The Farm is reservation-only for lunch and dinner—priority booking is given to guests staying at the resort. Those meals are comprised of vegetables from the garden and fish caught that day out at sea. No meat is on the menu.
For the night, Roan kept her complexion glowy and applied rosy shades to her lips and cheeks. For an added flare, she applied a bold eyeliner wing and went voluminous for her lashes.Read the original article on
A city in Florida began the formal process of removing fluoride from its water supply on Tuesday to be in compliance with a new state law.Ocala -- 75 miles northwest of Orlando -- currently has a city ordinance requiring fluoride to be added to the water supply. Last month, Gov. Ron DeSantisbanning local governments from adding fluoride to public water systems.
Gregory Davis, public information officer for the city of Ocala, told ABC News the city's council will be voting on Tuesday to amend the ordinance.Ocala had been adding fluoride to the water supply since 1961 and had spent about $50,000 a year doing so, according to Davis.
Davis said it's unclear how long it will take Ocala to remove fluoride from its water supply but added that the city's water resource team said it will be in compliance by July 1, which is when the state law goes into effect.
Local communities in Florida had moved to stop adding fluoride to the public water supply prior to the statewide bill, with Miami-Dade County commissioners voting in favor 8-2Now, the cruise line has quietly given out some information on its plans for smaller ships.
Royal Caribbean has been talking about the need for a new class of smaller ships for quite some time."We're always designing the next classes of ships really for all of our brands," Liberty said during Royal Caribbean's second-quarter-earnings call. "We specifically pick segments and brands in those segments and deployments and experiences that we believe have a very long runway to generate demand globally, as each of our brands are globally sourced business."
He also made it clear that the cruise line sees a need."And, of course, the other thing I think that's important when you think about ship classes, whether they could be small, they could be larger, is...a consideration that we also have ships that are reaching 30, 35 years [old]. And so some of this is not just about we want to build same-size ships, smaller ships. It's also replacing ships that will eventually kind of reach their end of life."