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Weather: Mostly sunny. A chance of showers in the morning, then showers and thunderstorms likely in the afternoon. Highs in the lower 90s. Southwest winds around 5 mph, becoming southeast around 5 mph in the afternoon. Chance of rain 70 percent. Heat index values up to 105. Wednesday Night: Mostly cloudy. Showers and thunderstorms likely in the evening, then a slight chance of showers after midnight. Lows in the lower 70s. Chance of rain 70 percent.
- Daily weather briefing from the National Weather Service in Jacksonville here.
- Drought conditions here. (What is the Keetch-Byram drought index?).
- Check today’s tides in Daytona Beach (a few minutes off from Flagler Beach) here.
- Tropical cyclone activity here, and even more details here.
Today at a Glance:
Separation Chat, Open Discussion: The Atlantic Chapter of Americans United for the Separation of Church and State hosts an open, freewheeling discussion on the topic here in our community, around Florida and throughout the United States, noon to 1 p.m. at Pine Lakes Golf Club Clubhouse Pub & Grillroom (no purchase is necessary), 400 Pine Lakes Pkwy, Palm Coast (0.7 miles from Belle Terre Parkway). Call (386) 445-0852 for best directions. All are welcome! Everyone’s voice is important. For further information email [email protected] or call Merrill at 804-914-4460.
Weekly Chess Club for Teens, Ages 9-18, at the Flagler County Public Library: Do you enjoy Chess, trying out new moves, or even like some friendly competition? Come visit the Flagler County Public Library at the Teen Spot every Wednesday from 4 to 5 p.m. for Chess Club. Everyone is welcome, for beginners who want to learn how to play all the way to advanced players. For more information contact the Youth Service department 386-446-6763 ext. 3714 or email us at [email protected]
The Circle of Light Course in Miracles study group meets at a private residence in Palm Coast every Wednesday at 1:20 PM. There is a $2 love donation that goes to the store for the use of their room. If you have your own book, please bring it. All students of the Course are welcome. There is also an introductory group at 1:00 PM. The group is facilitated by Aynne McAvoy, who can be reached at [email protected] for location and information.
Notably: The storefront above, glimpsed in a recent visit to Volusia Mall–one of my favorite sights at the mall, that shop, and Mike, always hunched over behind the counter always busy: no Kenneth Fearing Big Clock ruminations for him–made me think as if I was crossing through the page of a Bernard Malamud story in 1940s New York. You don’t think of watch or shoe repairmen anymore in our society of throwaways, which also happens to be a throwaway society (who remembers cabbage patch dolls anymore, or the Macarena? And when was there ever a watch repairwoman? She never had time to make it in the field by the time it was obsolete). There is always an invisible fog of sadness in Volusia Mall, its long marbled avenue so rarely trodden now but for those mall-walkers who get their exercise away from the elements, its shuttered storefronts ghosting you as you pass, its strange stores, like Mike’s Watch Repair, clinging to life. But Mike’s seemed to be doing well. Three customers in the couple of minutes we passed it: not bad for what was a Friday evening. Time ravages. It also still begs for repair once in a while, from a craftsman not that different in spirit from a surgeon: it’s all an attempt to repair time–the mall, the clock, the body–as we make our way to the exit only to hear how “a nearby siren yelped for a few seconds to remind one, if he had forgotten, of the perilous state of the world” (to quote an actual line from Malamud.)
—P.T.
Now this:
The Live Calendar is a compendium of local and regional political, civic and cultural events. You can input your own calendar events directly onto the site as you wish them to appear (pending approval of course). To include your event in the Live Calendar, please fill out this form.
July 2025

Wednesday, Jul 09
Separation Chat: Open Discussion

Wednesday, Jul 09
The Circle of Light A Course in Miracles Study Group

Wednesday, Jul 09
Weekly Chess Club for Teens, Ages 9-18, at the Flagler County Public Library
Flagler County Public Library
Thursday, Jul 10
Flagler County Drug Court Convenes
Flagler County courthouse

Thursday, Jul 10
Model Yacht Club Races at the Pond in Palm Coast’s Town Center
Central Park in Town Center

Thursday, Jul 10
Palm Coast Democratic Club Meeting
Flagler County Democratic Party HQ

Thursday, Jul 10
Flagler Beach City Commission Meeting

Thursday, Jul 10
Evenings at Whitney Lecture Series
Whitney Laboratory Lohman Auditorium
No event found!
For the full calendar, go here.

“America has evolved into one of the world’s most inequitable societies. Today, the richest 10 percent of Americans own over 75 percent of the country’s wealth, with the top 1 percent owning well over a third.92 Many of the political systems, legal arrangements, cultural beliefs, and economic structures that uphold and promote this level of inequality trace their roots back to slavery and its aftermath. If today America promotes a particular kind of low-road capitalism—a union-busting capitalism of poverty wages, gig jobs, and normalized insecurity; a winner-take-all capitalism of stunning disparities not only permitting but rewarding financial rule-bending; a racist capitalism that ignores the fact that slavery didn’t just deny Black freedom but built white fortunes, originating the Black-white wealth gap that annually grows wider—one reason is that American capitalism was founded on the lowest road there is.
—Matthew Desmond in Nikole Hannah-Jones’s 1619 Project (2019).
The Cartoon and Live Briefing Archive.