Your First Need

Dear Friends,
I recently lended my backcountry water filter to my daughter for an upcoming camping trip. The filter company has a very appropriate name “First Need”.  No, no, no, contrary to popular belief your first need is not coffee.

We talk a lot about nutrition at Francis Chiropractic and one of the first issues people need to become aware of is the quality and quantity of the water they drink.

Water is actually your first need. You will easily perish from dehydration before starvation. Think about when scientists are looking for life on other planets, what is the first criteria they look for? 

Water.

Water is actually part of your diet.  It makes up about 2/3 of your body which coincidentally is about the same percentage of water that covers the surface of the world. Just as water cleanses our outer body, is is vital in detoxing our inner body. If you are chronically dehydrated all the toxins are more concentrated.

When you first feel hunger, I tell folks to drink a glass of water. If the hunger goes away you actually were thirsty and this can decrease your appetite.

Helpful tips about water:

  1. Drink enough to keep your urine clear. 
  2. If you need flavoring ad a slice of lemon, lime, or a teaspoon of apple cider vinegar.
  3. Adding Jake’s ginger juice has wonderful medicinal benefits as does adding some bolthouse pomegranate juice.  (Great for good gut microbes.)
  4. Watch bottled water- some of that is actually just bottled in other cities municipal water treatment plants.
  5. Well water in Wisconsin is extremely rich in minerals so drink it up. Especially high in Calcium and in a form that your body most readily uses.  Obviously get yours checked to make sure it is safe from any local toxins.
  6. Drink a big glass of water 20 minutes before eating. It will hydrate you and fill you up.
  7. While eating, just take in enough water to get food down. Less is better so not the dilute the digestive enzymes.
  8. Immune system – think of it: drinking often lets you swallow microbes then your stomach acid kills them. Rinsing your nasal cavity with water flushes them out.
  9. We will add flavored collagen to our water or bone broth for a multitude of health benefits.
  10. Try not to drink water from plastic containers. The chemicals in the plastic are horrible for your hormonal system and help you add extra fat on you body.

I regularly add a dusting of calcium lactate powder and a dropper of phosfood to my water.  The CL adds the most usable calcium your body needs and is important for immune function, muscle relaxation, bone health, a calming agent and so much more. I use it to decrease the occurrence of canker sores! The phosfood helps balance the phosphorus to calcium ratio which helps arthritis and kidney stones.  It is really helpful for those stiff hands in the morning.

So cheers to your first need: water!

God bless,
Dr. Dan

Calcium Lactate Powder
Phosfood Liquid

Testimonial

Kurt Bassuener, President of MWS Associates, Inc.

MWS Associates has leased office space in the Business Center since the inception of our company in 2018 and from 2015-2018 with the previous company that I worked for.  The Business Center was the clear choice for us to locate our main office for several reasons: location, cost effectiveness, reliable high-speed internet, services offered and full access to the conference room.  It truly offers everything our company needs to headquarter our business from without the hassle of owning our own office building with the maintenance, yard care and snowplowing that goes along with ownership.  

A major benefit for us is the ability to host in-person and online meetings in the newly renovated, state-of-the-art conference room.  COVID changed many aspects of our business with a major increase in online meetings being one of them.  Many companies struggled with technology issues to host or participate in online meetings with poor audio, video quality, background noise and unprofessional business settings negatively affecting meetings.  The size, layout and quality of the A/V equipment of the conference room now allows us to host annual company-wide in-person meetings as well. Every October we bring our entire staff in from around the country for weeklong meetings and the conference room comfortably allows us to host 20+ people.  The setting also allows us to host on-site meetings with key accounts.  Clients appreciate being able to combine a business trip with bringing their family to enjoy a few extra days to experience all Door County has to offer.

Jeff Bruemmer

Physical Plant

Jeff Bruemmer joined DCEDC in July of 2001. Jeff is responsible for maintaining the DCEDC Business Center, located at 185 East Walnut Street in Sturgeon Bay. Jeff was born and raised in Kewaunee and moved to Sturgeon Bay in 1985.

KATHY LASEE

Accounting and Operations Coordinator

Kathy Lasee is responsible for the organization’s financial operations, as well as the operations of the Business Development Center in Sturgeon Bay. A Door County native, Lasee graduated from Sturgeon Bay High School and earned a bachelor’s degree in music with a minor in business administration from the University of Wisconsin-Green Bay. Lasee is a charter member of the Peninsula Symphonic Band and previously worked as a music teaching assistant for the Sturgeon Bay School District. Prior to joining DCEDC in October of 2023, Lasee was the Office Manager of Kevin’s Automotive in Sturgeon Bay. During her professional career, she also worked in the loan office at Baylake Bank (now Nicolet National Bank) in Sturgeon Bay.

DEVIN VANDERTIE

Director of Business Development

Devin Vandertie enjoys working with entrepreneurs and businesses to help foster economic growth in Door County. She is also passionate about helping nurture the next generation of the community’s workforce. Devin has recently earned a master’s degree in business administration from the University of Wisconsin-Parkside and is involved with Leadership Door County, which brings together professionals from diverse business sectors who are inspired to make a positive impact on the quality of life in Door County. A Door County native, Vandertie cares deeply about cultivating a community that is not only a desirable destination, but also an exceptional place to live and to work. In addition to her recent achievement of a master’s degree, Devin is a graduate of Southern Door High School and earned a Bachelor of Science degree from the University of Wisconsin-Green Bay. Prior to joining the DCEDC staff in October of 2023, Vandertie was the Laboratory Assistant Supervisor at Door County Medical Center in Sturgeon Bay.

Michelle Lawrie

Executive Director

Michelle Lawrie has more than twenty years of experience in economic development at regional and local levels. Michelle’s career in Washington, D.C., Arizona and Wisconsin has focused on serving the public interest through economic development, issue advocacy and coalition-building. Michelle began her economic development career at the Greater Phoenix Economic Council (GPEC), in Phoenix, Arizona. After serving in several roles at GPEC, Michelle became the President and CEO of the Western Maricopa Coalition (WESTMARC) in western Maricopa County, Arizona. Michelle later also served as Economic Development / Community Development Director for the communities of Goodyear, Arizona and DeForest, Wisconsin. Michelle has extensive experience working in development of strategies and performance measures for communities and organizations, as well as leading teams toward achieving goals desired by communities, businesses and residents. Michelle is a native of Phoenix, Arizona, and earned a Bachelor of Science degree from Northern Arizona University in Flagstaff.