florida Muse Melrose Bay Gallery July 2009




North Florida Muse

Linda Blondheim’s new North Florida Muse exhibit at Melrose Bay Gallery on State Road 26, Melrose, Florida is a “must see.”
Dates of Exhibit:
7/01/2009- 7/26/2009

Opening:
Saturday July 11, 2009
10AM-4PM

Gallery Hours:
Saturdays 10AM-6PM
Sundays 1-5PM
Come join Linda for a Hot Dog picnic and enjoy her paintings.
Blondheim is passionate about her beloved north Florida. Her farms and ranches show pristine pastures that house fat cattle, ranging in color from honey to sienna to mahogany and jet black. Majestic, long-armed, mossy oaks and tall, graceful palms guard the cattle as they graze along historic Orange Lake. On the land side of County Road 225 in Evinston, Blondheim paints at graceful and elegant Fair Oaks Farm with her French Bulldog Henry.
Whether she focuses on landscapes, rivers and lakes, or, in her new series, Florida Farms and Ranches, Blondheim throws every bit of her skill into artistically capturing and preserving the South in which she was born, has raised her daughters,and is a self-supporting artist. Blondheim’s paintings about farms and ranches will include such historic land owned by farmer Freddie Wood and his wife Wilma Sue Wood of the Wood Swink Post Office, the oldest working post office in Florida, a combination antique store, post office and produce market. Through her reverent depictions, you’ll be invited to step back in time, pull a chair near the old wood stove, play checkers, and buy a cola out of an old metal drink box.

Says Blondheim, "Freddie Wood and I have a dream to make Evanston [FL} an art destination. There is an old shack on the Wood farm that could be re built into a painter's cabin for visiting painters. The Wood Swink could become a fine gallery for original Florida landscapes. The large packing shed could become an art center for classes and workshops. We hope that a benefactor will come forward to help preserve this wonderful Florida town for artists and visitors.”
Through her north Florida Muse you’ll see beef cattle, feed sheds, barns, packing houses, fish camps, and fields of tall grasses.
Take a pictorial stroll on such horse farms as Town and Country (a thoroughbred breeding facility in McIntosh) and Rabbit Hill Farms located on county road 320, owned by Louise and Kiki Courtelis.
You’ll imagine you hear cattle lowing and owls hooting. Blondheim’s painted world is the rural South, the music of nature, and the visions of the critters, all just as desperate as you to escape the city’s lights, noise, and congestion.
Deeply committed to Southern Culture—what she knows, understands, and loves—Blondheim is also a realist. A supporter of the Alachua County Land Trust and Florida Land Trust, she realizes that not only is she painting what she knows, but she is preserving it as well. Barns may collapse from disuse and time, horses and cattle may become displaced by human “development,” but Blondheim’s paintings will capture and save forever the South that once was, still is but less so, and that may disappear into Progress.

Blondheim says of her North Florida Muse series, “Natural Florida is our state treasure. We must preserve these beautiful lands, rivers, marshes and crystal springs with their culture as a historical testament to the real Florida that is rapidly vanishing. My North Florida Muse series is a tribute to the farmers, ranchers, land and water conservationists of Florida.”
For additional information, see:

Linda Blondheim
Studio 386.462.5726
http://www.lindablondheim.com




lindablondheim@gmail.com

http://linda-blondheim.blogspot.com
-For collectors


http://melrosebayartgallery.com/home.html



http://www.cowartandmore.com

http://www.floridaseden.org/guide/index.php- about the Wood Swink.

http://www.amelianow.com/winter00-cattle.htm cattle industry history in Florida

http://floridacrackerlivinghistory.com/

http://home.comcast.net/~711trish/flcrack.html