Peninsula Pulse - 2016 The Hal Prize August 5th - August 12th v22i32

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August 5–12/2016 v22i32

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CREATIVE WRITING & PHOTOGRAPHY CONTEST

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2016


HAL PRIZE 201

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About This Year’s Hal Prize

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I clearly remember the day when Tom McKenzie came into my bookstore and asked if the Peninsula Pulse’s new writing contest could be named after my father. Tom was a regular visitor to the store who enjoyed talking about books. He would frequently ask for thoughts on the latest issue of the Peninsula Pulse – a newspaper he had co-founded with David Eliot – from my father when he was alive, or from my mother or me if we were in the store. Through the years, the growth of the annual contest moved through several changes including a name change and the additions of photography and nonfiction to the existing poetry and fiction categories. Businesses and individuals were gracious in their support of the contest from the outset. Still, the evolution was slow and though the number of entries in all categories grew steadily through the years, we still felt there were many more possibilities we had yet to explore. The addition of Write On, Door County as a collaborator helped to make many of the possibilities we envisioned became reality. Write On, Door County’s generous donation of stays at their house in Juddville allowed us to attract nationally recognized and published authors and photographers to judge our contests. We significantly broadened our marketing efforts to reach a wider audience, which resulted in submissions from across the state, the region, and the nation. And we streamlined the submission process for both writing and photography by using the Submittable website. With the publication of this year’s Hal Prize issue, which you hold in your hands, next year’s contest begins! So writers and photographers you are now formally notified: start working on your entries for the 2017 Hal Prize – the submission process remains the same and the website is ready to begin accepting your creative efforts (TheHalPrize.com). — Steve Grutzmacher


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HAL PRIZE 2016

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HAL PRIZE 2016

a H l Honoring

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Harold Grutzmacher

This annual issue honors a man whose passion for writing and teaching the craft of writing spanned his lifetime. While his specialty was the English Romantic period, particularly William Wordsworth, he also loved reading (and re-reading) James Bond novels. A widely published poet, he was also a regular columnist for the Door County Advocate when it was privately owned – he even convinced his editor to allow him to cover the Chicago Cubs, which afforded him several trips each season to Wrigley Field, where he became good friends with other sports writers from far larger newspapers. His greatest passion, however, was teaching writing. As an English professor at Carthage College (then in Carthage, Ill.), Knox College, and Parson College he influenced hundreds of undergraduate writers. Later, as vice president for academic affairs at the University of Tampa and dean of students at Beloit College, he continued to teach the freshman English courses, though these courses were not part of his job description. In Door County, he and his wife, Marge, opened Passtimes Books, where he enjoyed discussing literature with other avid readers. And he continued teaching writing, both at The Clearing and Northeast Wisconsin Technical College. Several of these students later brought him manuscripts which he helped edit into finished books. His encouragement and gentle, though pointed, criticism, influenced innumerable students and community members. The Peninsula Pulse, along with Write On, Door County, look to continue in the same spirit by encouraging writers and photographers of all skill levels with The Hal Prize.


HAL PRIZE 2016

Winners

Sponsors

Poetry

The Peninsula Pulse would like to thank the generous businesses and individuals that donated prizes to this year’s Hal Prize. Each deserves our salute for their support of the literary and photography community!

Second Place “Delicate Lesson” by Sylvia Cavanaugh

Write On, Door County focuses on the importance of writing and reading and the ability of people to connect through stories. The three-year-old nonprofit provides a beautiful and inspiring retreat for writers on 39 acres in Juddville, and conducts classes, programs, and special events throughout the county for all ages and experience levels. For more information about Write On, visit writeondoorcounty.org or call 920.868.1457.

First Place “Blazon” by Julie Gonnering Lein

Third Place “Star Light, Star Bright” by Paula Schulz Honorable “Roller Skating is Life” by Justin Krishka “Mailboxes in February” by Bobbie Lovell “On That Night In Late September” by Andrea Potos “Also the Acorns, the Avocados” by Julie Gonnering Lein “At the Uzbek Restaurant on the Ishim River” by Timothy Walsh “Birds and the Hereafter” by Timothy Walsh

Fiction

First Place “The Hunt” by Scott Winkler Second Place “Keeping Things Whole” by Justin Krishka Third Place “Another Thing to Fall” by Morgan Beatrice Peters Honorable “A Matched Indifference” by Greg Venne “Grandpa’s Lesson” by Tim Riekena

Nonfiction

First Place “Pay Back” by Harvey Silverman Second Place “To Arvid” by John Koski Third Place “Crash” by Laurin Bellg Honorable “A Moving Matinee” by Justin Krishka “Afraid of Snakes” by Laurin Bellg “Life in the Crapper” by Jill Zima Borski

Photography

First Place “Native American Portrait” by Guntis Lauzums Second Place “Joy” by David Bueschel Third Place “Josef and Polyphemus Moth” by Timothy Borski Honorable “Cherry Blossoms” by Laura Joeckel “77 Years in Key West” by Thomas Jordan “Snow Fairies on Break” by Mary Ann Rinkleff “Tree, Whitefish Dunes” by Donald Zdenahlik Notable “Crab Spider with Prey” by Timothy Borski “Bald Eagle Bad Hair Day” by Carlyle Chan “Scripps Pier” by Carlyle Chan “Blue Dawn” by Laura Joeckel “Young Monks” by Laura Joeckel “AntiqTes” by David Renier “Jacksonport Storm” by Nona Seaver “The Deli” by Arlene Stanger “Where Everyone Knows Your Name” by Arlene Stanger

Peninsula School of Art provides enriching, educational experiences to participants of all ages and abilities by offering year-round workshops, lectures, exhibits and family-friendly events for students of all ages and abilities. The first place winner of the photography contest will partake in a class at the nationally recognized school. For more information about Peninsula School of Art, visit peninsulaschoolofart.org or call 920.868.3455. David and Jeanne Aurelius, owners of Clay Bay Pottery, have generously donated both time and skill to the literary and photography contest through their production of customized pottery for contest winners. In past years, Clay Bay has donated both commemorative plates and mugs to first place winners – much prettier and more functional than your average trophy! To contact Clay Bay Pottery, located just south of Ellison Bay on Highway 42, call 920.854.5027. Sharon Grutzmacher & Roger Bergen (daughter and son-in-law of Hal Grutzmacher) are pleased to be able to assist with the cash awards for the first place winners. Sharon is the executive director of the Peninsula Music Festival and Roger is the manager of Lampert Lumber, Sister Bay. For 64 years, the Peninsula Music Festival (PMF) has presented nine different symphonic concerts in three weeks each August. Under the baton of Victor Yampolsky, professional musicians come from America’s finest orchestras to present the concerts. The PMF performs in the Door Community Auditorium in Fish Creek from August 2 – 20. Many thanks to PMF for donating tickets. Order tickets by phone at 920.854.4060 or online at musicfestival.com.

Al Johnson’s Swedish Restaurant & Butik in Sister Bay is the home of Swedish pancakes, goats grazing on the green sod roof, and Stabbur, the new Scandinavian Beer Garden. The entire Johnson family was a great friend to well-known Door County writer Norbert Blei, whose “writing coop” now resides on the Write On, Door County property in Juddville. Visit aljohnsons.com for more information. Located in the heart of Fish Creek, the Peninsula Bookman features new, used and rare books. They also feature an extensive selection of books about Door County and by Door County authors and are noted for hosting book release and autographing events, and their ongoing support of local writers and Write On, Door County. For more information, visit peninsulabookman.com or call 920.868.1467. For 31 years, Seaquist Orchards Farm Market has been welcoming customers with their own cherries and apples and wonderful, locally processed fruit and cider. Located two miles north of Sister Bay on Hwy. 42, the Market is open from mid-May through October. Seaquist Orchards Farm Market – where family and farming mean everything. For more information, visit seaquistorchards.com or call 920.854.4199. Base Camp Coffee Bar, located in northern Sister Bay, offers delicious coffee and specialty drinks as well as delectable baked goods and quick bites. Have a bite before heading out to explore, or get energized after an afternoon of hiking! For more information about Base Camp, call 920.854.7894. Door County Living, sister publication of the Peninsula Pulse, is a free magazine published five times a year. Paper Boy is Door County’s premier delivery and distribution service, serving more than 700 locations weekly. It, too, is a sister operation of the Peninsula Pulse. Thank you to all!

First Place Fiction, Nonfiction, Poetry • Custom Hal Prize mug, courtesy of Clay Bay Pottery • One-week stay at Write On, Door County • $100 Photography • Custom Hal Prize mug, courtesy of Clay Bay Pottery • Peninsula School of Art class • $150

Second Place Fiction, Nonfiction, Poetry • Peninsula Bookman gift certificate • $75 Photography • Peninsula Bookman gift certificate • Al Johnson’s gift certificate • Seaquist Orchards gift certificate

Third Place Fiction, Nonfiction, Poetry • Peninsula Music Festival gift certificate • Base Camp Coffee Bar gift certificate • Seaquist Orchards gift certificate Photography • Door County Living one-year subscription • Door County Living In Pictures (Volumes I and II) • Base Camp Coffee Bar gift certificate • Seaquist Orchards gift certificate

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Prizes

“Blocked Shot” by Susan Ulm

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Hal Prize


HAL PRIZE 201

Process As the Peninsula Pulse’s arts and literature editor, few things are dearer to me than the Hal Prize. This annual issue represents the very best of what our publication is about: creative expression. That creative expression comes in many forms: through poignant or humorous prose, pictures that speak a thousand words, commentary from our exceptional judges, and the way our artistic director puts it all together. Each fall, we invite people of all ages, backgrounds and artistic abilities to submit stories, photographs and poems for a chance to be published in our annual literary issue. While prose and photos find their way to our online submission site, Submittable, until the deadline (this year, May 1), The Hal Prize organizers are exploring ways to enhance and grow the

contest by making the submission process easier and bringing better prizes into the fold. The contest’s continued growth is possible for one reason: we live in a community where artistic and literary resources are abundant. One of those resources, Write On, Door County’s Executive Director Jerod Santek, was instrumental in helping us secure an impressive panel of nationally recognized judges – authors Jerry Apps, Oliver de la Paz and Nicole Helget, and photographer Wing Young Huie. These individuals gave hours of their time to review the finalists selected by our pre-screening committee, make their selections and provide thoughtful commentary on why the chosen prose or photos captured their attention. And long

before that, they carved out time for me to share the journey they each traveled to become the successful authors, poets and photographers they are. It was because of these judges, our incredible sponsors, readers and the hundreds of individuals near and far who shared their creative representations with us that The Hal Prize received a record number of entries this year (356 to be exact). With your support, we hope to continue this trend in the years to come. On behalf of The Hal Prize organizers and the Peninsula Pulse, we extend our heartfelt gratitude to everyone who has taken part in this year’s contest and to our artistic director, Ryan Miller, for creating this beautiful issue. With that, I welcome you to The Hal Prize 2016! — Alyssa Skiba, Contest Administrator

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Judges Poetry

Fiction

Nonfiction

Photography

Oliver de la Paz is the author of four collections of poetry, Names Above Houses, Furious Lullaby (SIU Press 2001, 2007), and Requiem for the Orchard (U. of Akron Press 2010), winner of the Akron Prize for poetry chosen by Martìn Espada, and Post Subject: A Fable (U. of Akron Press 2014). He is the co-editor with Stacey Lynn Brown of A Face to Meet the Faces: An Anthology of Contemporary Persona Poetry (U. of Akron Press 2012). He cochairs the advisory board of Kundiman, a nonprofit organization dedicated to the promotion of Asian American Poetry and serves on the Association of Writers and Writing Programs Board. A recipient of a NYFA Fellowship Award and a GAP Grant from Artist Trust, his work has appeared in journals like Virginia Quarterly Review, North American Review, Tin House, Chattahoochee Review, and in anthologies such as Asian American Poetry: The Next Generation. He teaches in the MFA program at Western Washington University and in the Low Residency Rainier Writing Workshops at Pacific Lutheran University.

Nicole Helget is the author of The Summer of Ordinary Ways, The Turtle Catcher, Stillwater, Horse Camp (coauthored), Wonder at the Edge of the World, and the forthcoming Fern’s Grove. She lives on a farm in southern Minnesota with her family.

Jerry Apps, born and raised on a Wisconsin farm, is Professor Emeritus at the University of Wisconsin-Madison and the award-winning author of more than 35 books, many of them on rural history and country life. He is a former publications editor for UW-Extension, an acquisitions editor for the McGraw-Hill Book Company, and editor of a national professional journal. Jerry has won awards for his writing from the State Historical Society of Wisconsin, the Wisconsin Library Association, American Library Association, Foreword Magazine, Midwest Independent Publishers Association, Robert E. Gard Foundation, The Wisconsin Council for Writers, Upper Midwest Booksellers, and Barnes and Noble Bookstores, among others. In 2010 he received the Distinguished Service Award from the University of Wisconsin-Madison’s College of Agricultural and Life Science, was named a Fellow by the Wisconsin Academy of Sciences Arts and Letters in 2012, and was named to the Wisconsin 4-H Hall of Fame in 2014.

For more than 30 years, celebrated photographer Wing Young Huie has captured the complex cultural realities of American society. His work has been shown in international museums – more than half a million people have viewed his traveling exhibit in China – and in Minnesota storefront windows. His most well known works, Lake Street USA and the University Avenue Project, transformed Minneapolis and Saint Paul thoroughfares into six-mile photo galleries reflecting the everyday lives of thousands of their citizens. His projects explore a myriad of social issues, including immigration, race, adoption, urban and rural life, dementia, faith, Lutheranism, gender, homelessness, and youth culture. Though much of his work centers on his homeland of Minnesota, his current series Chinese-ness explores experiences of identity in the United States and the Motherland of China, employing documentary and conceptual conceits, and occasionally a chalkboard. Wing uses photography as a societal mirror and window, seeking to reveal not only what is hidden, but also what is plainly visible and seldom noticed, providing a collective portrait of the “them” who are really “us.” As an extension of his public art installations that create informal communal spaces, in spring 2011 Wing opened The Third Place Gallery. Housed in a building that previously sat empty for 47 years, Wing has turned the space into an urban living room for guest artists, social conversation, karaoke, and ping pong.


HAL PRIZE 2016

Photography

1st “Native American Portrait” by Guntis Lauzums Every year, the Holiday Folk Fair presents ethnic dancers and cultural events at Wisconsin State Fair Park. The Native American presented an opportunity for a nice portrait.

Judge's Comments “I chose ‘Native American Portrait’ as #1 because it jumps out at you while still pulling you in. The eyes of this person are shielded but perhaps the eyes of the animal skin are the true ones. The intricate balance, or collision, of color, line, and cultural symbolism leave the viewer with much to interpret. Perhaps a metaphor for Wisconsin— beneath all cultural layers is a Packers fan.” — Wing Young Huie

2nd “Joy” by David Bueschel As so often in life, one goes looking for something and finds another. A photo of bubbles in front of a city skyline turned into one of a grown up and child that shows us joy, love, laughter, peace, and hope.

Judge's Comments “‘Joy’ is aptly named. Is the boy buoyed by the bubbles or vice versa? Or perhaps the adult is holding it all aloft with joyous blowing. The lines of the buildings, people, tents, clothing all seem to balance on the V formed by the outstretched hand that propels the boy upward, forever.” — Wing Young Huie

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Judge's Comments “Nature, childhood and mythology converge in ‘Josef and Polyphemus Moth’ in a moment of stilled innocence, lifecycle and capture. The blond curls echo the insect’s design as well as the net that caught it. Wikipedia tells us that this particular species has inspired various writers, such as Homer as well as a scene from Lord of the Rings, whispering secrets into Gandalf’s ear.” — Wing Young Huie

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3rd “Josef and Polyphemus Moth” by Timothy Borski

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HAL PRIZE 201

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by Julie Gonnering Lein

Blazon

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HAL PRIZE 2016

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Poetry 1st

(Eye) upper branches—the sky above a clearing—wind tilts robin’s nest this way

(Ear) on a ridge legible interrogative curves

(Torso) supine with six knots and a hollow sandpapered skin smooth wood blonde fern grown between two crabapples at rest in the flax-linen grass-covered swale it will carry away when the flood rains come a caraway-crabapple jam: pucker, swell, swallow

/ Julie Gonnering Lein grew up in southeastern Wisconsin visiting her grandparents in Sturgeon Bay. She is the author of the chapbook Glacier, Perfect Tense (dancing girl press & studio), a recipient of the Larry Levis Memorial Poetry Prize, and winner of The Winter Anthology’s 2015 contest.

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“I’m intrigued by the fragmentation and fierce image-making in this poem. I particularly love the final stanza’s rich language when the poet writes, ‘at rest in the flax-linen grass-covered swale/ it will carry away when the flood rains come/a caraway-crabapple jam…’ Such rich language!” — Oliver de la Paz

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Photography Honorable “Tree, Whitefish Dunes” by Donald Zdenahlik I have lived in Door County for the last 24 years. I moved here from Illinois after working in the printing industry for 30 years. I took up photography as a hobby about 14 years ago. I found this tree one foggy morning while walking through Whitefish Dunes State Park.

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Judge's Comments

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HAL PRIZE 2016

CONGRATULATIONS to the

2016 Hal Prize Winners! Look for the new Write On, Door County Fall 2016 Course Catalog at the end of August! Remaining 2016 summer courses available: August 20: "Walk in the Words" August 20: “Short Story Intensive” August 20: “Whodunit: A Mystery Writing Workshop”

Naomi Shihab Nye is coming to Door County!

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Write On is proud to present internationally-acclaimed poet Naomi Shihab Nye Thursday, March 24, at the Door Community Auditorium. The reading will kick-off the After Words Poetry Conference March 25-26. Watch our website for details The author of more than 30 volumes of work, Naomi Shihab Nye grew up in Ferguson, Mo., Jerusalem, and San Antonio, Texas, where she continues to live. She has been a visiting writer in hundreds of schools and communities all over the world for 42 years. She has written poetry, picture books, novels and stories for young readers, teens, and adults. She has been featured on two PBS poetry specials with Bill Moyers. Her writing is a testament to our shared humanity. Public Reading | Thursday, March 24, 2017 at 7pm Door Community Auditorium, Fish Creek | $10 suggested donation

“Inspiring people to write and share their stories. Everyone has a story to tell.”

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HAL PRIZE 2016

Poetry 2nd

by Sylvia Cavanaugh

Delicate Lesson The small blonde desk in her bedroom, my mother marriage-battered with her pile of textbooks to try to make something of herself mouth her private Calliope between parallel blue lines one time she set aside her books to make paper dolls with her pencil she drew with meticulous precision every detail of face curve of arm angle of foot perfect tiny tabs for the clothes her careful hand gave life to paper cut-out dolls became characters ready to enter a story of my own making when I picked them up they were so very thin the shock delicate in my hands

Sylvia Cavanaugh has an M.S. in Urban Planning and teaches high school cultural studies. She and her students are active in the Sheboygan chapter of 100,000 Poets for Change. She is a Pushcart Prize nominee, and contributing editor for Verse-Virtual. Her chapbook, Staring Through My Eyes, was published in 2016 by Finishing Line Press.

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Judge's Comments “The poem quietly reveals its lace underpinnings as the writer, in very finely sculpted lines, reveals ‘the shock’ of a mother’s artistry despite the trials of a difficult life. A remarkable poem that unfolds its marvelous epiphany.”

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Photography Notable “Blue Dawn” by Laura Joeckel

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HAL PRIZE 2016

Star Light, Star Bright A Calder piece kind of altar piece-our slow-motion galaxy expanding Ax-hacked Xs pinwheeling in smooth bourbon turn

Poetry

3rd by Paula Schulz

All of it in a blue beyond us Breathe it in that silvered fizz as rib-netted minnows scintillate and wriggling swimming upstream in the bloodstream straight for the heart that beats beats beats constellations through me Oh what bits of light we are! And how the soul that white pocket longs to fill itself

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with light and light longs to expand to live as parasols of open stars

Paula Schulz works as a classroom aide and sits on a board that helps teachers access information on special needs education. She has been involved in ekphrastic projects, nominated for a Pushcart Prize and lives with her husband, Greg, in Slinger, Wisconsin.

Judge's Comments “I love the playfulness of the poem. It is unafraid to use audacious language like ‘Ax-hacked X’s/pinwheeling/ in smooth bourbon turn[s].’ It’s a joyful meditation on the Mobiles of Alexander Calder but also the light within us.” — Oliver de la Paz

Photography Honorable “Snow Fairies on Break” by Mary Ann Rinkleff I spent a long Saturday afternoon snapping photos of these girls as they rehearsed for a holiday ballet performance. This unrehearsed moment came when the instructor called for a break. The dancers immediately stepped out of character and fell into the usual teasing, gossiping and daydreaming so common to girls.


HAL PRIZE 2016

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Partial list of 2016 seminars Is it Warm in Here? The Intractable Policy Challenges of Climate Change David Gerard, associate professor and chair of the Department of Economics at Lawrence University What Next for Israel in the New Middle East? Jon Greenwald, taught diplomacy and foreign affairs as the Scarff Professor at Lawrence, 1998–99, and has given multiple Björklunden seminars on the Middle East

go.lawrence.edu/bjork

Everyday Herbalism: Backyard and Kitchen Remedies for Natural Health Jacquelyn Dobrinska, herbalist and author

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Sturgeon Bay

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Tucked away in Baileys Harbor is a sanctuary for those seeking enlightenment and relaxation. Björklunden, Lawrence University’s northern campus, hosts world-renowned speakers every summer and fall.


HAL PRIZE 201

Waterfront dining on the shores of Egg Harbor

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TOTE BAG: MAKE IT YOUR OWN! Kathy Swanson n September 7 & 8

2016 workshop program

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Poetry Honorable

by

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Roller Skating Is Life With black laces tied tight and candy cane striped wheels spinning in a blur of red and white, I take to the rink floor and join the counterclockwise current of bodies in constant motion that go nowhere. Hidden, high above, a DJ spins the soundtrack of our life, and when the lights snap off and the strobes begin their erratic pulses while Vincent Price’s voice haunts us in concert with Michael Jackson, we scream in delight, and the DJ smiles upon his creation.

not foolish enough to believe we could push our lives into reverse, but naïve enough to try pumping the breaks in hopes that time would stand still.

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As he introduces intermittent games of chance, contests of skill, and moments of intense adolescent passion, also known as “Couples’ Skate,” I never leave the floor. With well-oiled wheels and perfected playground learned technique, I am as fluid as the currents and tides of time. In that dark, windowless room, with its blaring neon lights and bright, bubblegum 80s pop, we cast furtive glances at the clock; it’s only a three hour session, yet we work in unison, forcing ourselves in counterclockwise motion,

HAL PRIZE 2016

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HAL PRIZE 201

Poetry

Honorable

by Bobbie Lovell

Mailboxes in February

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PENINSULA PULSE  AUGUST 5–12/2016 • v22i32  DOORCOUNTYPULSE.COM

Along the main drag, they’ve been jostled by the plow and buried to their necks, these stoic stand-ins for each taxpayer, each targeted prospect, their heads largely empty, their faces all jaw ready to receive without prejudice: the probable power bill, the unlikely Valentine. One small scarlet flag semaphores hope for whatever scant matters still believe in paper if not pen. Later, their humans are lured from cozy abode to glacial road. Everyone of a certain age is haunted by someone who once promised to write.

Bobbie Lovell is a Pushcart Prize nominee who participates in a workshop group and has given readings in Appleton, Green Bay and Oshkosh. She marvels at Door County’s bluffs and tenacious trees.

by Andrea Potos

On That Night In Late September

For our daughter

We stood in the road for the best view of the sky, that rare phenomenon of sun and earth in one straight line. A total lunar eclipse became a supermoon a blood moon, a burnt and eerie planet so near to us we felt we could touch it. In just an hour or two it would be gone, it would be my birthday, I would enter late middle age, the same hour our daughter’s best friend would succumb to the darkness moving across him, erasing one more element of beauty from this earth whose axis we would be certain must somehow, some way shift to make room for such loss.

Andrea Potos is the author of six poetry collections, including An Ink Like Early Twilight (Salmon Poetry), We Lit the Lamps Ourselves (Salmon Poetry) and Yaya’s Cloth (Iris Press). She lives in Madison.


HAL PRIZE 2016

by Julie Gonnering Lein

Also the Acorns, t h e Av o c a d o s I do not recognize the tall trees out front— Live Oaks they’re called (I know this now)— whose leaves from here look shriveled and sharp; whose oblong acorns scared me when my toddler daughter first picked one up and presented her discovery: Look, Mama, Bean!— and I’d swatted the green thing down thinking Poison—Slug—Shelled animal? Something strange inside. Even the acorns are different here. I miss the squat brown nuts beneath the trees of my Midwestern youth, their woody little berets like the rough wool caps my great-grandfather wore as he sat in the sun on his own cement front porch and thought, perhaps, of the flock he’d tended as a boy across the sea. All he’d left behind. I can see him now near that oak, raking leaves on the side lawn: look how it drops leaves like embers, how it asks us to bury ourselves inside its crackling skirt. Julie Gonnering Lein grew up in southeastern Wisconsin visiting her grandparents in Sturgeon Bay. She is the author of the chapbook Glacier, Perfect Tense (dancing girl press & studio), a recipient of the Larry Levis Memorial Poetry Prize, and winner of The Winter Anthology’s 2015 contest.

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That was the familiar wonder, the one with robins and cider, the one I still ache for in this new state, where peacocks are declared a public nuisance, where young avocado trees are mown as weeds: We’d just toss them into the dirt, my mother said. We didn’t even plant them. They just grew.

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HAL PRIZE 2016

Poetry Honorable

by Timothy Walsh

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It is for the Uighur noodles, not the Uzbek meats that Zhuldyz says we must go, Zhuldyz, far from her home in Shymkent to the south, Zhuldyz, whose name means star, her eyes radiant as stars. The unfiltered Kazakh beer is served in huge glasses, each with a bendy straw to more easily sip. The Uzbek waiter has no English, but the menu— in Russian and Kazakh— has pictures. Shashlik, he says, pointing at skewers of meat, beshbarmak, laghman, plov. We order haphazardly, the dining room bustling. Eventually, they bring platters of mutton chops, beef, chicken, and horsemeat on skewers, duck breasts on buckwheat, and bowls upon bowls of those delectable Uighur noodles, the noodles Zhuldyz says no one but Uighurs can make, each bowl seemingly one tangled, infolded noodle a mile or so long. They are sumptuous, the Uighur noodles, the texture an uncanny balance of chewy softness, both dense and airy, like earthbound angels— the product of the muscled manipulations of virtuoso noodle makers. their secrets arcane as alchemists’ formulas. As we feast on meats and noodles, sip our Kazakh beer through straws, not many miles to the east, the Uighurs in their homeland overrun by Chinese are sending car bombs into crowded markets, furious at being marginalized in their own land, their language languishing, but here in Kazakhstan it is their noodles that are famous, Uighur noodles, such a bountiful banquet, but evanescent as are all human feasts.

Timothy Walsh’s poems and short stories have appeared in The North American Review, Arts & Letters, Cutthroat, The Midwest Quarterly, New Millennium Writings and others. His awards include the Grand Prize in the Atlanta Review International Poetry Competition, the Kurt Vonnegut Fiction Prize from North American Review, and the Wisconsin Academy Fiction Prize. He is the author of a book of literary criticism, The Dark Matter of Words: Absence, Unknowing, and Emptiness in Literature (Southern Illinois University Press) and several poetry collections and chapbooks, most recently The Book of Arabella and When the World Was Rear-Wheel Drive. Find more at: timothyawalsh.com.

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HAL PRIZE 2016

Photography Notable “The Deli” by Arlene Stanger I took this image while my order was being filled. I was struck by the lighting and how the deli worker seemed to be dwarfed by his work environment.

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Birds and the Hereafter

by Timothy Walsh

He grew more interested in birds as he grew closer to death— watched from the dining room window, teacup in hand, as sparrows and finches flitted round the feeder, soft as angels— watched the bumptious grackles careening through the yard, clouds of starlings settling in the katsura tree. As his heart began to fail, he felt a growing affinity for feathers— for the great horned owl calling from the cottonwood, the red-tailed hawk circling above the house. As pneumonia wracked his body, starved him of air, he dreamt of flight— flying free through the blue empyrean, oxygen aerating the pores of his body, his air-hunger everlastingly sated. The evening he died, thousands of starlings settled in the silver maples, grackles swooping from the oaks, blue jays and crows calling raspily under a roiling sky.

Timothy Walsh’s poems and short stories have appeared in The North American Review, Arts & Letters, Cutthroat, The Midwest Quarterly, New Millennium Writings and others. His awards include the Grand Prize in the Atlanta Review International Poetry Competition, the Kurt Vonnegut Fiction Prize from North American Review, and the Wisconsin Academy Fiction Prize. He is the author of a book of literary criticism, The Dark Matter of Words: Absence, Unknowing, and Emptiness in Literature (Southern Illinois University Press) and several poetry collections and chapbooks, most recently The Book of Arabella and When the World Was Rear-Wheel Drive. Find more at: timothyawalsh.com.

And who can say whether they accompanied his soul into the afterlife? But when they flew off, his spirit was gone from the house.

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YEARS

Door County Land Trust

Sunday, August 14, 3:30-6:30 pm

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POIS MOI COLLECTION

Owner Terry Bolland


Fiction

a H l The

Peninsula Pulse

August 5–12/2016 v22i32

doorcountypulse.com

> Prize

2016


HAL PRIZE 2016

Fiction 1st

by Scott Winkler

The Hunt “I feel sick,” I said. “You did just take a rather monumental piss,” Clay said. “One has nothing to do with the other,” I said. “I know,” Clay said. “Half a thermos of coffee has that effect.” “How long have you been hiding behind my tree?” Clay smiled. “Awhile,” he said. “I’d only been in my stand ten or fifteen minutes before I heard you shoot. I figured, ‘what the hell? If he’s got one laying on the field, it’ll be a bugger dragging it over that frozen mess.’ Plus, it’s good practice.” “Practice?” I asked. “You didn’t know I was there.” I shook my head. “Practice?” “Never mind.” Neither of us said anything. “You think we’ve waited long enough?” “I think so,” he said. “No sign of Dad,” I said. “You know him—the patience of Job—and if something’s happening here, he’ll want us to take care of it. Brothers bonding. Manly fortitude.

Pulling ourselves up by our own bootstraps.” We both knew his lines. “Let’s check,” I said. “Lead the way,” Clay replied. We walked to the spot in the field where the deer had been when I shot and studied the earth, searching for a spot of red or a tuft of hair, but against the muted palette of Wisconsin farmland, neither showed itself. “He headed east?” Clay asked. They would be the last words he’d speak for some time. “Yes,” I said moving toward the barbed-wire fence at the edge of the field. The deer had leaped in an elegant parabola, momentarily loosed from gravity, but I’d sensed something off in its stride. Clay motioned with one hand to lower my volume, never looking at me as his eyes swept the ground. I scanned the field as well, but things soon blurred. Clay stopped at the fence, and bending at the waist, looked at the rusted barbs. He

motioned for me to join him. Now crouching, he pointed at the sagging top strand of the fence. Barely visible on the rusted braid was a small, scarlet drop, and a tuft of no more than five or six white hairs. I’d hit my target, but if the sign we’d found were any indicator, I hadn’t hit it well—or I’d made the dreaded “gut shot,” which meant the deer could go and go and go before expiring, leaving scant sign of its path as lack of snow compounded the difficulty of tracking. Clay reached into his duffel and tore off a square of toilet paper to impale on a barb near blood and hair. He handed me the roll and motioned to follow. He stepped over the sagging fence and went on, silently and deliberately moving through the wooded border between field and railroad track. I went with him, ten feet to his left and a step or two behind him, looking, as he did, at the ground littered with leaves, hoping to spot another tuft of hair or drop of blood, but to no avail. Clay, upon reaching the spot where the ground

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HAL PRIZE 2016

The essence of Door County in an historic setting “A Walk In The Woods” thru August 20 The gallery is featuring artists Sue Seeger, Mark Motquin, Dennis Salaty, Lynne Schoenecker and Albert Stark.

CAPTIVATING DIMENSIONAL MAGICAL featuring over 45 local & regional artists

EXTRAORDINARY MUSIC: Friday August 5, Wise Women: Jeanne Kuhns, Marybeth Mattson, Jenny Bienemann, Carley Baer, Andrea Nikopoulis Weliky WEDDINGS & SPECIAL EVENTS 6746 County Road G • Egg Harbor (3 miles south of Egg Harbor just off Hwy 42) Open Daily 10-5 thru October • Friday-Sunday 10-4, November-December (920) 629-4877 • www.WoodwalkGallery.com MIDSUMMER MUSIC • THEATRE M • WORKSHOPS

“The purpose of our lives is to be happy.” DALAI LAMA

EXHIBIT IV August 4 – September 9

Lori Beringer

Dave Turner

David Sear

Hal Koenig

mAke A WISH Oil | 16” x 20”

CARDINALS Hand-painted Woodturning | 5” x 8”

CHeCkeRbOARD Acrylic | 18” x 40”

tHRee SHeD Oil | 42” x 42”

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Art for every day and special occasions.

YEARS

Clay Bay Pottery Jeanne & David Aurelius

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Domicile

4th Annual

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Photography Notable “Crab Spider with Prey” by Timothy Borski A regal frittilary on the Buena Vista marsh in Portage County. We worked hard for it for a couple years but made it happen.

Mystique & Mystery of the Midwest September 16-18, 2016 Kathleen Ernst

Patricia Skalka

Rebecca Makkai

Michael McCarthy

Nick Petrie

Writer workshops Friday, September 16, 2016 washingtonislandliteraryfestival.com • To register: www.truebloodpac.com Photo by Paula Hedeen

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I nodded, and my brother motioned for me to take the lead. For a moment, I felt a sense of relief and silently thanked anyone eavesdropping on my thoughts. I looked back through the naked branches and caught a glimpse of the last toilet paper marker we’d placed, barely stirring in the breeze some hundred feet back. I breathed deeply and exhaled before stepping down the right branch, which would soon bring us to a creek feeding Christy Brook. I drew from an imagined well of fortitude, re-upping my focus, and where the trail veered away from the meadow, on the moss-covered base of a maple, a patch of frost had encrusted the frilled edges of the moss, and in the middle of that patch was a single red drop. I paused, astonished at my good fortune, and tore a square of toilet paper from the roll. Clay, now standing beside me, also saw the spot and gave me a congratulatory clap on the shoulder. A few feet further down the path was more blood, a larger smear the length of a loaf of bread, and several strides beyond that, another smear against the trunk of a tree. For an instant, I forgot about embarrassment and shame and trepidation. For an instant, I felt I’d done something right. For an instant, I imagined my father’s praise, and energy coursed through me, enough to allow me to find the deer and with my brother’s help, drag it back to the field. For an instant. Then I heard snorting and thrashing. Clay and I moved toward the sound. In a shallow depression ringed by scrub cedars lay the deer. He again took on the ghostly qualities I’d witnessed on the field, but as my eyes took in the sight, my brain processed the scene. He lay on his side, his head rising on his swollen neck, and despite every effort he made to gather his legs beneath him and stand, he couldn’t. He flailed, his breath coming out in short, violent bursts of vapor in the cold air. My shot had clipped his stomach—not a wound that produced much external bleeding, not a wound that killed quickly. It was enough to bring him to the edge of death, to let his own strength and the tragic beauty of his instinct and locomotion hasten his demise. The wound was almost enough, and I’d caused it. As he’d headed toward cover and water, his own movement and the force of gravity pulling on his bowels conspired to open the wound further. He’d probably bedded more than once over the course of his trek, and I’m certain we had—or more accurately, I had, as Clay was a phantom moving along the route—stirred him from those beds and pushed him until, in reaching the depression where he now writhed, nothing could hold. I saw his bowels spilling onto the ground, the milky gray stomach and coiled

intestines speckled by burnt orange flecks of fallen, dried cedar greens. My own stomach lurched, and a gorge rose to burn the back of my throat with the taste of wood smoke. I managed to choke it back, but I couldn’t prevent my heart from dropping when Clay spoke. I couldn’t make out everything he said; it came in snippets, but the longest phrase I recall was clear as a bell, perhaps because it echoed a voice in my own head: “you know what to do.” But while I now know it was my brother’s voice, that day, in that moment, in the wash of white noise filling my brain, I couldn’t distinguish Clay from my father. I froze. Single shot, the voice said. To the neck. The deer’s head swung toward me, and we briefly made eye contact—maybe for a second, maybe for several seconds, but it felt like ages compressed in an instant, as though someone or something were trying to speak with me through my brother or the animal. Whoever or whatever it was, it was broadcasting on an existential frequency I couldn’t locate in my heart. End it, the voice said. I floated outside myself, bearing witness to my actions, or lack of them, watching myself as I tried to will myself to act, to raise the rifle to my shoulder, to align peep and post and swollen neck of the deer, to slip my trembling index finger through the trigger guard and flick the safety to off with my thumb, to squeeze the trigger and mercifully end the life of the handsome creature flailing on the ground, its very self spilling out before me—Walt?—and I felt as though I were being watched, watched not only by some part of myself and by my brother, but also by my father and mother, by Meg and her parents, by Rev. Stubenvoll and Mayor Lambrecht and Thomas Lindow, by every teacher I’d ever had, from wrinkled old Mrs. Melchoir on up to Mr. Grzesch himself—Walt!—by Mark Raddatz and Eilene Ehlers and a toddler I’d never seen, a young girl in a Winnie the Pooh jumper with an inquisitive look in her bright, brown eyes, and they all watched me and willed me to act in some fashion, to walk away from either the task I knew was right or the one I felt was right. I couldn’t do either one. I froze. I stood with my rifle half-raised. I felt a cold bead of sweat trickle down my rib cage, and my feet felt like they were encased in concrete. My hands and arms wanted to move, but something inside me held them in check. I wanted to at least turn my head away, search for sunlight flashing through the cedar boughs, but I couldn’t. I couldn’t move, couldn’t speak, couldn’t give any indicator of hearing or heeding the exhortations hurled at me, real or imagined—but I could see my brother to my right, his expression somewhere between placidness, disgust, and pity as he raised his rifle, took aim, and fired the killing shot.

Scott Winkler is currently a high school English teacher, and his publication background is varied and diverse. His academic work has previously appeared in The Journal of Popular Culture and Aethlon. His short fiction has appeared in a variety of publications. His short story “The Kicker” won the 2012 Winning Writers Sports Fiction & Essay Contest, and his short-short “Winter” received honorable mention distinction in the 2013 New Millenium Writing Contest. His book The Wide Turn Toward Home, a collection of seven short stories and the title novella, was published by Pocol Press.

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dropped away in a steep slope higher than either of us were tall, surveyed the slope in longer and longer sweeps until he found it—a smear of blood no larger than a quarter on a brownspeckled yellow birch leaf. I placed another square of toilet paper at the spot on a pencil-thin branch above the leaf and looked back at the first marker. The deer had begun drifting northward—angling toward Spiece Lake lay three-quarters of a mile to our north, and Christy Brook, whose waters moved swiftly enough to fend off frost. Clay and I descended the embankment to the tracks, moving along the imaginary line suggested by the two faint signs my brother had found. We continued our search in that fashion for nearly three hours. I diligently sought any sign of the wounded animal’s path, but with no luck. Always, it was Clay who spotted the pin-prick of blood and I who marked the spot. At times, we might go for a quarter- or half-hour without finding anything, prompting us to return to the last marker and strike a slightly different trajectory than we’d imagined the deer taking; invariably, Clay’s instincts proved correct. We moved carefully, stepping lightly. I feared that I might obliterate whatever scant evidence of passage the deer had left. More than once I was ready to give up entirely, hopelessness outweighing the guilt of imagining the magnificent creature I’d wounded dying somewhere and having to share such a humiliating story with my father, Mr. Grzesch, and Meg. Clay, though, was dogged. His movements over a varied landscape were efficient and silent, whether we moved over unplowed fields or through patches of scrub forest, along the bed of the Chicago Northwestern rails or through the partially frozen lowlands that occasionally gave way beneath my weight but which held for Clay’s lighter tread. I grudgingly came to admire what my brother was doing, to respect that what I was witnessing was as much a gift as his talent on the diamond. I refused to defer to him once, when the deer’s route seemed headed toward the meadow. My brother’s instincts had been the sole reason we’d kept finding signs of the deer; whether I instinctively knew that the animal couldn’t have crossed into the opening of the meadow or I was merely hoping against hope, I wasn’t about to let this journey go there. Clay had reached a fork on the path and had taken his first step down the left branch, which would have, in fifty feet, spilled into the meadow, when I hissed his name in a hoarse whisper. He paused, then pivoted to meet my stare. I shook my head and mouthed no. Clay raised his eyebrows. I again shook my head, more emphatically this time, then motioned toward the right branch. Clay mouthed, are you sure?

HAL PRIZE 2016

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HAL PRIZE 2016

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Keeping Things Tony had just finished tying his hair back into a ponytail as he turned the corner. He loved opening the coffee shop; the birds had not been drowned out by the sounds of traffic, the sidewalk was empty of all life, and the air had that crisp smell of a new day. Pulling his keys out of his pocket and finally looking up, he was shocked to find he was not alone. Almost to the edge of the curb, a young man sat atop a large bamboo mat facing the coffee shop. He stared at the hands in his lap, which seemed to be kneading a ball of clay, and Tony could see occasional flecks of orange slip through his fingers. The man didn’t look up at Tony when he appeared, and Tony almost apologized, feeling as if he were interrupting something sacred. A rainbow of colored paper sat atop a small wooden step-stool, and Tony realized it was a piece of orange paper the man was molding with his fingers. To the left of his stool sat a mudcolored vase, cracked in many places, chipped in even more; a blue flower on a large green stem poked out of it, and Tony observed its angular form, its conical shape in a five pointed star pattern, and its perfect symmetry. The flower had been created solely from the square sheets of paper; the artist sat in stark contrast to the flower he created. He couldn’t have been more than 20, and everything about him gave off signals that he was a member of a fraternity at the local college. His baseball cap, which he wore backward, was a navy blue; in fact, Tony would have assumed he was a baseball player and from the designer clothes he sported, a well-off baseball player. But, here he sat, at 5:30 in the morning, folding pieces of paper into flowers. Tony’s temporary paralysis left him, and he started walking toward the door. The man looked up, briefly, and with a fluid gesture, grabbed the blue flower and presented it to Tony. “For you,” the young man stated simply in a deep, gravelly voice one would expect from someone with a frame twice his size. Tony, taken aback, took the flower from the young man and reached to his back pocket for his wallet. The man held his hand up and shook his head, looking at the ground as he did. “Oh, thanks,” Tony apologized through is gratitude while unlocking the door to the coffee shop, and the man returned to the orange paper in his lap. The young man came to fold flowers at least two times a week, and Tony was always assured the first flower of the day. At first he threw them away at the end of his shift until he observed the artist make one from

start to finish. The whole process took at least fifteen minutes, with each crease and fold being executed as if his reputation depended on its perfection. At the end, he’d examine his artwork for flaws. If he saw something he didn’t like, the flower would disappear into a black canvass bag he carried with him. Those that passed inspection would end up in his vase. After viewing the meticulous process, Tony couldn’t bring himself to throw any of the flowers away; instead, his apartment grew thick with a paper garden. Sometimes customers would come in with a flower in hand, and Tony would usually make it a point of conversation. One afternoon an elderly woman carrying a pink flower stepped up to the counter. Tony asked her if she was all right after she shook her head, frowning while touching the points of her flower almost as if it were as fragile as its real counterpart. “Why does he do that? Refused to take my money.” “It makes him happy, I guess,” Tony replied while pouring steamed milk into her latte. “I bet he just likes seeing people carrying his flowers down the street.” “Can’t eat off of warm, fuzzy feelings,” she argued with a push of her oversized glasses up her nose. He handed her her latte, gave her a warm smile and sent her on her way. A few mornings later, Tony turned the corner to see the young man throwing papers around, flipping his canvass bag upside down, and spilling its contents onto the concrete. For the first time, the vase was empty. The artist was on all fours like a puppy, and he had his baseball cap upside down on the ground revealing a mop of frazzled unkempt black hair; he shuffled through the spilled contents of his bag, his colored pieces of paper becoming soiled with dirt and smudges. He hadn’t even acknowledged Tony’s presence. Tony surveyed the area. He had thought he had seen the artist’s setup enough times to figure out what was missing. The young man looked up, still on all fours, and blushed at the sight of Tony standing within a few feet. He moved to his usual cross-legged position and began repositioning his papers, dusting off the dirt that had accumulated. When he repositioned the vase to its upright position, he glanced at its current empty state, then at Tony, then back at the vase. His head hung low, absently staring at his papers. Wanting to be of assistance, Tony had a revelation. “Scissors?” he suggested, “If you are missing your scissors, we have some inside that you can use.”


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HAL PRIZE 2016

J

Contemporary, Mixed-media Fine Art Gallery

by Justin Krishka

Whole The artist’s head fell as he stared at the pink piece of paper. Nearby, a piece of newspaper was also crumpled into a ball, and Tony watched his face turn from the pink paper to the newspaper and back again. His hands remained motionless as Tony finally went back to work. People demanding refunds because their cappuccino didn’t taste like the one they would buy at the gas station and a constant flow of people demanding special orders kept Tony from seeing the artist leave. That was not very unusual; he very seldom saw him pack up his bamboo mat for the day. As he left the coffee shop that day, though, he couldn’t help but notice the pink paper still on the ground, demoted to the status of common litter. It was a crisp morning as Tony walked down the sidewalk to work. Mourning doves cooed their calming song somewhere nearby, and Tony reveled in the early morning sunlight until he unexpectedly stepped on something. The crunch and snap underneath his feet told him whatever it was, was no longer in one piece. Looking down at the ground, he saw a spray of mud-colored glass fragments, and Tony grunted with disgust as he wondered why people didn’t pick up their garbage. After kicking the glass fragments into a pile and throwing them into the nearest garbage can, he turned the corner and found the sidewalk unoccupied, which wasn’t too surprising. The artist didn’t come every day of the week and kept no set schedule. Tony figured that after the previous day’s incident, the artist decided to take some time to himself. But every day he turned the corner he was greeted with an empty sidewalk. A few months later an older woman stepped up to the counter; she wore a red sun dress that hung on her like a garbage bag, and her oversized glasses made her seem even smaller and bug-like. Knowing the artist would never return, Tony had placed the flowers he had received all those early mornings into vases and placed them one on each side of the loose teas and flavor syrups that lined the back wall. “So, did he end up getting a real job?” the woman asked after ordering her latte. She pushed up her glasses and set a canvass bag on top of the counter. A smirk of self-assurance crept its away across her face. “Excuse me?” Tony asked stopping the steaming of the milk because he was sure he had missed part of the conversation. “The flower-folder,” she responded gesturing to the vases on the back wall. “You can’t live on folding paper and not taking money when people offer,” she offered as explanation as she dug through her canvass bag,

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The papers slid from the artist’s fingers. A light breeze took a yellow piece of paper and scratched it across the sidewalk into the road. The artist didn’t even try to stop it; instead, he stared at Tony. His eyes, large pools of pity, saw Tony perhaps for the first time. Tony, for once, looked down in reproach. He wasn’t sure why. “No,” the young man declared as he put his baseball cap back on, backwards. A distance of miles seemed to grow between the two men, though they were feet away from one another. “There is no need for scissors,” the artist declared. His eyes had grown large with criticism as he surveyed Tony like a boxer would size up his competition. Feeling somehow exposed, Tony tugged on his ponytail, and as he thought about it, he had never seen the artist use any sort of cutting in his work—not even a tear. “I have no flower for you today” the artist stated, and Tony felt almost as if it were a punishment for his insolence at making a suggestion of a scissors. But, Tony realized he must have misinterpreted the artist’s intentions, because as he was unlocking the door to go into the coffee shop, he heard the quiet yet strong voice from behind him: “I’m sorry.” When Tony took his break later that morning, he sat sipping an Americano and nibbling on a scone. It was a busy day in town. The college kids were getting ready for finals and were crowding the streets on one of their last weekends of freedom before summer jobs took them away to other parts of the state. Staring out the window, Tony observed a group of five college guys circle around the artist. They watched the artist while talking and laughing with one another. As usual, the artist didn’t look up from his work. Tony assumed the artist knew them, but then he watched one of the guys reach over and flip the artist’s hat off his head. Through the glass the group’s silent laughter was deafening, and Tony glared at the guy who flipped off the hat. On his arm ran a pattern of dark blue ink in the shape of barbed wire trailing up underneath the sleeves of his t-shirt, and Tony watched as this arm reached down and grabbed a pink flower out of the vase. The artist had put his hat back on, and he and Tony both watched the barbed wire on the guy’s arm expand with muscle as it attacked the pink bloom of paper. As the flower slowly collapsed in on itself, pink bled through the space in between the guy’s fingers as he crumpled the flower into a piece of trash, and with a flick of his wrist the pink mass hit the artist in the face and landed in between the vase and the nearby bench.

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which was decorated with puffy paint butterflies in various stages of flight. Tony remembered the woman as the one who was upset that the artist had never taken her money when she offered. “People get paid in different ways.” “What, then, did he get fired?” she smiled up at him from above the plastic frames, a twinkle in her eye. “You know,” he paused pondering over that last day, “I think he may have thought that.” The woman gave him a curious look but let the conversation fall as she turned for the door; he put her money in the register and ripped off the receipt that the woman obviously didn’t want. He crumpled the receipt, and instead of dropping it thoughtlessly into the wastebasket, he kept it tight in his closed fist.

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Justin Krishka resides in Watertown, Wisconsin, where he spends his days working for a hospital and his nights scribbling away while wishing his apartment lease would change so he could have a cat.

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Windmill Farm

Nestled in a Dutch farmstead, the gallery features Ed Fenendael’s award-winning watercolors, pastels and oils. Inspired by the pastoral scenes of Door County and Europe, Fenendael’s paintings evoke a sense of peace, comfort and tranquility.

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The gallery is located 3 /2 miles North of 1 Jacksonport on Cty A, then 1 /2 miles west (left) on Fairview Road to 3829. Open Friday, Saturday, Sunday; May 20 - October 16, 10am-5pm (or by appointment) 920-868-9282 www.watercolorexcitement.com Also Visit: Lupine Antiques at Windmill Farm Antiques - Gifts - Collectibles

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HAL PRIZE 201

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Another Thing To Fall There is an escaped strand of hair clinging to the swell of her bottom lip. If things were different, if we were not the people that we are resigned to be, I would have closed the awful distance between us and tucked the stray hair behind her ear. My hand might have lingered there, palm against her cheek, fingertips tracing stars onto her skin. But there are rules, and reasons to follow them. There is a train, and a ticket with her name on it, and a sea of unsaid everythings. My fingernails scrape the lint at the bottom of my pockets, setting roots to resist the temptation. I regret that I am a romantic. The church is full of them. It is the occupational hazard of believing in the impossible. Seminary only serves as an escape once in a lifetime. A single punch­card, no do­overs, no second-guessing. Two years ago, I had every intention of loving no one but God in an effort to simplify things. Abandoning the practice of modern romance was easy when the bruises were fresh. The flesh of my fragile heart had caught too many times on the sharp angles of bad love. Devotion was free of the snarl and mess of ordinary love. My faith has always been a guilt­free indulgence in affection. I could love and be loved without the collateral. It had been Christian charity that compelled me to offer Lilli the spare room beneath my umbrella that afternoon

outside of the cafe. But it had been another power entirely that had drawn me back to her company, day after day, sharing unfamiliar histories and a dish of sugar cubes. She was on holiday, hiding away at her gran’s old house in the beach town she had not visited since she was a girl. I knew her grandmother from Sunday mass, but had never heard of Lilli until she was there, sitting in the pews, inventing the lyrics to the hymns. I accepted her invitation to coffee as a kindness, that was all. It had nothing to do with the pale green of her eyes, like sunlight through stained glass. When I told her that I lived in the rectory, her smile faltered. For a moment, I had forgotten my resemblance to the most mediocre of men. Free of a cleric or wooden cross on my back, I might have been anyone. My Catholic school blood settled me comfortably amongst all the in­betweeners: the floss once, brush twice a day boys. I have known from the beginning that loving her was a disaster. The church insists they have rid the cloth of masochists, but it can’t possibly be true, as I have happily endured the suffering of an impossible affection. Lilli would mention past loves and I would swallow a mouthful of black coffee, trying to ignore the bitterness. We would sit together for hours, and I would imagine that I could hold her hand without breaking any promises. December was a mild month, facilitating the innocent communions that we shared. She would soak the shell of her croissant in coffee, sometimes forgetting, so that it crumbled away in her hand. “Do you ever get lonely?” she asked me once, licking flakes from her fingertips. I smirked, and made a vague motion towards the ceiling. “I’m never alone.” Lilli had made a face. She never minded my awful unfunniness. She was clever enough for the pair of us. I second­guessed every word I said to her, wondering which

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Morgan Beatrice Peters is a full-time university student pursuing a Bachelor of Arts in English Literature. Her previous honors include First Prize in Focus Features’ 2015 “Your Vision, Your Voice” essay contest, as well as the 2014 Hal Prize in Fiction for her short story “Catfish Days.”

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would be the sin. We met at that cafe for conversation, never conversion. It was a rare and beautiful acquaintance. My love has never been for her, the composite, but rather the delicacy of interwoven details that could be dissected and separated from the whole. How she used her pinky finger to scoop foam from the top of a latte. How she told stories with the breathy anticipation of her own punchline. How she never pressed for an answer to the question of why and what we were. It’s possible to get to know someone while sitting in the corner table with drowsy rain against the window, and it’s possible to know someone as we stand here, counting down the seconds together in silence, before the train arrives and we part for the last time. And maybe coffee will not taste as sweet once she has left, but she has to leave all the same. This was only ever a vacation: nothing was supposed to break. We crossed that line without meaning to. After all, there is no rule against falling in love with the sound of a person’s voice. Too often has the unwelcome thought crossed my mind that I could be very happy in a life with her. I am happy in this life too, with its measured practicality and daily wonder. I am more than willing to dedicate myself to prayer and integration and the open bar at the annual seminarian’s Christmas party. But across the mélange of our shared hours, there have been fleeting glimpses at a future in which Sundays only meant lazy jam and toast in bed, a lousy song on the radio, and her smile in the doorway “Don’t take this the wrong way,” I say, and she looks up, “But if you ever come back, I think it might be best if you don’t tell me.” The overhead lights cast strange shadows across Lilli’s face. “Oh,” she exhales the sharp, unhappy punctuation. “I hope you understand.” She looks away, out into the darkness beyond the track, as though trying to discern in it some future that did not involve me. I do not follow her gaze to see it, for fear that I might lose the slim courage keeping me upright. I remind myself, not for the first time, that this is not the worst thing that has ever

happened to me. It is hardly the worst thing happening in the world, but for the selfish minutes I have left, nothing else could distract my misery from its attachment to her. Love, for all the good it is meant to do, is a damned thing. When she turns back, there is something resolute in the set of her jaw. The train is only minutes away now, and somehow that makes us braver. “I won’t say that I’m happy about it,” she speaks without blush. There are no more secrets to keep. “Me neither,” I admit, “But I can’t take the risk.” Three weeks had already restructured the shape of my conscious. Any more time and I would be getting on the train with her. “It’s silly,” she sighs, a small frown pulling at her lips, “I just. Well, I never gave up on you. Not entirely. But I suppose this is it, isn’t it?” “It is,” I say, because this is an exercise of staying inside the lines. The headlight of the train bathes us in soft yellow as it approaches. It is small comfort that there are two broken hearts on the platform. In the new light, she smiles. “I hope He makes you happy.” I choke out a hollow sort of laugh. “We’ll be alright in the end,” I manage, “He tests us all.” She rolls her eyes. “Yeah, tell Him thanks for that.” As the train glides to a careful stop, neither of us move. We don’t speak, don’t look away, but we don’t fall apart either, and there is some small victory in that. She reaches out and steals one of my hands from its guarding pocket. Held gently between hers, warmth floods my fingertips and, for a moment, we are back on that sleepy side street in the rain, with an umbrella above our heads. She is looking at me, and asking a question that I can never answer. She begins to move away, and I let her, until it is only the tips of our fingers keeping us connected. Then nothing. She boards the train and does not turn to say goodbye. Everything unsaid remains in the cold beside me, watching as the doors close and she disappears. I search the passing windows for her face, but meet nothing but drawn curtains or the blank stares of strangers. The train leaves the station and I remain on the platform, blinking away the bands of light burnt into my vision. I stay until the cold fills my chest, and every star above spreads its light like wings and flies away, leaving only darkness. My breath escapes into the night air as an exhale of frustrated steam. I watch as it catches the red light of the arrival sign announcing the next train.

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Fiction Honorable

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PENINSULA PULSE  AUGUST 5–12/2016 • v22i32  DOORCOUNTYPULSE.COM

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A Matched Indifference Old women do not attract the attention of priests. A parish can always count so many widows, soon-to-be-widows, and a smattering of old maids like myself. The priest will conduct our quiet funerals in front of a sparse congregation. A misperception, old women appear to give the most reverence to the priest, and seemingly without question or scrutiny. The priest currently assigned to St. Catherine’s pushes his gentle manner and kind, loving words to excess. When children gather near him, his hands reach down and he gently cups the back of their heads. He gives a reassuring rub and then he spreads out his arms and hands to their parents in a jubilant welcome. These are fleshless embraces. The young of the parish take a reward from his smile and his extended hand. Now, to me, it seems to be a smile painted on a cheap doll. The priests of my younger years carried stern faces, demeanors earned by the heavy duties they carried. Father Megner, the priest before Father Boldt arrived in the midtwenties, chewed on his own mouth. He sucked on his large teeth, and his gaunt face was pocked. To match his straight and greasy dark hair, an odor lingered around him. He was an awfully ugly man. As best anyone knew, he laundered his own clothes and cooked his own meals. Refusing to use an automobile, he tended and cared for his horse that he hitched to a buggy. The next priest, Boldt, immediately tore down the small stable adjacent to the rectory. My brother, Steven, didn’t care about or see the ugliness in Megner. According to Steven, Megner knew history and philosophy, and he considered his job to be learned. One of three or four young men that gathered around Megner, Steven heard his history lessons. While the rest of us acquiesced to the unfolding of world war, Megner placed it in an historical sequence that he explained to his small gang of young men. “I hear one half of history at school,” Steven said. “I hear the other half from Father Megner.” “Maybe you know too much,” Mother said. “Father says that we…America… thinks it will alter history if we enter the war in Europe. But history always alters us.” “I don’t know what that means,” Mother said. I didn’t understand until Auggie died. Auggie and I were courting. Before he left for France, he asked me to wait for him. When word came of Auggie’s death, Megner did not come to the house. At the cemetery his words came from the missal. It seemed he stood alongside our sorrow, but he did not hold it himself. Steven said later that historians do that. In the confessional a week or two past the funeral Mass, I started by rote, “Bless me Father, for I…” “Helen, the world sins and those are not your personal sins. Don’t worry about sin…about your sins right now. Don’t worry about that,” he said. “I’m lost,” I said. “I feel empty now. I cried all week. But now I don’t know if I should cry more.” “Does someone tell you not to cry?” he asked. “Mother says that it’s time for me to ‘get on with the world.’” “You’ll feel your sorrow until the sorrow just seems normal,” he said.

“Just be sad, go ahead. And then it will be there with your happiness.” “Auggie didn’t propose. We knew we wanted to…” “That’s just so many words; a proposal is just the words. You know what Auggie felt,” he said. “Is your mother saying that you don’t have the full right to be sad?” “No…she says…” I said. “Helen…Miss Prevett, for your penance, go home and cry all night long, tonight, tomorrow night, for as many nights as you need to cry, cry!” he said. I am still struck by his wisdom. He added a simple offer before I was able to push myself up from the kneeler. “Maybe when you are ready, you might work as the housekeeper in the rectory…here in the church. But when you are ready and you will know when.” Then he slid the little door closed. A lull came in our supper conversation that evening and I filled it in with Megner’s offer. It seemed safe to disclose that part of my confession. “Oh, no!” Mother blurted. But Father put down his fork and raised his hand across his plate. “We…you should leave a job like that to someone from a family with need,” he said and he kept his hand poised above his plate. “That’s who should take a job like that.” Mother watched me closely that night. She insisted we pray the rosary. I stayed awake for several days, but I was afraid to cry. I did not know how to take advice from a priest, one who used my first name, who knew who I was behind the opaque screen of the confessional. I suppose, if I admit it, I understand him now, his advise to cry, and yes, his offer. Father’s steady hand above his plate is unforgettable! When Megner died suddenly, members of the parish cleaned the rectory from top to bottom. They took much of his belongings a few miles from town and started a bonfire. In less than a week from his arrival, Boldt enlisted some of those same men to tear down the old stable. Boldt carried his weight and muscle on a short frame. At evening in the heat of summer, he might be a lone swimmer crossing the Wisconsin River. Father noticed him one evening out our parlor window. From a distance, I saw the priest pull himself from the river, dressed only in his swim trunks. He might put his cigar down for a few moments to talk or work, and of course to swim, but when not saying Mass, he had it either in his mouth or on its way to his gaping lips. Only speaking from my experience, he didn’t talk directly to younger women either. Perhaps my sister, Corrine, said something once, but I doubt if it was a lengthy conversation. Of course there was the confessional. “Three Our Fathers and Three Hail Marys.” Boldt looked at me though. He looked at Corrine as well. Just a couple of times I noticed him pause as he moved onto the sidewalk after Mass. He greeted Father, nodded at Mother and passed by Corrine and I, his eyes curious about something. His eyeballs stayed still for a moment or two and even his hands halted in their motion. I knew I had been looked at. Corrine parted her lips and drew her head away. I would say both of us were uncomfortable for those moments, so discomfited as to say nothing to one another.

Boldt did not seem to look at his housekeeper. He knew Emma worked next to him preparing for Mass, cleaning the rectory, and cooking his meals. As it’s said in most places, the priest had a housekeeper. Emma appeared shapeless with simple strands of hair pulled down and tied in a long ponytail. As colorless as light-brown hair can be, it turned a mottled gray over the years, always tied into a tail. She set her facial expression to her work: simple jobs, tedious and familiar tasks. Boldt took his release with Emma, regardless. I have to believe Steven’s account, one he developed by literally standing in the shadows of the rectory at midnight. He confirmed the gossip of others. On most Wednesdays Emma left the rectory at midnight. With her drab hair hanging loose and her step less measured, she left by a back door. I imagined the near bare torso of Boldt standing a few steps back, the body I saw as he pulled himself from the river. On a schedule, a routine that kept him sated, Emma joined with him as she might have washed the floors or set the altar cloths. This is my telling, my perception of such an association between a priest and a waif of a housekeeper. But if Emma’s heart raced, if Boldt raised his hand gently to her face, no one I know ever witnessed the acts that would proceed or follow save Steven and a few others standing in a secret shadow. Emma had to think, and think about it daily…and all day on some days…and remain expressionless as she moved from task to task. A small and thin woman, she squared away her shoulders and stood erect. Only age brought on a stoop common to all of us. Mother and Father knew, for sure they knew. And they would have acquiesced to the persistent deception. The parish…no one from the parish negotiated the protracted sophism. We all strived to be virtuous, to be held in God’s grace. This was something concurrent but not congruent necessarily, not to me anyway. Without seeing any hint of romance, I felt deeply sad. Boldt retired with the title of the Right Reverend Monsignor Boldt. Taking Emma with him, he moved to a lake home fifty or more miles north of Twin Pines, far enough away to almost vanish from our thoughts. Maybe some felt that Emma and Boldt settled into a little love nest. But when Boldt died, his body returned to Twin Pines for a stately funeral overseen by the diocese. Maybe I was the only one looking for Emma, or the only one waiting for a mention of her name. Nothing! The celebrant of the Mass praised Boldt’s stalwart shepherding of St. Catherine’s congregation, but nowhere in his homily did he insert the existence of Emma or her coexistence with Boldt. Raised bronze letters announce the remains of Right Reverend Monsignor Boldt on a gravestone in Saint Catherine’s Cemetery. I am left to guess that Emma’s remains lie in a modest grave 50 or more miles north of here, and no title in raised letters will point to her steadfast service to a congregation, to a church, to a priest! For a long time I wanted to be the one to smash the deception. But how can anyone do that, explain it all and still keep Emma’s deep goodness intact? As long as she knelt with such dedicated subservience at Mass, the


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rest of us could glance away for a moment or two. The clean church, the crisp vestments and altar cloths, the Angeles bell precisely tolled made us all Catholic. More than anything, her penitence helped us all atone. This sin, his sin, did not push us way from church. And if we doubted church, religion, believing in priests, we did not show it unless we doubted deep inside, privately. I still go to Mass and any observer could say religiously so. I saw Boldt rise from the river without his holy garments. He was a well-formed man who loved the rigor of a strenuous swim, who took the pleasure of a woman, a primal form of being a man. Mother and Father did not feel sad about all the contradictions, the obvious violation of Emma. At least I did not see that as the source for any of their everyday and awfully human anxiety. Did they believe that virtue had to exist alongside primitive appetites for even or especially for a priest? One little thought I have had for a while tells me that I felt sad because I was afraid. Whatever I was, however I appeared, that priest looked at me long enough. I didn’t think I offered any other reason for his interest, for his momentary appraisal. Maybe Megner based his offer on innocent and genuine concern, but my father always showed himself to be a smart man. I’m an old woman now, but I hold back from any starry-eyed reverence for our current parish priest. If he is the one to celebrate my funeral Mass, I have already matched his indifference.

Greg Venne retired in 2012 from UW-Marathon County as the Coordinator of the Wausau Homes Writing Center. Prior to joining UWMC, he taught high school English and carried duties as Language Arts Coordinator and Department Chair. Since retiring, he has explored what he really knows about writing.

Judge's Comments

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PENINSULA PULSE  AUGUST 5–12/2016 • v22i32  DOORCOUNTYPULSE.COM

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Fiction Honorable

by Tim Riekena

Grandpa’s Lesson The boy should have turned back when the river ice first cracked, but he was nine and didn’t know better. To have turned around would have meant giving up an afternoon of exploring the forest on the north side of the river. He had never explored across the river. Plus, the opportunity to slip out of the house didn’t occur very often. The boy had waited until his grandpa was busy listening to the noon radio report talking about the war in Vietnam, then snuck out the back door. He headed north toward the river knowing if he got caught there would be a spanking. The only witness to his escape was Milo, the Border collie that lived down the road with Mr. Sorenson, a widower like his grandpa. Milo had spotted the boy as he was climbing over the barbed-wire fence leading to the pasture. The dog bounded through the ankle-deep snow determined to be out on a hike with the boy. The boy welcomed his new partner with a scratch behind the ears and the two headed across the flat pasture leading to the river. So, when the boy heard the river ice crack for the first time, he was close enough to the three-foot high river bank that he simply scrambled up it and got to his feet. He looked around at the unexplored woodland and quickly forgot about the cracking river ice. As he stood there proud and smiling, he wondered if Christopher Columbus felt this way when he discovered America. The boy thought he probably did. The boy and Milo explored the old growth of walnut trees for an hour before the boy realized the winter sun would be setting soon. He followed his footsteps back to the river and slid down the bank where he had earlier climbed out. When both feet landed on the ice he heard the river ice crack for the second time. He took a hesitant step with his right foot and then with his left. Suddenly, his left leg punched a hole through the ice and went down past his knee. What scared him wasn’t the shock of the freezing water or the realization that his foot didn’t touch the bottom. What scared the boy was the pull on his leg. It was the strong current flowing under the ice. The boy yanked his leg out and rolled over on his right side away from the hole. He laid still until he was

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and how Milo saved his life and how sorry he was for lying and how sorry he was for killing the dog. His grandpa stroked his head and asked the boy what should be done next. The boy thought of poor Mr. Sorenson and knew the man deserved to know the truth. Milo had saved his life. He told his grandpa that he needed to tell Mr. Sorenson the truth and started getting out of bed to dress. His grandpa gave a soft laugh and told the boy that he needed to rest more and they would visit Mr. Sorenson in the morning. The boy laid back down and was soon asleep. In the morning, the two dressed and made the short trip to their neighbor. As they walked down the road, the boy held his grandpa’s hand; something he hadn’t done since he was seven. Mr. Sorenson opened the door and invited the two to sit down in his front room. Once settled, the boy’s grandpa instructed the boy to tell his story of the river ice. The boy told the same story he told his grandpa, but this time he held his head up. When he got to the part about Milo jumping in the freezing water to save him, the boy saw a prideful smile creep up on Mr. Sorenson’s face. When he finished, Mr. Sorenson took the boy’s hand and told him he appreciated the truth even when telling the truth was hard. He also said he thanked the Good Lord that the dog was there to save him. Mr. Sorenson then invited his neighbors to stay for breakfast. When they went into the kitchen, the boy noticed that the table was already set for three. The breakfast was scrambled eggs, fried ham, and all the toast and jelly the boy could eat. His hunger surprised him, which pleased both old men. The two men laughed and reminisced about dogs they had in their long lifetimes while the boy sat between them not sure how he should feel. He was both ashamed and relieved for telling the truth. The boy knew in time he would try to read his grandpa’s book about restoring lost honor again but not until he was much older. Right now, he decided he was happy to be sitting in between the two old men listening to their stories. He looked into his grandpa’s eyes and for the first time realized how they matched his own. His grandpa saw him, smiled, and handed the boy another slice of toast.

Tim Riekena is a retired middle school teacher that still coaches high school cross country. His wife is also a retired teacher. Right now, they are happy spending time helping out with their three new grandbabies, including twins!

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36 Hole Golf Course Egg Harbor

2 golfers, 18 holes with a cart, brat and a beer $109 920.868.3232 www.GolfAtAlpine.com

4146 GOLF VALLEY DR. STURGEON BAY, WI 54235 920.743.3334

18 HOLE CHAMPIONSHIP COURSE Beautifully Manicured & Maintained Exceptional Greens & Bunkers idlewildgolfclub.com AMERICAN PUB FARE Full Bar • Big Screen TV’s Stunning Views OPEN DAILY 11AM

Summer Rates: MON - THUR

FRI, SAT, SUN (EXCLUDES HOLIDAYS)

9 HOLES 18 HOLES

9 HOLES 18 HOLES

Before 1 PM $28

$46

Before 1 PM $33

$56

1 PM - 4 PM $24

$38

1 PM - 4 PM $26

$43

After 4 PM

$28

After 4 PM

$28

$18

$21

Carts per person: $12 for 9 holes • $18 for 18 holes

Call us or like us on Facebook to check out our Summer Specials. N. of Egg Harbor on Hwy. 42, Take EE to 8125 Heritage Lake Rd.

920-868-2483 • 888-463-4653 • orchardsateggharbor.com

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Where the View is as Great as the Golf!

IDLEWILD GOLF CLUB

DOORCOUNTYPULSE.COM  AUGUST 5–12/2016 • v22i32  PENINSULA PULSE

darkness. The calls were sad and desperate. The boy woke when he heard a knock at the door. He sat up and heard his grandpa invite the visitor into the front room. It was Mr. Sorenson who had been calling for his lost dog. Mr. Sorenson wanted to know if anyone had seen his dog that afternoon, especially the boy who the dog loved dearly. The boy’s grandpa told Mr. Sorenson that the boy was resting, but he would ask him in the morning. Then their voices grew soft and the boy could no longer hear every word. He thought he heard Mr. Sorenson whisper, “Oh no!” three times. When Mr. Sorenson was leaving, he thought he heard his grandpa say, “We’ll see you in the morning.” The boy noticed that when Mr. Sorenson left, he no longer called out for Milo. The boy’s grandpa came into the bedroom to find the boy crying. He sat down on the edge of the bed and gently asked the boy if he knew anything about Mr. Sorenson’s dog who had gone missing. The boy kept his eyes on the gray blanket at the foot of the bed and said he had not seen the dog. The old man went on to tell the boy that, after supper, he had taken the flashlight and found the boy’s footprints in the snow heading toward the river and the same set of footprints coming back. He also said he saw the dog’s footprints, but they only led toward the river and not back. In a softer voice, the boy’s grandpa asked if he knew anything about Mr. Sorenson’s dog. The boy sobbed and said no. The old man sighed. He reached past the boy for one of the two books that had been on his nightstand for as long as the boy could remember. One was the Bible he received in 1907 when he was the same age as his grandson. The other book he had brought back from Europe ten years later when he fought in WWI. The title read The Poem of the Cid. The boy had tried reading it once but could never make sense out of the verses. This was the book the old man picked up and held in his hands with familiar gentleness. The boy’s grandpa cleared his throat and told the boy that the book was written hundreds of years ago about a Spanish nobleman named El Cid whose king no longer had confidence in. But, by doing heroic acts, El Cid regained the confidence of the king and his honor was restored. The boy’s grandpa said the book was about integrity and doing the right thing even if it was hard to do. The old man pointed at the book and said something that the boy wouldn’t have understood if it had been said by his teacher or anyone else. But when he heard his grandpa say it, he understood the phrase as well as any nine-year old was capable of. His grandpa had said, “The honor restored will be greater than the honor lost.” For the third time, the grandpa asked the boy about Mr. Sorenson’s dog. This time the boy nodded yes and buried himself in his grandpa’s chest weeping. When the crying passed, he told what happened on the river ice

HAL PRIZE 2016

confident the ice would hold him. He rolled two more times before getting to his knees in the middle of the frozen river. Carefully, he stood with his feet spread wide. The boy noticed with giddy curiosity that his left pant leg from the knee down was quickly becoming stiff in the winter breeze. He would have to be sneaky about changing his pants and shoes when he got home. Milo whimpered and barked at the boy standing in the middle of the frozen river. Both the boy and the dog looked to the south bank twenty feet away. If they could make that, they would be safe. The dog easily trotted to the south bank and then ran back and forth barking at the boy. The boy knew he couldn’t stay where he was, so he started taking baby steps toward the bank. When he got within five feet of the bank, he heard the ice crack for the third and last time. The ice gave under his feet. The boy jumped for the bank, but it was too late. He found himself chest deep in the frigid water fighting the powerful current as it flowed around him and under the ice. This time, his entire body was being pulled by it. With nothing to hang on to, the boy was slipping into the current. Just when the boy’s head was starting to go under, he felt an icy splash in front of him. It was Milo. Instinctively, the boy grabbed the dog and tried climbing on top of him. The buoyancy was enough for the boy to make a lunge toward the bank where he was able to grab a root. He pulled himself out of the river and up the bank. He looked back for Milo, but the dog was gone. The boy had pushed him under the water where the current took the dog under the ice. The boy cried out and ran downstream hoping to catch a glimpse of Milo but there was nothing but black, milky river ice. As his body began to shake from the cold, the boy knew Milo was gone and he had killed him. He would be in trouble if his grandpa found out. No one must ever find out. It would be his secret. All he could do now was get home before he froze. The boy stumbled and staggered as he made his way back through the pasture toward his grandpa’s house. By the time he got to the barbed-wire fence, the cold had robbed him of his ability to climb. He pitched his body across the top barbed-wire strand tearing his coat before landing on the other side. When he finally made it to the back door, his grandpa was waiting for him. The old man saw the ice on the boy’s winter coat and knew that the boy had fallen through the river ice. There would be no need for a spanking. He hugged the crying boy and told him everything would be okay. He brought him into the house and undressed the boy from his frozen clothes. The boy let his grandpa do these things without any embarrassment reserved for a nineyear old boy. After a warm bath and dry clothes, the boy’s grandpa fed him supper and the boy was soon asleep in his grandpa’s feather bed. The boy dreamed Mr. Sorenson was calling out for Milo in the winter


E M I LY S HAPI RO TRU N K S H OW Saturday, auguSt 6, 10am-5pm • Sunday, auguSt 7, 11am-4pm New York City artist Emilie Shapiro uses the ancient craft of lost wax casting— dating back to the Egyptians—carving sculptural pieces into hard wax and casting them into metal. Rough gemstones are incorporated into her work as a celebration of the beauty of natural imperfection.

Open daily May – October; Weekends Year-Round 10376 Hwy 42, Sister Bay, WI 920-854-4343

finelinedesignsgallery.com

Door County on canvas. You can take it with you.

Exhibit & Sale through Aug 13 Take home your favorite Door County scene painted by nationally recognized artists • Proceeds benefit the programs at the non-profit Peninsula School of Art •

doorcountypleinair.com Presented by Peninsula School of Art, Fish Creek 920.868.3455


It begins and ends on the waterfront in Sister Bay

25 mile | 50 mile | Metric Century | Century Ride

bike northern Door County stay and celebrate in sister bay.

PENINSULACENTURY.COM

REGISTRATION IS OPEN PRESENTED BY:

PREMIER SPONOSOR:

MAJOR SPONOSRS:

SUPPORTING SPONSORS: FLANIGAN DISTRIBUTING | GOING GARBAGE | NOR DOOR SPORT & CYCLERY

The Peninsula Century Fall Challenge is a

event.


Door County Living in Pictures: The Photography of Len Villano

DOOR COUNTY LIVING IN PICTURES

The Photography of Len Villano

AVAILABLE

NOW

1

Door County Living in Pictures: The Photography of Heather Harle Frykman & Lucas Frykman

2

DOOR COUNTY LIVING IN PICTURES

The Photography of Heather Harle Frykman & Lucas Frykman

2 Volumes of Door County Living in Pictures The books feature the photographs of: Len Villano (Volume 1) and Heather Harle Frykman & Lucas Frykman (Volume 2)

$12.95 each $12.95 each – check, MC, Visa, AmEx, Discover Available at the Peninsula Pulse office, weekdays 10am – 4pm 8142 Hwy. 57, Baileys Harbor (920) 839-2121 Shipping $6.50 for 1 or 2 books. Higher quantities calculated at time of purchase. (Wholesale pricing available for qualified buyers)


Fiction

non

a H l The

Peninsula Pulse

August 5–12/2016 v22i32

doorcountypulse.com

> Prize

2016


HAL PRIZE 201

Introducing the Nautical Collection in Sterling Silver and Diamonds designed by Draeb Jewelers

Door County’s First Choice For A Great Steak!

SERVING MONDAY - SATURDAY AT 5 PM CL O SED SU NDAY S e x c e p t H o liday We e ke n ds

CHECK OUT OUR NEW EARLY DINING MENU FROM 5-5:30 PM MONDAY - SATURDAY Three Course Dinner $21.95 (dine in only)

N I G H T LY S P E C I A L S All nightly specials include choice of salad or cup of soup

Additional pieces available. Stop in to see the entire collection.

MONDAY | SURF & TURF TUESDAY| TEN PERCENT OFF WEDNESDAY | DATE NIGHT SPECIAL THURSDAY | WHITEFISH

920.854.2700

Family Owned & Operated Since 1910

FRIDAY | FISH & SEAFOOD SPECIAL

RESERVATIONS WELCOME

www.thechopsisterbay.com

www.draebjewelersinc.com

Lower Level • Country Walk Shops • Sister Bay, WI 54234

50 N 3rd Ave. • Sturgeon Bay • 920-743-4233

“The best way to find out if you can trust somebody is to trust them.” ERNEST HEMINGWAY

N I S T K R E C CON HE PAR T

August 11 BIRCH CREEK JAZZ AMBASSADORS August 18 DAVE & LYNN MUSIC Acoustic Rock/Blugrass

Concerts are free and begin at 5pm on Thursdays in Harbor View Park, 7809 Hwy 42, Egg Harbor. Bring a lawn chair or blanket, carry-ins welcome.

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PENINSULA PULSE  AUGUST 5–12/2016 • v22i32  DOORCOUNTYPULSE.COM

OTHER EVENTS August 13 Door County Sports & Classic Car Show Dedicated to fellow car enthusiast, Herb Mueller

Catch the Flavor Flavorful, fresh and fun. The award-winning Carrington Pub & Grill offers tasty salads, appetizers, sandwiches, steaks, fish, pasta, pizza and American classics. Great view. Tasty food. And a friendly crew. Located on a bluff overlooking the sparkling waters of the Bay of Green Bay.

Indoor and Outdoor Seating: Seasonal outdoor seating. With one of the best views in all of Door County.

September 17 Egg Harbor AleFest Tickets on sale now! www.EggHarborAleFest.com

Special menu: Gluten-sensitive menu is available. Healthy choices on the Kid’s Menu as well.

October 8-9 Pumpkin Patch Fun-filled, family friendly festival!

Hours: Open daily, serving 11am - 9pm. Lounge open later.

November 25-26 Holly Days Old-fashioned holiday celebration

Friday Fish Fry: Check out our Friday Fish Fry. You’ll be hooked. Karaoke: Every Saturday night from 9pm - midnight. Signature dish: Walleye

Menu

At the Landmark Resort 7643 Hillside Road | Egg Harbor

920.868.5162 or 920.868.3205

www.CarringtonPub.com

Our Harbor. Your Harbor.

D O O R C O U N T Y, W I

For complete schedule, more live music, events & fun... 920-868-3717 | EggHarborDoorCounty.org |

/eggharbordoorcounty


d

64th Season

HAL PRIZE 2016

d

DOOR SHAKESPEARE’S 2016 SEASON

W M S H A K E S P E A R E’S

JULIUS CaeSAR DIRECTED BY

SPONSORED BY

JAMES PICKERING

AND

DIRECTED BY

SPONSORED BY

JOSEPH HANREDDY

at SACRED GROUNDS

Thru Aug 20th 2016 Victor Yampolsky

JUNE 29- AUGUST 20, 2016

Music Director and Conductor

MONDAY-FRIDAY at 8 PM • SATURDAY at 5 PM

Discover World Class Symphonic Music in the Heart of Door County!

All performances take place in the outdoor setting of the Garden at Björklunden.

■ Sat, Aug 6 d

d

VISIT DOORSHAKESPEARE.COM OR CALL 920.839.1500

All Concerts Start at 7:30 PM

“Old age is fifteen years older than I am.” OLIVER WENDELL HOLMES

Accordion Wizard

Alexander Sevastian, accordion

■ Tues, Aug 9

Igor & His Strings

Igor Yuzefovich, violin Lura Johnson, harpsichord

■ Thurs, Aug 11

Memories from Moscow I

Discover Door County Lighthouses!

Olga Kern, piano

■ Sat, Aug 13

Mostly Mozart

$

PMF Chorus Madison Choral Project

1.00 of f

RTY N IN YOUR PA EACH PERSOSHOW US THIS AD. WHEN YOU

EN JOY L IV E M U SI C ON SU N SE T CR UIS E S!

■ Tues, Aug 16

American Greats

Alain Trudel, conductor Spencer Myer, piano

Memories from Moscow II

Elena Urioste, violin

■ Sat, Aug 20

Festival Finale

Elena Urioste, violin Nicholas Canellakis, cello Departs Daily • Fish Creek Marina • USCG Masters Certified / 69 passengers

FishCreekScenicBoatTours.com 30 3 21.3 4 . 920.421.4442 0 L 92 1½-2 hour tours: $39 Adults • $36 Seniors

KIDS UNDER 12 FREE!

STAY CONNECTED WITH US!

AY

S

RB ISTE

TA

N T RE A O B

Tickets Start at $35

Students and Children are JUST $10!

ALL CONCERTS HELD AT 7:30 PM IN THE DOOR COMMUNITY AUDITORIUM, FISH CREEK

920-854-4060 Ticket Office Located at the Green Gables Shops, North Ephraim

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www.musicfestival.com

DOORCOUNTYPULSE.COM  AUGUST 5–12/2016 • v22i32  PENINSULA PULSE

■ Thurs, Aug 18


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5IF 4IPSFMJOF The Shoreline 5IF 4IPSFMJOF The Shoreline 3FTUBVSBOU Restaurant 3FTUBVSBOU Restaurant */ (*--4 30$,

Nonfiction 1st

IN GILLS ROCK

by Harvey Silverman

*/ (*--4 30$, IN GILLS ROCK

Open0QFO %BJMZ 'PS -VODI %JOOFS Daily For Lunch & Dinner 'VMM #BS Full Bar

920.854.2950 Open Daily For Lunch & Dinner Open 0QFO %BJMZ 'PS -VODI %JOOFS Daily4PSSZ /P 3FTFSWBUJPOT For Lunch & Dinner Sorry No Reservations Full Bar 'VMM #BS Full Bar

920.854.2950 4PSSZ /P 3FTFSWBUJPOT Sorry No Reservations

Pay Back

P.C. JUNCTION

“I’m very worried about your mother.� Oh, Jeez. My silent reaction was something between a sigh and a moan. Sadness combined with annoyance. My poor dad. Watching him slowly deteriorate was distressing and painful. Gradually at first, barely noticeable, simply a part of growing old; no, the physical frailty was obvious now and sad enough but it was his mental state that was most upsetting. He had been such a smart man, bright, determined, stalwart, dependable, mentally and emotionally strong. Now his random episodes of confusion and forgetfulness were more frequent and his fears and anxieties increased. He had become reluctant to travel, afraid of how he might feel or what might happen, preferring to remain within the presumed security of his own home. He worried about everything, his health, my mom’s health, the tree next to the house that he imagined might fall onto the roof, what time the mail would arrive. Of course I was the one he would call. The older child who was a physician and thereby invested with the knowledge and wisdom that many, at least of his generation, faithfully believed resided within the being of the medical practitioner. Their son the doctor of whom my folks were so proud. It had not been easy but they had somehow found a way to provide for the greater part of the cost of my medical education. My dad had once aspired to practice medicine; he determined that the financial burden on his parents would be too great. Instead he became a pharmacist and

HWY. A & E • PENINSULA CENTER • 839-2048

• Friday Fish Fry • Award Winning Chili • Homemade Soup pcjunctiondoorcounty.com

Mon 10-3 • Wed-Sun 10-8

Family Train Themed Restaurant 5th DOOR COUNTY NORDIC Annual FIDDLE FEST Admission $15 per person

Featuring

VIDAR SKREDE with Special Guest

BRUCE MOLSKY

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PENINSULA PULSE  AUGUST 5–12/2016 • v22i32  DOORCOUNTYPULSE.COM

Fri., August 12 at 7pm

Ticket Vouchers MUST Be Picked Up In Advance At Baileys Harbor Visitor Center 8061 Hwy. 57, Baileys Harbor Call (920) 839-2366 For Info

BjĂśrklunden Lodge 7590 Boynton Lane Baileys Harbor, WI 54202

while his folks had earned a living selling penny candies, two cent seltzers and two-for-a-nickel cigars, he did a bit better but the cost of my education had risen far faster than he and my mom had been able to save. Still, they found a way. I spent the first fifteen years of practice as an emergency physician. A type of practice that was fast paced, exciting, stressful, and rewarding. Patients were seen, diagnosed, treated, admitted to the hospital or discharged. Then it was off to the next patient. My folks were proud when I became board certified in emergency medicine, though they may not have entirely understood what that meant, they were proud when I contributed a chapter to an emergency medicine textbook, proud when I became director of an emergency department. Now, though, I was in a general practice in an office with a sign out front that displayed my name which meant that I was a physician in the way they had imagined and in the form with which they had grown up. Sometimes during visits they would detour to drive past the office simply to see my name on the sign. Patients were seen in a slower, calmer, more leisurely fashion and then seen again. Patients’ worries, concerns, fears were discussed in greater detail. I enjoyed listening and when appropriate, reassuring. So of course my dad had called me. Again. He had already called me that day, earlier in the afternoon. My mom had abdominal pain, he told me during that first call, and they had gone to see their doctor who had told them

PICK YOUR OWN

CHERRIES! Sweet, Tart & Balaton

7886 County A • Baileys Harbor, WI 54202 920-559-2933 | zettelfarms.com

2489 S. Bay Shore Dr. P.O. Box 589 Sister Bay, WI 54234

10611 Chalet Lane – Sister Bay Beautifully remodeled & landscaped home with rentable lower level Guest Suite. Close to the amenities of Sister Bay, but you’ll feel like you’re on a country estate! $499,000

County Road F – Fish Creek Great 3.8 acre homesite with an open area shielded by pines. A sunny secluded setting for your new home in a central northern Door location. $65,000

Phone 920.854.4994

Inn at Little Sister Hill – Unit 303 Fully furnished 1 BR unit with kitchen & living room – an affordable vacation getaway. Rent when you are away, and then come and play! $52,900

www.profrealtydc.com


HAL PRIZE 2016

Door County’s Best Rack of Ribs • Charbroiled Burgers • Broasted Chicken

Open Tue - Sun 11am - Close • Kitchen closes at 9pm (6pm on Sun)

71/2 miles North of Sturgeon Bay Hwy 42 & Cty Rd. I, Downtown Carlsville • 920.743.4966

Open Fri., Sat., & Sun. ★

ON THE BAY

DOOR COUNTY ★

WISCONSIN

Cocktail 4 - 10pm Food 5pm - Close

10716 N. Bay Shore Dr. * Sister Bay

DONNY’S

Gift Certificates Available

Glidden Lodge

condition sounded to be under control for the moment. About an hour later our secretary told me I had a phone call. “It’s your dad again.” “I’m very worried about your mother.” The poor guy, I thought. It had been breaking my heart to watch what was happening to him these past years, powerless despite my years of training and experience to fix it. The best I had been able to do beyond seeing that he received the best care available was to listen, to care, to love. I told him that when I finished my work in the office I would drive to their home and see for myself. In the background I heard my mother yelling at my dad. “No. I don’t want him to come.” Just like my mom, I thought. But I had to go. Not so much for my mom who would be okay for now according to the doctor who had actually seen her and laid on hands, but for my dad. He was clearly in bad shape mentally and I needed to be there to comfort him. I would drive down, check out my mom, stay for a bit and visit, and then I would drive the hour and a half back home with my dad’s mind hopefully set to rest. As I drove to their home I thought about the irony, the reversal of roles for my dad and me. Was this inevitable, would I someday have to rely on my sons to provide to me the strength and reassurance my dad now required? I arrived and walked in the door, left open. In seconds, from across the room, I saw my mom was severely ill. In a few seconds more I knew she

RESTAURANT

Extraordinary Cuisine Breathtaking Waterfront Dining

Reservations Accepted Closer than you think...

Open Daily 4pm-9pm 920.746.9460•donnysgliddenlodge.com 4670 Glidden Drive • Sturgeon Bay 54235 A Glimpse of Ireland in County Door

O’Meara’s Irish House

THE BEST OF IRELAND AND BEYOND

At the north end of Fish Creek, Hwy 42 920-868-3528 • www.omearasirish.com

Served Nightly

credit cards accepted

Open Daily at 11am and Mondays at 4pm

Lunch Tuesday - Sunday 11:30am - 2pm Cocktails & Dinner • Tuesday - Sunday, 4 PM

“The food is phenomenal and deserves a full five stars.” – Yelp review

Friday All-You-Can-Eat Fish Fry Saturday Prime Rib

TheFiresideRestaurant.com • At the Hillside Inn, Ellison Bay • (920) 854-7999 •

Music at the Alley Bar Sundays, 6pm, David Hatch & Lynn Gudmundson Thursdays, 6pm, Frank Maloney

Alley Bar Nightly, 3pm; Monday is Flip Night! Monday is Industry Night $1 Bowling & Drink Specials After 10pm

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Happy Hour 4 - 6 PM

Dining Room Open Night 5pm; Fridays 4:30pm Full Menu Plus Nightly Specials

DOORCOUNTYPULSE.COM  AUGUST 5–12/2016 • v22i32  PENINSULA PULSE

she was alright for now and sent them home. My dad thought that she was more ill than the doctor had recognized. He thought more needed to be done. He worried. I had asked to speak with my mom and our conversation was brief and her comment not unexpected. “I’m okay.” I told my dad I’d call the doctor and speak with him and ask just what he had found when he had seen her. As a physician myself I would be able to get details that might be helpful so far as reassuring my folks, particularly my dad who needed, clearly, to be reassured. I had spoken with their physician a handful of times in the past few years regarding one or the other of my folks. I thought him, based upon those conversations, to be reasonably competent. I would have done some things differently than he but medicine is that way; there is often more than one way to do things. Now I called and he told me that he had seen and examined my mom that day, she had some abdominal pain that did not appear to be severe or immediately worrisome, he had ordered some tests to be done the following week to look further. I called my dad back to tell him I had spoken with their doctor and confirmed what they had been told. If my mom were not a lot better by morning he should call the doctor and arrange for her to be re-evaluated. My dad did not seem completely happy with this advice but agreed to it. I returned to my own patients, worried more about my dad and his anxiety than about my mom whose


HAL PRIZE 201

Family Owned & Operated for 3 Generations The

Mill

Food & Spirits

Located 5 minutes north of Sturgeon Bay at the intersection of Highways 42 & 57

Fish Boil

Every Tues & Thur; 6 pm - $16.95

Family-style

Roasted Chicken

Every Wed, Thur, Sat & Sun - $14.95

All You Can Eat

Prime Rib

Every Wed & Sat - $25.95

Soups & Desserts • Steaks • Seafood • Prime Rib • Pastas • Martini Menu

Complete Bar Service

Dining Room Opens at 5:00

920.743.5044

Closed on Monday year ‘round; Tuesday Nov thru Memorial Day

www.MillSupperClub.com

Chief Oshkosh Native American Arts Open 10am - 5pm

Meet the Guest Artist Dick Mindykowski August 17-18 • 10am-5pm First 20 children each day will receive a free gift.

7631 Hwy. 42, Egg Harbor (920) 868-3240

GGrereaatt FoFoodod! ! Great View!

GGrereatat DDrinrinksks! !

On Kangaroo Kangaroo Lake On Lake

BAILEYS HARBOR, WISCONSIN

BAILEYS HARBOR, WISCONSIN

DD ININ E IN OR E IN CARORYR OCUATRRY

had a septic gall bladder. She was far too ill for me to get her to my car so I called 911. Minutes later she was on her way to the hospital. I got my dad into my car and we were off to the ER and my mom. I sat my dad down in the waiting room and after a few minutes I was speaking with the emergency physician, giving him my mom’s history, medication list, and recounting the events of the day. I then left him to do his job. A half hour later my dad and I were next to my mom, IV running, antibiotics infusing, oxygen flowing, pain medication working. My dad kissed her tenderly and she smiled at him. “Okay, go home now,” she said. I stayed the night with my dad. My mom recovered, went home and lived another decade, lovingly caring for my dad as he continued his descent into dementia. He had saved her life with his calls to me. There is no doubt that had they waited until the next day she would have died. Driving home I could not help but reflect upon how I had come to be a physician and thus contribute to my mom’s survival. My folks had somehow produced the funds necessary. They did not have the resources yet managed nevertheless. In some cosmic ledger the account had come closer to being in balance. But how? I had made the correct diagnosis; the education my folks provided made that possible. Yet it was mom’s illness and my dad’s concern that allowed me to enjoy a sense of happy and comfortable satisfaction that I had been able to use to their benefit what they had made possible – which was to my benefit as well. Cosmic ledgers can be tricky, I decided. Perhaps it was in balance all the time.

OUT Nightly Specials All You Can Eat MON.-Meatloaf TUES.-Turkey Pot Pie Walleye Wednesday WED.-Walleye Grouper THURS.-Mexican Friday FRI.-Grouper

SPECIALS

SERVING OUR FULL MENU LUNCH & DINNER OPEN DAILY 11 AM • YEAR ROUND

County E on Kangaroo Lake • Baileys Harbor • 920.839.9192

www.coyote-roadhouse.com

Harvey Silverman is a retired physician and writes primarily for his own enjoyment.

Judge's Comments

university of wisconsin

whitewater

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PENINSULA PULSE  AUGUST 5–12/2016 • v22i32  DOORCOUNTYPULSE.COM

University Alumni Relations and Development

CALLING ALL WARHAWK ALUMNI

Please join us for a fun-filled farewell to summer with Door County UW-W Alumni

When: Saturday, August 27, at 6 p.m. Where: Alum’s Home in Fish Creek

For reservations and more information: UW-W Alumni Office at 262-472-1187 or schroedk@uww.edu

“‘Pay Back’ begins with a ‘reader grabbing’ first couple of lines, then creates considerable suspense as we keep reading to find out what is happening to the author’s aging parents. It’s a story with the classical elements of a strong beginning, interesting middle, and satisfying ending. It’s a situation that many of us have faced as we face the challenges of aging parents.” — Jerry Apps


HAL PRIZE 2016

Photography Notable “AntiqTes” by David Renier I used to drive by this giant antiques shop located in Allentown, Pennsylvania every day. The parking lot was usually filled with gypsy vans covered in dirty oriental rugs so I was fortunate to get this shot.

DOORCOUNTYPULSE.COM  AUGUST 5–12/2016 • v22i32  PENINSULA PULSE

$1 off adult buffet

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Home of the scrumptious pecan & cinnamon rolls. Swedish limpa bread. Cardamom coffee cake. Only scratch bagels in D.C.

Reservations recommended

1/2-lb

Prime Rib Sunday Brunch Buffet $16.99 Tuesday International Buffet $17.99 Thursday Prime Rib Buffet $19.99 Breakfast Buffet 7:30 -11:30

Daily 7:00 920-854-2385 n 1041 Cty. Rd. ZZ, Ellison Bay

Dinner Buffet 5:00-8:00

All-you-can eat Fish Boil buffets Mon., Wed., Fri. and Sat. Storyteller at 4:30 with a second story at 6:00 every Sat. $19.99

R OW LE Y S BAY R E SOR T

rowleysbayresort.com

n

one per person


You died in the big-city hotel where I worked while in college. Yours was not a tragic death like the lady who committed suicide, but a quiet death one night while you were alone in bed. Old age came to take you away. One of a dozen or so permanent residents of the hotel, you had been a guest for a year-and-a-half. Quiet, friendly looking, with kind features and white hair, you never said a word as you walked through the lobby, always paid your rent on time, and had no visitors in your narrow, seventh-floor room. The maids who cleaned your room twice a week never complained about the way you lived – not like they did about the beehive hairdo lady who always wore the same scarf and soiled felt coat whether it was summer or winter, and who the maids said about, “You should see her room. Wine stains on the walls, bags of aging food in the closet. The smell is horrible.” No, Arvid, you were different. No one had anything bad to say about you. In fact, no one really had anything to say about you, except that you were quiet. Alas, we never got to know you, Arvid. After you died and your relatives had come to see what you had left behind in your room and to claim what they wanted, Bill, the hotel manager, told me to go up to your room and take whatever I wanted of what was left. The rest would be thrown away. It was eerie entering the room of a dead man – like the time in high school when I attended a gathering in a distant town and we stayed in the home of a widow whose husband had died five years before and finding in the dresser drawers his cuff-links, wallet, socks and underwear, all neatly preserved and untouched, as though he still lived there. Walking into your room, Arvid, it felt as though you were still there. I half expected you to walk out of the bathroom and confront me as I rummaged through your belongings. Neatly arranged on your dresser top were your hairbrush, comb, nail clippers, razor and after-shave lotion. In the closet were some old shoes and a half-dozen sets of clothes, worn but not shabby – and very conservative. You were always a conservative dresser, Arvid. Other than that your belongings consisted of what was in two cardboard boxes on the bed. Your relatives must have been disappointed at what you left behind. It looked like they hadn’t taken anything with them. Bill said they were in your room for only a few minutes. The boxes told me a little about you, Arvid. There were some notebooks you had compiled as a power plant engineer years ago. Nothing much recorded in

OPEN

them except readings and occasional, brief comments about minor problems encountered and solved. The pages were yellow, some of them water stained. They brought to life a part of your past we had known nothing about. Along with the notebooks were a few technical books on steam boilers and combustion systems, all remnants of a long-ago career. Testimonies to an engineer who provided heat or electricity to homes and businesses from the unsung depths of a rumbling, clanking boiler room buried deep in the bowels of a building, unnoticed and unrealized by all but a few. There wasn’t much else in those boxes, Arvid. But there was one thing I pondered over, and it was the only thing I took with me when I left that night. It was a book. It rests on my library shelf today. A work of literature – The Complete Short Stories of Guy de Maupassant. It is an old edition, published in 1903 and bound in thin, soft leather. It was the only non-technical book in your room. You didn’t even have any magazines or newspapers. What were you doing with a volume of Maupassant? Was it a gift from a friend or lover long ago? I doubt that you ever married, there was no trace of marriage in what you left behind – there were no photographs or rings. What significance did that curious book hold for you? I looked through its pages carefully, there are no pencil marks anywhere, no loose pieces of paper, and it looked like it had never been read. Well, anyway, Arvid, I took it with me. Partly because I like Maupassant and partly because several years before my great aunt Mary, after I had admired it at her home, gave me a companion volume of Mark Twain short stories by the same publisher and in the same binding. Arvid, part of you came home with me from the hotel that night, tucked neatly and safely under my arm as I walked through freshly fallen snow. When I got to my apartment, I penciled your name inside the front cover of the book so I wouldn’t forget who you were and because someday I thought I might write about you, and now I am. The maids went through the rest of your belongings, Arvid, after I was done. What they didn’t want the dumpster behind the hotel accepted without comment or complaint. Well, Arvid, I don’t know what else to say. We knew each other only briefly, by face and name only, and then we parted. I have a piece of your life on my bookshelf. What more needs to be said other than I hope you find death to be as peaceful as you seemed to find life. Thank you, quiet spirit, Arvid. It was nice having our paths cross ever so briefly.

Nonfiction 2nd by John Koski

John Koski has an M.A. in print communications and worked as a magazine and newspaper editor for 30plus years in Illinois and Wisconsin. He currently works in high school special education where he is heavily involved in vocational training both within the school and at local work sites.

Judge's Comments “The strength of this story is its simplicity, and its insight into a quiet, unassuming man that we learn about from what he has left behind in the hotel room where he lived for the past year-and-a-half. The author includes just enough detail to keep us reading, but not so much as to interfere with the emotional impact of the story.” — Jerry Apps

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To Arvid

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HAL PRIZE 2016

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Crash Standing in front of our lockers on the first day of Gross Anatomy lab, we tried to look confident. But you could tell by our body language and lack of eye contact with each other that there was apprehension. We busied ourselves with changing into scrubs and futzing with our dissecting supplies, trying to camouflage our uneasiness. The thinned texture of the blue scrubs we were issued hinted at the countless times they had been laundered yet they still had that subtle smell of formaldehyde. And judging by the scented cloud that hung over the dental students, who had started lab a couple of weeks before us, we would smell like that for the rest of the year. It was the first week of medical school and our class was large, but already some personalities had begun to distinguish themselves. One of the most prominent was a super-sized, former college linebacker named Joe. Joe didn’t make it into the NFL so he went to medical school instead. It was his second choice. He was actually a pretty nice guy – vocal and funny – but that day he was revealing a pesky side by teasing us about our obvious discomfort surrounding our first gross anatomy lab, probably to detract from his own. He was largely ignored but hardly unnoticed as his bravado continued, and although Joe was a likable guy, you could tell by whispered comments and sideward glances that our class was collectively just a little annoyed. We were momentarily spared by a creaking sound from the lab door, and with some relief we turned our attention to a pale teaching assistant with stringy brown hair and tiny wirerimmed glasses balanced unevenly on his nose. After peeking through, he stepped into the hall where we are all waiting. A quick waft of the pungent preservative followed him. He tucked his hands behind his back, leaned against the door handle and began to intone a summary of the general protocol, finishing with a brief description of what we would be dissecting that day. Looking around me I caught visible reactions of uncertainty out of the corner of my eye and tried to hide my own. There was a concentrated aroma of formaldehyde emanating from this guy, who looked like he could stand a little more exposure to daylight, and it smelled terrible. There were squints and blinks as our eyes watered from the stinging vapors. The thick sense of foreboding was palpable. Addressing the group of onehundred-plus medical students, all dressed in blue, he told us to file into the anatomy lab and organize ourselves, four to a table. Walking in through the double doors we saw row upon row of cadavers laid out on metal tables covered in white sheets. We chattered nervously about our new surroundings in muted whispers – all of us, except Joe. As we all filed in, his voice echoed throughout the cement anatomy bay, but the escalating pitch to his laughter began to hint at his own


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time this had happened, the professor kneeled down beside Joe and as he slowly began to rouse, queried gently, “Son, are you alright?” Joe mumbled a foggy, “Uh huh,” and was carted off to the emergency room where, for caution’s sake, he was evaluated for a potential closed-head injury. When he rejoined us later that day he had to have anticipated the bit of ribbing he might receive from his classmates, and he did get a little. But he took it on the chin with a sheepish smile and laughed out loud when we dubbed him “Crash.” That’s what we called him for the next four years – long after the memory of how he even got the nickname in the first place had faded. Sure, he took some teasing but he was also met with a decent dose of sympathy, because we all understood that our first exposure to the Gross Anatomy lab could easily have landed any one of us on the floor. But that, I would come to learn, is how it is with med students. If one person falls, in a way we all go down, because whatever made one ofus to falter is probably what we are all feeling at any given time. The rites of passage are tough, frequently odd and you often find yourself emotionally unprepared no matter how many ways you work it out in your head before taking it on. It’s like a club of unwitting initiates into a secret world where you disassemble a body then spend the next four years learning how to put it back together again, trying to understand what made it fall apart in the first place and how to do your best to keep it from happening again. In retrospect, I think we cut Joe some slack for giving us a hard time because, in a strange way, what happened to him gave us permission to react to all the things we would encounter in the ensuing years – death, dismemberment, failure – with whatever emotions showed up and that, at least in our class, there was an unspoken understanding that it was acceptable and we were supported. The last I heard, Crash was working in Sports Medicine somewhere in Georgia – a fitting career for a former linebacker. But, of all the potential job choices he considered upon graduation, I’ll bet pathology wasn’t one of them.

DOORCOUNTYPULSE.COM  AUGUST 5–12/2016 • v22i32  PENINSULA PULSE

underlying nervousness. Nonetheless, it was aggravating. Catching the eye of another med student, who puffed out his cheeks with an exhaled sigh and rolled his eyes, I returned the gesture with a tight-lipped smile and a headshake. “Enough already,” we silently agreed. After some shuffling to organize ourselves, we lined up around our tables –two on each side – and quietly awaited our instructor. While we were waiting, one brave soul in my group gently peeled back the sheet and we all peered somberly at the face of our cadaver. There lay a sizable, oliveskinned male with a Mediterranean, hooked nose with a broad chin. Straight away we affectionately dubbed him Guido. Somehow naming him made it personal, and it seemed to be understood among the four of us in my group that making it personal would honor the man who wanted to donate his body to science so that we might know what ‘n-the-hell we were doing. Thanks, Guido. The instructor eventually came in and began a lecture on the fine and delicate art of dissection, after which we were told to remove the sheets from our cadavers. The landscape of preserved bodies on metal tables lined up in neat rows in the vast bare room was surreal. I think we all felt vulnerable, because the quietness thickened as the professor’s voice took on a very respectful, reverent tone. After a lengthy pause, no doubt giving us time to process what we were seeing, he began to speak again. He didn’t get far, though, before he was interrupted by a loud, dull thump of a noise. Looking around to see where the sound had come from, it was quickly evident that Joe was down. He had passed out cold – lying limp and splayed out on the polished, grey cement floor. Despite the fact that Joe fainted, and quite possibly had a concussion from his head meeting the floor, the irony of him losing it at first sight of the cadaver did not escape us. The student with the most to say about how gross anatomy was no big deal was the one who fell first. Whether it was from the shock of what had just happened or the realization that it could as easily have been anyone of us sprawled out in front of our whole class, no one said a word. Moving calmly to his side, in a way that suggested this was not the first

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HAL PRIZE 201

Nonfiction Honorable

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A Moving Matinee

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Judge's Comments

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HAL PRIZE 2016

been a tiara within 20 yards, I have no doubt she would have fought to the death. The mother came next: a short woman, somewhat tired, with hair in a lose wave kind of like Karen Carpenter toward the end of her life. But, the real showcase was Junior. Junior was what has been labeled these days as a “tween”–probably about 12 or 13, right at that age where some sort of wiring in a teenage boy’s brain misfires and they turn into obnoxious, foul mouthed brats. Granted this is not the case for all middle school aged boys, but Junior– Lord, did I have pity for his parents and all his teachers. Passing in front of me, Junior’s pants hung so his SpongeBob boxer shorts belched out of the top waistband, his too large baseball cap was tilted to the side, and he was on his cell phone. And he was loud. “Yeah, I’m at this lame movie my sister wants to see.” “No, man, couldn’t stay home. Grounded.” “Yeah, sucks.” He stepped on my foot as he crawled down the row, and his head snapped to glare down at me from his self-righteous pedestal. It was my lucky day. Junior sat next to me, with only one seat separating the two of us. He stayed on his phone, mostly complaining about how unfair his mother was and how he couldn’t wait to be with his oh-so-much cooler father on the weekend. His language crude and demanding, he ordered his mother to get him popcorn–which she did. I figured she was choosing her battles, and since she had won the battle about him taking off his cap when he sat down (which resulted in a resplendent display of his skills with using four-letter words), this one wasn’t worth her time. Thankfully, the lights dimmed and Buzz and Woody started to play out their heart-breaking narrative at the nursery from Hell. It really was a beautiful movie. The toys were safe and sound, Andy decided to take them over to the little girl’s house, and he gave the back story for each toy--the back story we all knew from the previous two movies. Not going to lie, I teared up a little at the end. And right before Andy was saying that last goodbye before heading off to college, I heard a sound as if someone were trying to softly crinkle paper or blowing bubbles slowly in a glass of chocolate milk. The animated car on the screen started to drive off into the distance, and I heard the sound again. Turning my head, there was Junior–and he was crying. His attempt to discreetly stop his runny nose with no one noticing was a complete failure. With moisture on his face, reflected from the screen, I saw that his mother was also looking at him. Her eyes had that glassy look, reflecting in them a kid she once knew but thought she had lost, and I’m fairly certain I saw a couple tears, too; but, those tears weren’t intended for the movie.


HAL PRIZE 2016

Founder’s Square!

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Cajun Strangers Trio

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HAL PRIZE 2016

Nonfiction Honorable

by Laurin Bellg

Afraid Of Snakes conversation ended with a “Thanks, but no thanks”. I saw Doug on occasion and each time I did would ask him how he was doing and take the opportunity to express my concern about his heart and the risk for a bad cardiac event that might claim his life. Always the cheerful fellow, he maintained that he was fine and didn’t feel he needed to explore the issue any further. I did learn, however, that he was looking into other options such as nutrition and chelation therapy, an alternative medicine approach to treating calcified coronary arteries. For a physician trained in western medicine, I’m actually fairly open-minded about alternative treatment, but when it comes to a blocked coronary artery I, along with my cardiology colleagues, still think it needs a stent – a metal spring that opens an obstructed vessel to let life-giving blood flow through to the heart muscle. One day a few months later I came home from work and my husband met me at the door to tell me Doug had died suddenly of a massive heart attack. I was devastated. Moreover, I felt like I had failed somehow in convincing him that, despite what his friend had experienced, he was far safer having the procedure than not. But his fear spoke louder than my feeble attempts to address those fears. As much as I am afraid of snakes, Doug was afraid of most things medical and that fear had cost him his life. Staring at a pile of pine needles he had convinced himself it was a snake and couldn’t see it any other way. I see a lot of fear from patients around issues of medical care and I’m sure other physicians would agree that it takes a lot of patience and skill to navigate those fears in order to bring about the best outcome for the patient. But I understand fear better now and in exploring my own sometimes irrational and unfounded fears, I’ve become better able to speak that language with patients – to take them by the hand and slowly lead them to the pile of pine needles, stir them gently with a stick and show them, “See, it’s not a snake after all. Just pine needles.”

Laurin Bellg is a wife, mother and physician who cannot resist the inner drive to see the world around her – both in and out of the hospital – through the rich lens of words.

Judge's Comments “This is a powerful story with a sad ending—and an important message. A better place to begin the story would have been with the paragraph, ‘I’ve never feared anything medical…’ and leave out the snake references. Keep the focus on Doug.” — Jerry Apps

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lightheadedness in the same sentence catches your attention. Especially when the person delivering those words has high cholesterol, hypertension and is on the heavier side. “Doug, I think you need a cardiac stress test”, I said. I knew Doug outside of my work and I’d never seen him nervous until now. His speech became a little pressured and he seemed agitated. “I can’t do a stress test,” he replied. I tried several approaches to engineer his consent to the procedure and continued to meet resistance. I asked him to help me understand why he did not want to have this done and he told me an acquaintance of his received an injection during a stress test once and had a very bad reaction. Doug was physically active and I felt he could easily do a treadmill test and forgo an injection to stress his heart. It took a lot of reassurance but I finally convinced him that the particular study he would undergo would be completely safe and would involve no injections. Reluctantly he agreed. When I received the results of Doug’s stress test it revealed a rather worrisome focal abnormality on the EKG that most assuredly indicated a blocked artery on the back side of his heart. Furthermore, during the test it was reported that he experienced that same heartburn and sweating that had been intensifying over the past few months. I called him right away with the results and informed him that he needed to have a cardiac catheterization as soon as possible. He flatly refused it. It turns out that a friend of his had undergone the same procedure and suffered a heart rhythm problem during the procedure and had nearly died. He expressed intense fear around anything invasive – especially a procedure that he perceived might put his life at risk. I had called Doug on my cell phone as I was leaving the office and sat in my parked car for nearly an hour talking to him about how serious this was and that if he didn’t have the heart catheterization he might die from a heart attack. The long back and forth

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I’ve always felt a little unsettled by the caduceus – a winged staff with two snakes intertwined in an ascending double helix that has come to symbolize medicine. Maybe it’s because I grew up in rural Alabama where, on most days, I had to watch my step. I know there is noble symbolism wrapped up in this coiling icon, but every time I look at it I can’t help but experience a little chill. Coexisting with assorted serpents for much of my youth, I certainly did not feel neutral about them. In fact, I developed a strong fear, swearing that I would move to a colder climate as soon as I could drive, and I did. When you have a deep fear that you nurture and cultivate, you have a tendency to filter everything through that fear. “Is that a pile of pine needles”, you ask yourself, “or a rattlesnake?” You stare at it until whatever matrix your brain has entrained upon the debris fades away, and you can see it for what it is – a pile of pine needles. I’ve personally never feared anything medical. Rather, I’ve always had an unquestioned trust that if I was broken, modern medicine could somehow fix me. So, when I became a doctor, I was not only surprised by but also struggled to relate to the paralyzing fear of medicine that I encountered in some patients. That was never so clear to me as it was with Doug. Doug was a bigger-than-life car salesman who was easily recognized by his fedora and bow tie. He had an enthusiastic air about him and was cheerful to the point that it was sometimes difficult to tell what he was really feeling underneath his easygoing manner. Doug came to me for a routine physical exam and in the course of the interview he complained about a nagging “heartburn” that had worsened over the last several months. In fact, he reported that lately when it occurred, he also had intense sweating and sometimes felt like he was going to pass out. He wrote it off to the stress of a busy life as an auctioneer. Now for a physician, hearing the words heartburn, heavy sweating and


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“Love - and I mean true love, real love - can cripple us. It can make us miserable, and even dangerous to those we love. It can make us jealous, clingy, overprotective, guilt-ridden, and even vengeful. But appreciation is pure. It’s the kind of love that can let us step away, and even watch a loved one suffer, when suffering is what they need.” - Page 126 of What Happy People Know: How the New Science of Happiness Can Change Your Life for the Better by Dan Baker, Ph.D. He sat on the toilet, sleeping, pants around his ankles in our hall bathroom. The kids were sleeping soundly. I was looking for him to tell him I was going to bed and he had fallen asleep on the toilet. I stood still, not knowing what to do exactly. How had it come to this? I could’ve felt compassion at his alcohol dependence. But, he had a good life compared to many, so no, there was not much compassion. Was it more a genetic thing, something that ran in the family that I simply had to accept? His father only drank soft drinks. Was it an escape from past haunts? He openly talked about difficult teen years and his escape to the Florida Keys. He admitted being a difficult teenager to some extent, not overly prone to follow household rules, and when his father had to choose between his son and a new wife, the wife had won. He harbored no grudge over this; he just moved out on his own to an unheated friend’s cabin by a lake. Observing his humiliating posture, I wondered, what was I to do? If I shook him awake, he surely would be embarrassed. Would that be good or bad? Certainly, conversation at this point was useless. There would be mumbling at most. I suppose I should have, could have felt some sympathy for his sorry self. I could have chosen to try and shake him awake and tell him lovingly to come to bed. But, disgust had developed over time and progressed beyond pity, and so I left him there, knowing he’d wake up eventually, a ring around his butt, and make his way to bed. Somewhere around our ninth year of marriage, it became abundantly clear Thomas had a drinking problem. He would begin drinking at 11 a.m. and go through nearly a case of beer, 24 cans of beer, before the night was out. Day after day, night after night. Sometimes, I would watch and marvel: it apparently was necessary to kill the case even if that meant drinking his last two beers right before brushing his teeth before bed.

In addition to the expense of the bad habit, there was the toll it took on the boys and I. I got tired of repeating everything he and I discussed after 5 p.m. because the next morning he could not recall already having talked about these things. I have little patience for wasted breath and effort, and the endless repetition of previous evening conversations increasingly became a burden. It was worthless to talk to my spouse after dinner because it served no purpose and bore no reward. How lonely the situation had become. If my husband had to pick up our children from any place after 5 p.m., I was endangering them as back seat passengers in a drunk driver’s truck. And yet, I had enough work assignments that I was not able to be the single responsible parent. Our professional and financial situation warranted a functional two-parent household; my spouse simply had to be able to share kid duties. Thomas was never an angry drunk and seemed to weather alcohol in his system more or less well, but it appeared he was not all that happy about his drinking because he tried to hide it. He’d walk outside by his truck or tuck away in a corner of his art studio, away from interested eyes, to down the 12-ounce beer in about three seconds. It was never about the taste of beer; it was always about the buzz. He would stash beer cans behind various furniture in his art studio and under his truck’s seats, and before the weekly recycling pickup occurred, I’d go around un-stashing them and putting the cans in the bin. I even found them hidden away in bathroom cabinets. Who did he think was removing the endless empty can supply? Did he even remember putting them in these hiding spots? Tim swigged Listerine throughout the day to assist in the fooling, or trying to. Occasionally, I’d peer out the living room windows and watch him as he tried to conceal his drinking. Our oldest son, still so young, picked up on my creeping and the reasons for it, and from time to time, he’d comment about the drinking or beer cans he found in Dad’s truck or the bathroom. “Dad’s drinking,” he’d say, and it was not so much tattle-telling as sensing my concern and confiding in me. What a burden for a seven-yearold. There was not a lot I could say in reply. Tim was an adult who had to be responsible for his actions, but how exactly could I convey that truth to my beautiful son. “I know,” I’d say quietly. “It’s not good.” Occasionally, my mom or my sister would call and I’d comment that I

didn’t know how much more I could take. In addition to the loneliness from having a spouse I couldn’t talk to, night after night, it was hard physically and emotionally to be solely responsible for our two young kids’ homework oversight, school lunch making, bath taking and simply playing and tucking in bed. I needed a spouse I could count on, and he was not present. I never saw myself leaving him specifically. I figured at some point the situation would reach a zenith. There’d be an accident or a phone call from the sheriff or hospital. Eventually, if the situation got worse, I would probably choose to leave with the kids and tell him to let us know when he had gotten himself together. My mom suggested I attend the AA support group for spouses but I couldn’t see how I was going to fit in yet another responsibility, that is, a meeting outside the home, and leave the kids home alone with my useless husband. One time a friend asked me if there had been an ultimatum. And, I could sense the hackles rising up in this lifelong bachelor. I told him no. An ultimatum implies potentially false hopes and deadlines. I have learned there is a time when someone simply knows the right path. Things become clear. In my case, it would have been a time when enough was enough. I simply would’ve been done with the lonely, frustratingly difficult nights. It would have had to reach a desperate point where the kids would have been better off without their father and I better off without a spouse. It hasn’t reached that nadir. Around 2009, with our tenth year of marriage around the bend, it was time to move the abstinence and recovery process along. My father’s cousin, who had been to Alcoholics Anonymous, who had gone through the 12-step program, who had stopped drinking and who now led AA groups in Door County, Wis., and his wife, who also had had to stop drinking, sat down one evening with Thomas and I and my parents and we had a discussion about drinking in general and how it related to his predicament. The AA leaders did most of the talking and Tim added a comment here or there, admitting he had a problem and saying he wanted to do something about it. They invited him to attend an AA meeting in Wisconsin with them, but he said he’d think about it and it didn’t happen. It wasn’t long after that, though, that Thomas attended his first AA meeting with a friend in the Florida Keys. He came home and said it


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them from Thomas’s anger and yet, it was hard to judge when it would flare because it was so nonsensical. After a while, still without beer, Tim’s normal personality returned and we resumed happier family relations. He didn’t yell at the kids and he could drive them places without me worrying about their lives being in danger. I didn’t intrude on his privacy about the meetings but I did ask at some point about when he had begun to drink in the morning. I always knew he liked Busch beers and a six-pack’s worth, but this case-a-day seemed to me altogether different. He replied it was about six years into our marriage and it started slowly… One day, his 5 o’clock beer started early, and soon earlier still, until 11 a.m. became the new start time. I had wanted reassurance that I had not missed the signs when we were dating, and he confirmed that in the first several years that we were married he did not drink until afternoon. The best culmination of being on the other side, out of the darkness of alcoholism, occurred at a Christmas

party in about 2009. I was chatting with a couple of ladies with whom I was acquainted from membership at a local gym. Thomas approached and he knew them, too, to my surprise. Soon, we had our photograph taken together with the party’s hostess. I noticed none of the five was drinking at this holiday party except for me. We were a happy friendly five-some, juxtaposed by everyday small-town life. On the way home, Thomas confessed he knew them through AA and we both grinned. We had moved beyond a crappy life and it was going to be a great new year ahead. Here we are, seven years later, and Thomas began his day at 7:30 a.m. with a beer beside his truck. My older son -- when he sees this -- will yell, “Stop drinking,” but he is at high school, so I yell, “Stop drinking” for him, as I made coffee. Thomas ignores me, ever the contented drunk. Resignation has set in and again I suspect either the sheriff or the hospital will end our family’s burden… ‘til death do us part, after all. There is little chance of a happy ending; just a slow march toward the unknown when life is in the crapper.

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Jill Zima Borski is a lifelong writer, having earned prizes in the “The Sparky Fire Department” contest in third grade and travel opportunities with the Cutty Sark Tall Ships. She makes her living as a journalist and has written an adventure-filled memoir, Know that I have Lived.

Judge's Comments

— Jerry Apps

Home Goods Clothing • Grocery • Pharmacy • •

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“A sad beginning, a hopeful middle, and a sad ending pretty much sum up this all-too-common story that too many families face these days. Leave out the quotation at the beginning, include more dialogue so we can hear people speaking, add a little more of the emotion from the spouse’s perspective, and this story will be a great one.”

DOORCOUNTYPULSE.COM  AUGUST 5–12/2016 • v22i32  PENINSULA PULSE

wasn’t for him, he didn’t appreciate the religious factor, and for a while he walked the line between quitting and not. Then he attended another meeting with his friend, and then another. In his inimitable way, Thomas refused to do the program in the manner it traditionally worked; he didn’t want a mentor who called him every day, for example. That made me smile. We both hate the phone -- such an intrusive, necessary piece of machinery. Many times I have handed Thomas the phone while he had a paintbrush full of wet paint ready to continue some masterpiece, and the caller wanted to discuss tides or ask if fish are biting or reminisce about old times. So, Thomas began doing AA his way, and he obviously got something from the weekly meetings, because he continued to go to them. And, once he committed to not drinking, he never looked back, But oh, he was a cranky old fart without beer. Quick to anger, I didn’t know which was worse: a happy, drunk Thomas or a mean one who yelled too loudly at the kids for a minor transgression or for no real reason at all. I felt I needed to protect


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Vast shore frontage on an inlet just south of Gordon Lodge. Forestville built home has wonderful woodwork & Brazilian cherrywood flooring. Large attached 2-car garage. On a private gated lane. $759,900. www.PPDC.info/4sale/WildLane/

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Townhouse with 2 bedrooms & full bathroom upstairs. Main level: full kitchen, half bathroom, & living room w/fieldstone fireplace. Swimming pool. Small community: just 19 units. REDUCED: $88,900. www.PPDC.info/4sale/Hilltop/

Top floor has higher ceilings, granite, ceramic tile, & fieldstone fireplace. Elevator. Indoor pool & tennis. Walk to village activities; adjoins expanded waterfront park. Optional rental program. REDUCED! $349,900. www.YachtClubSisterBay.info

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CELEBRATING 20 YEARS • 1996–201

AUGUST 5–12/2016 • v22i32

NEWS EDITOR IN CHIEF  Madeline Harrison EDITOR  Jim Lundstrom ASSISTANT EDITOR  Alissa Ehmke ART, LIT & ENTERTAINMENT EDITOR  Alyssa Skiba ART, LIT & ENTERTAINMENT INTERN  Andrea Nelson ASSISTANT NEWS EDITOR  Jackson Parr EVENTS CALENDAR MANAGER  Angela Sherman PRODUCTION MANAGER  David Eliot CREATIVE DIRECTOR  Ryan Miller PHOTOGRAPHY DIRECTOR  Len Villano LAYOUT ASSISTANT  Sharon Anderson ARTISTIC CONSULTANT  Renee Puccini SALES MANAGERS  Jess Farley, Steve Grutzmacher,

BULLETIN WHAT HAPPENED

Madeline Harrison

CONTRIBUTING EDITORS  Joe Heller, Sally Salopek DISTRIBUTION MANAGER  Angela Sherman COURIER  The Paper Boy, LLC DISTRIBUTION EXPERTS  Michael Brooks, Steve Glabe, Michael

Hyde, Matthew Smith, Drew Witteborg PUBLISHER  David Eliot BUSINESS MANAGER  Madeline Harrison OFFICE MANAGER  Ben Pothast MARKETING & OFFICE ASSISTANT  Abigail Thornton CHIEF TECHNOLOGY OFFICER  Nate Bell

• Republican Presidential nominee Donald Trump and his running mate, Gov. Mike Pence of Indiana, will hold a rally at 7 pm on Aug. 5 at the KI Convention Center in Green Bay. Tickets are available at donaldjtrump.com.

OWNERS  Madeline Harrison & David Eliot

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cover Dawn Craig and Prudence Birringer from the Jacksonport Womens Club at Cherry Festival in Jacksonport. Photo by Len Villano.

Fri/5 Mostly sunny 79/61 5:39a/8:09p   Sat/6 Mostly sunny 77/58 5:39a/8:07p   Sun/7 Sunny 75/60 5:41a/8:06p Mon/8 Sunny 76/65 5:42a/8:05p   Tue/9 Thunderstorms 77/66 5:43a/8:03p   Wed/10 Partly sunny 81/66 5:44a/8:02p   Thu/11 Thunderstorms 78/66 5:44a/8:02p   Fri/12 Scattered thunderstorms 75/62 5:45a/8:00p

MUNICIPALITIES

COUNTY

COUNTY OF DOOR co.door.wi.gov 920.746.2200 421 Nebraska St. Sturgeon Bay, WI 54235 County Clerk: Jill Lau jlau@co.door.wi.us

• Wildwood Road Farm, the largest grower in northern Door, is holding an open house on Monday, Aug. 8, from 10 am to 2 pm. The family owned and operated farm will have produce for sale. The farm is located at 1693 Wildwood Road, Sister Bay. Rain date for the open house is Tuesday, Aug. 9. • Join food business entrepreneurs and food business experts at this year’s Edible Startup Summit in Madison. This three-day boot camp kicks off on Wednesday, Aug. 24, with sessions covering current and upcoming trends in food; creating a uniquely defensible brand; telling your story through branding; the best way to demo your product; and networking. Resource people will be available during lunch and the social hour reception, so be sure not to miss the first day. For entrepreneurs who are ready to go more in-depth, days two and three will include workshop sessions on: pitching your product; business concept planning; marketing (physical and digital); food safety (licenses, labels & regulations); getting your product on the shelf; working with distributors; and financing. There will be opportunity to sign up for one-onone consultations with business experts during days two and three. On Friday, August 26, the Summit concludes with a tour of several area food business incubators. The registration fee for the first day of The Edible Startup Summit is $75 (early bird rate of $50 ends Aug. 8). Register for all three days for $150. Registration closes on Aug. 19, 2016. Partial scholarships are available for a limited number of participants. To request a scholarship, fill in the scholarship request form at: goo.gl/ forms/RxZwkj6NPcZedCB93 or contact Sharon Lezberg: lezberg.sharon@ countyofdane.com. For more details, visit ediblestartup.com. • Sealed bids will be received by the Town Clerk for the Town of Jacksonport at the Jacksonport Town Hall, 3365 County V, Sturgeon Bay, WI, until noon Sept. 26, 2016 for the sale of the single family three-bedroom home commonly referred to as the “Koulias House.” The home is located at 6282 Hwy. 57 in the Town of Jacksonport and must be moved off the property no later than Dec. 31, 2016. All bids received will be publicly opened at a properly noticed meeting of the town board. Each bid must contain the full name or names of the party or parties making the bid. For a complete list of Instructions to Bidders or to view the home contact Town Clerk Elissa Taylor at 920.823.8136.

NEWS (2) COMMUNITY (5) SPORTS (6) ART & LITERATURE (7) ENTERTAINMENT (8) HAPPENINGS (8) PERSPECTIVES (14) BUSINESS (16) CLASSIFIEDS (17)

DOOR

PENINSULA PULSE  AUGUST 5–12/2016 • v22i32  DOORCOUNTYPULSE.COM

next week Camp Meenahga’s 100th Birthday

Source: National Weather Service, for Baileys Harbor, WI

• Paul Loppnow, co-chair of HELP of Door County’s board of directors announced that the board has, reluctantly, accepted Executive Director Ursula Bunnell Timreck’s resignation. Her extensive expertise in all matters related to domestic abuse issues, fierce passion for HELP’s clients and unwavering professionalism will be sorely missed. Anni Lampert has been named interim director.

COMING UP

CHECK IT. READ IT. USE IT. IN PRINT & ONLINE DOORCOUNTYPULSE.COM

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It is a capital mistake to theorize before one has data. Insensibly one begins to twist facts to suit theories, instead of theories to suit facts.”

• “How to propagate native plants” is a garden demonstration offered by the Door County Chapter of Wild Ones in the propagation facility and gardens of Door Landscape and Nursery. The public invited. The event takes place at 9:30 am on Saturday, Aug. 13, at 6329 Hwy. 42, one mile north of Carlsville.

TOWN OF BAILEYS HARBOR townofbaileysharbor.com 920.839.9509 2392 County F Baileys Harbor, WI, 54202 Clerk: Doug Smith tbaileysharbor@dcwis.com

TOWN OF BRUSSELS 920.825.7618 Mailing: 8674 Cty H, Sturgeon Bay, WI 54235 Meetings: Community Center, 1366 Junction Rd, Brussels Clerk: JoAnn Neinas

ARTHUR CONAN DOYLE

Kewaunee Harbor Project Kicked Off Kewaunee Mayor Sandi Christman presided at the dedication of the Dockwall and Harbor Improvements Project for Kewaunee Harbor on Friday, July 29. According to Wisconsin Assemblyman Joel Kitchens, there is no other place in the state, in this budget cycle, with a project that’s comparable. He stated that it represents a revitalization of the entire area. It will stimulate tourism and help attract new businesses. Mayor Christman compared it to “winning the lottery.” Governor Scott Walker was on hand to participate, and referred to this as a great project for the state and for the region. “We’re happy to join the city of Kewaunee, the Kewaunee County Economic Development Corporation, local officials, and the Foth team in making the Kewaunee Harbor Restoration Project a reality,” Walker said. “The improvements to this harbor will undoubtedly attract more tourists to the area and spur economic development for decades to come.” The project rebuilds 800 feet of the existing wall and will additionally provide improvements to the local park, the boardwalk, and exterior restoration of the lighthouse. Originally built in 1881, the Kewaunee Harbor is made up of approximately 6,500 feet of breakwater and piers and 5,500 feet of maintained channel. The city of Kewaunee purchased land several years ago with the goal of restoring the harbor. Local government officials, businesses, and residents worked diligently to secure funding for the revitalization project for the commercial harbor. Wisconsin Act 55 provided a $4.22 million Harbor Assistance Program grant as part of the 2015-17 biennial budget. The city of Kewaunee plans to redevelop the property surrounding the harbor and has received interest from developers for hotel, retail, and business uses. The city also intends to add a boardwalk, green space, lighting, benches, public easements, extended parking and access to existing and new retail spaces.

MUNICIPAL NEWS DOOR COUNTY City of Sturgeon Bay: Finance/ Purchasing & Building Committee meets at 4 pm on Aug. 9. The Community Protection & Services Committee meets at 4:30 pm on Aug. 11. County of Door: The Highway Committee meets at 8:30 am on Aug. 8. The EMS Committee meets at noon on Aug. 8. The Property committee meets at 2 pm on Aug. 8. The Human Services board meets at 8:30 am on Aug. 9. The Legislative Committee meets at 2 pm on Aug. 9. The Board of Adjustment meets at 6:30 pm on Aug. 9. The Ag & Extension Committee meets at 8:30 am on Aug. 10. The Airport & Parks Committee meets at 8:30 am on Aug. 10. The IS Committee meets at 2 pm on Aug. 11. Town of Brussels: The town board meets at 7 pm on Aug. 10. Town of Clay Banks: The town board meets at 6 pm on Aug. 11. Town of Egg Harbor: The Plan Commission meets at 6 pm on Aug. 8. Town of Gardner: The town board meets at 6:30 pm on Aug. 10. Town of Jacksonport: The Plan Commission meets at 8 am on Aug. 8. Jacksonport is seeking a town resident to fill a five-year volunteer position on the five-member Fire Advisory Committee. Per the Committee Bylaws and Rules, the Fire Advisory Committee exercises oversight of the Fire Department and the provision of emergency services provided to the town, prepares an annual report on the activities and operations of the fire department along with recommendations for TOWN OF CLAY BANKS 920.746.9617 597 Lower LaSalle Rd. Algoma, WI 54201 Clerk: Jessica Bongle sjbongle@dcwis.com

future improvements, and prepares an annual budget for submission to the town board. If interested, please submit an application consisting of a one-page letter of interest stating why you would like to serve and a second page stating your qualifications, curriculum vitae, or experience relative to this position to Town Chairman Randy Halstead at Town of Jacksonport, 3365 County V, Sturgeon Bay, WI 54235. Your application shall be in the office of the town clerk no later than Monday, Aug. 29, 2016. Town of Liberty Grove: The Plan Commission meets at 7 pm on Aug. 10. Village of Egg Harbor: The village board meets at 6 pm on Aug. 8.

KEWAUNEE COUNTY City of Algoma: The Tourism/ Promotion Committee meets at 1:30 pm on Aug. 9. City of Kewaunee: The Finance Committee meets at 6 pm on Aug. 8, followed by the Common Council at 7 pm. County of Kewaunee: The Health, Vets & CS Committee meets at noon on Aug. 8. The Land & Water Committee meets at 9 am on Aug. 9. The Law/EM Committee meets at 9 am on Aug. 9. The Human Services Committee meets at 8:30 am on Aug. 10. The Finance Committee meets at 4:30 pm on Aug. 10. The Personnel Committee meets at noon on Aug. 11. Village of Casco: The village board meets at 7 pm on Aug. 9. Village of Luxemburg: The village board meets at 7 pm on Aug. 9.

TOWN OF EGG HARBOR townofeggharbor.org 920.743.6141 5242 County I Sturgeon Bay, WI 54235 Clerk: Pam Krauel towneggharbor@newwis.com

VILLAGE OF EGG HARBOR villageofeggharbor.org 920.868.3334 7860 Hwy 42 Egg Harbor, WI 54209 Clerk: Lynn Ohnesorge lohnesorge@ villageofeggharbor.org


Bill Schuster retires after 37 years of protecting our water by JACKSON PARR jackson@ppulse.com

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TOWN OF FORESTVILLE forestvilletown.com 920.856.6584 7705 County H Sturgeon Bay, WI 54235 Clerk: Ruth Kerscher rkerscher@centurytel.net

—­­ Bill Schuster

Photo by Len Villano

recognized his work and gave the first groundwater priority watershed in the state of Wisconsin to Door County. As soon as that happened, he closed his textbooks and went back to work. “I never finished and got my degree,” said Schuster. “The point of the education was to change the program. We accomplished it. We got the priority watershed.” Schuster’s work on ensuring water quality hasn’t changed much since then, but the perspective of county residents and local government has. He came into the county conservation job after the Milwaukee Journal’s April 18, 1971, issue printed “Poison in Paradise,” an exposé on water contamination in Door County. Don Olesen, a seasonal resident in Door County, secretly collected water samples from bars, restaurants, parks and hotels around the county, finding nearly half of them to be contaminated with bacteria. “It dropped like a bomb in Door County,” said Schuster. “The first thing that happened after that article came out was there were meetings about how do we contain this story.” Fast forwarding to the early 2000s, when 68 swimmers got sick in Peninsula State Park and the Natural Resources Defense Council gave the county the Beach Bum label for beach contamination and closures, the tone of the county’s response changed. “The first thing that happened was that the SWCD was supposed to figure out what was happening, what was causing it and what can we do about it,” said Schuster. “The health department was to start working with the communities to protect people’s health. Think of how different that is.”

The county shifted from containment to solutions and Schuster’s office has been at the helm of solving these water quality problems. Now, water quality conversation is about Concentrated Animal Feeding Operations (CAFOs) and karst topography. While solutions are still years in the future, Schuster is happy the conversation is even taking place, but warns things will only get more challenging as the dialogue continues. “I’m concerned about a couple of different things,” said Schuster. “I find it distracting to the effort that the social topic of CAFOs versus non-CAFOs gets mixed into the environmental part. I think the distraction of some people who are against the CAFOs because of the social impact, and thus they are active in the water quality, hurts the validity of the effort. Your well doesn’t care how big of a farm the cow came from.” Schuster believes the rules for CAFOs and non-CAFOs should be the same. He thinks the state needs to clarify that county conservation departments have enforcement authority, the authority that Schuster’s office has used to become a conservation leader. He wants to develop geo-regions so areas of the state with vastly different topography have different rules, because the earth is not a level playing field. He still has big opinions on where things should go from here. In the last few weeks of his career, he can see those opinions beginning to play out. In July, the DNR released a plan for rule revisions, “in areas of the state with shallow soils overlaying fractured bedrock,” recognizing the geo-region concept. The same week, Dane County Judge John Markson ruled that the DNR overstepped

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www.pinkertlawfirm.com VILLAGE OF FORESTVILLE villageofforestville.com 920.366.3640 131 Krueger Avenue Forestville, WI 54213 Clerk: Mary Ann Salmon villageofforestville@centurytel. net

TOWN OF GARDNER townofgardner.org 920.825.1137 2026 Cty Trunk DK Sturgeon Bay, WI 54235 Clerk: Amy Sacotte togclerk@townofgardner.org

TOWN OF GIBRALTAR townofgibraltar.com 920.868.1714 4097 Highway 42 Fish Creek, WI 54212 Clerk: Beth Hagen clerk@townofgibraltar.us

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TOWN OF JACKSONPORT jacksonport.org 920.823.8136 3365 County Road V Sturgeon Bay, WI 54235 Clerk: Elissa Taylor jtownclerk@jportfd.com

TOWN OF LIBERTY GROVE libertygrove.org 920.854.2934 11161 Old Stage Rd Clerk/Administrator: Bud Kalms tlibertygrove@dcwis.com

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VILLAGE OF EPHRAIM ephraim-wisconsin.com 920.854.5501 10005 Norway and Hwy Q Ephraim, WI 54211 Administrator/Clerk Brent Bristol office@ephraim-wisconsin.com

“ I ’ve worked in a county that has a deeper environmental conservation ethic than most counties in the state of Wisconsin. That has the political support to run a program that could not have been run in other counties. In many of the counties in the state I would have been fired many times over.”

DOORCOUNTYPULSE.COM  AUGUST 5–12/2016 • v22i32  PENINSULA PULSE

hen a federal employee from the United States Department of Agriculture showed up at the Door County Soil Conservation office to fill a vacancy, he found a wily young man poring over the office manuals. It was 1979 and Bill Schuster decided he was in charge. Schuster has been in charge for the past 37 years, serving as the first and only department head for the county’s Soil and Water Conservation Department (SWCD). His retirement on Thursday, July 28, marked a change within the department, but not in the conservation ethic and reputation of Door County’s conservationists. “I’ve worked in a county that has a deeper environmental conservation ethic than most counties in the state of Wisconsin. That has the political support to run a program that could not have been run in other counties. In many of the counties in the state I would have been fired many times over,” said Schuster. The support Schuster and his office received gave him the authority to rewrite the rulebook on water quality and that rulebook has become the standard the rest of the state strives to achieve. “This department is, and has been for quite some time, the county conservation department in the state of Wisconsin,” said Schuster. “We are used as an example of how it should be done.” Although today’s conversation centers around terms like karst, CAFO and escarpment, it was Schuster’s studies in the 1970s that laid the groundwork for groundwater conversation. Growing up on Cherry Road in Sevastopol with a family line dating to some of the earliest orchards on the peninsula, Schuster was firmly planted in the bedrock of the county before he got his degree in geology from the University of Wisconsin-Oshkosh. Just as he was heading off to Ohio to begin master’s work on hydrogeology, he opened the newspaper and saw a job listing for a county conservationist back home in Door County. “I thought, ‘Hell, you count birds and walk in the woods, that’s got to be a good job’,” said Schuster. Buying his own office supplies out of his $10,500 salary, he was the first county conservationist in Door County, a job that previously fell under the jurisdiction of a federal USDA soil science employee. “I was in this office for five days and had no idea about anything,” said Schuster. “So what I did was all day long I read manuals. I was staying in my parents’ house and I’d bring manuals home and I’d read them at night because I had to figure out what the hell this [job] was.” Schuster was also on his way to a master’s degree in hydrogeology from University of Wisconsin-Green Bay, working under Ron Stieglitz, another Door County native. Knocking on Stieglitz’s office door, Schuster said he wanted to demonstrate the close relationship between groundwater and surface water in Door County. His ultimate goal was to convince the Department of Natural Resources (DNR) to include groundwater when it talked about priority watersheds. “It’s hard, you have to be careful looking at things in the past through today’s eyes,” said Schuster, explaining how the DNR didn’t link ground and surface water back then even though the two are inseparable now. “It isn’t like we were running into people of science who didn’t agree. It was just how it came out politically in the first step of a program.” Before Schuster could finish his thesis and get his master’s degree, the DNR

its authority on ignoring a cap on the numbers of cows at Kinnard Farms in Kewaunee, giving weight to Schuster’s argument of county-level enforcement wherever the state falls short. But what happens when the man who started these conversations, who brought groundwater into the minds of the DNR leaves his desk after 37 years? Is there sadness in leaving the dialogue he started? “People tell me I should have that feeling,” said Schuster, smiling. He dunks his teabag into a ceramic mug. “I don’t think my voice is going to disappear. I don’t know how it’s going to emerge, but my voice is going to continue.” Schuster is confident his office is set up to continue just as it always has while the county decides how to reorganize the department. The county has authorization to search for a new department head, but Schuster suggested consideration of a management team consisting of the remaining department employees, who have more than 20 years of experience between them, instead of a department head. He also suggested using his salary to hire another conservationist in the field. “It doesn’t fit well with existing policies and people have a hard time wrapping their heads around how that would possibly work,” said Schuster. “Even if they make the decision to hire, that will take a few months anyhow so the office is positioned to go on. There shouldn’t be a missed step.” As the county wades through these changes, Schuster will make his way to the airport with tickets to Spain, Norway, Nepal and China. When setting up a time to meet on the day of his retirement, Schuster made clear that he would much rather slip quietly into his new nonpublic life. He bristled at the idea of recognition for his life’s work, content to know from afar that every time a Door County resident takes a clean drink of water, it was thanks to him. “You think you know when the big decisions are being made that shape your life, but as you look back in life, you realize that the thing you didn’t think was a really big deal was the one. I think that’s what’s interesting about life. You think you have control about making decisions, but no, that’s not how it goes. “I’m a pretty healthy 62. Unless I get some bad luck, I can lug a backpack through international airports for another 15 years pretty easy,” said Schuster. “I can’t be sitting here thinking of the unfinished tasks because they never will all be done.” For 37 years, that list of tasks has been about the protection of Door County’s water. Schuster has crossed off almost all of them and has written himself a new list.

CELEBRATING 20 YEARS • 1996–2016

A Lifetime of Local Conservation


CELEBRATING 20 YEARS • 1996–201

NEWS

Sevastopol School Board Members Would Like to Focus on Education Recall election was instigated by group without all the facts by JIM LUNDSTROM jim@ppulse.com

S

ection 12 of Article XIII of the Wisconsin Constitution allows for “qualified electors of the state” to demand the recall of any incumbent elective officer in the state, without offering any justification for the recall. Get enough signatures, and you can have a recall. The case of the Aug. 23 recall election of Sevastopol School Board President Sue Todey and Vice President Bill Behme is a perfect example of why there should be some scrutiny applied to the justifications of those requesting a recall. In this case, the recall was instigated by a group of people who are upset with a unanimous personnel decision made by the school board not to renew the contract of former elementary Principal Mary Donaldson. Because it was a personnel decision, the school board could not say why they did not want Donaldson to return to the schools. Without having access to all the facts, the group started arriving at conclusions that have led to the district spending tens of thousands of dollars in

legal fees and other costs associated with public records requests and the recall election itself, instead of spending that money on education. Knowing some of the background circumstances behind all the uproar at Sevastopol and that Donaldson caused a similar divide in the New Richmond school community where she had been employed earlier in the century, we sat down to hear from the two embattled school board members, Sue Todey, who has spent 10 years on the board, and Bill Behme, who has been with the board for seven years. “It’s been extremely challenging,” Todey said. “Bill and I have gone back and forth. Do we just resign, because this has taken a toll on us individually and with our families? One day we’d talk and say, let’s just call it quits. But there are so many people who voted for us originally and they’re counting on us. And we would get input from people who would say, ‘Stay with it. Help us get through this.’ The whole time it’s been back and forth. Finally we said, nope. When this recall was certified, we said we’re going to give it our all.

Reasons the Recall is Needed

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PENINSULA PULSE  AUGUST 5–12/2016 • v22i32  DOORCOUNTYPULSE.COM

Attempts to reach the two candidates opposing the incumbents were unsuccessful. In lieu of that, we provide an excerpt from the Sevastopol Parents & Community United Facebook page: 1. The Sevastopol School Board is currently deeply divided. …A board so deeply divided is the most important reason for the recall. We have hit the dreaded stage where if we say blue, they say red. If we say fine, red it is; they switch to blue. There is no compromise, only stubborn mindedness, and that is not acceptable for our small school. 2. Todey and Behme have done nothing to try and unite the board, or unite the school. They knew about complaints of [former Superintendent Linda] Underwood’s leadership over a year ago and did nothing. Over two dozen letters were submitted by various staff members to no avail. When people wrote letters, Todey told them it is illegal for the letters to go directly to her, that they instead must follow the chain of command through Underwood even though she was the subject of the complaint. Some teachers were even written up for breaking the chain of command for simply attempting to contact Sue Todey…. 3. Behme and Todey have said at board meetings for months that details about Mrs. Donaldson’s leave of absence will never be discussed, disclosed, or released because it is a personnel issue. Suddenly now once there is a recall election scheduled, everything is made public. Why now is it fine for this to come out? Sevastopol has lost three administrators in the last few months. One was forced out. One was bought out. One couldn’t stand it and

TOWN OF NASEWAUPEE 920.743.9391 Mailing: 6897 Meredith Lane, Sturgeon Bay 54235 Meetings: Nasewaupee Fire Station, 3388 Park Drive, Nasewaupee Clerk: Brenda Olsen nasewaupeeclerk@gmail.com

left on his own accord. This is not normal. How did this happen?... Had Todey and Behme not supported Underwood 110 percent none of this would have gotten so far. They were rubber stamps for Underwood even while she was under investigation for harassment and even as they were negotiating her buyout. They knew she ruled with an iron fist, they knew the investigator cited a workplace just shy of a “hostile environment,” they knew dozens of staff wrote letters over a year and half ago about her bully tactics, and yet they put more trust in her than the staff members who have lived and worked at Sevastopol for 10, 15, or 20 years. On top of that they gave her a 10 percent raise to not work next year.…This recall is about what is right for the common good. This recall is about a school that was turned upside down. This recall is about board members who think they are more important to the school than other board members, and more important to school than those who work there every single day. Todey and Behme didn’t do their due diligence when hiring Underwood. They didn’t do their due diligence when others notified them of what was going on. In fact they silenced the people who work at school every day who tried to bring forth concerns. They scorned citizens who asked questions. They blamed instead of taking responsibility. They laughed in the board clerk’s face saying that there would never be enough people that would sign the recall. They tried threatening lawsuits against those involved in the recall.…This is not healthy for our school. Too much damage has been done and we need a fresh start.

TOWN OF SEVASTOPOL townofsevastopol.com 920.746.1230 45258 Hwy 57, PO Box 135 Sturgeon Bay, WI 54235 Clerk: Linda Wait office@townofsevastopol.com

VILLAGE OF SISTER BAY sisterbaywi.gov 920.854.4118 2383 Maple Drive Sister Bay, WI 54234 Clerk: Christy Sully information@sisterbay.com

Sue Todey

Bill Behme

Hopefully the folks who come to vote will understand what has happened. We couldn’t talk. Because this is a personnel issue, legally and ethically, we could not talk about this. Everybody else could. But we couldn’t. Our hands were tied on this.” “And on the other side, they have the ability to say anything they want – disparaging, inaccurate and there’s really nothing you can do to defend yourself in that process because you hold what is the truth of it,” Behme said. “They talked about how nobody was listening to them. They sent in these letters and nobody was listening to them. The reality is that we were listening to them, but we were also listening to a lot of other people who have a completely different perspective on this…. When it comes right down to it, we were listening intently to what these people, what these teachers, were having to say, but we had to balance that with all the other things we knew about it in the employment process or in the community, by students, by parents, by teachers. That’s ultimately where that decision came in.” Behme points out that the January vote not to renew Donaldson’s contract was unanimous because of “the preponderance of evidence.” “The one dissenter just did not have enough information. And that’s perfectly fine. That’s due diligence on the part of that board member,” Behme said. “But when it really came right down to it, the vote was unanimous all the way through to put Mrs. Donaldson on a paid administrative leave. It was unanimous when it came to accepting the agreement with Mrs. Donaldson. I was told by some of the folks that the word is that some of these school board members, that they had to vote for it, that there would be some liability if they didn’t. That is absolutely not true. Everybody on that board has the ability to speak their mind, to vote the way they want to. There was no pressure within the group, and it was still a unanimous vote.” Todey said the bellicose nature of the dissent has instilled an atmosphere of fear at the school. “People were fearful. They still are,” she said. “They see the battering some of us have taken at board meetings and they have to work with those people. They’re fearful of the their job situation. If they’re not in the school, they’re fearful for their community business. They’re fearful for their children and what repercussions may come to them.” She said it’s time to get over the drama and refocus on educating children. “We should put aside all of this other information and falsehoods and everything

else that’s out there. All the other drama is insignificant to this goal everybody has,” she said. “We have a great school and we have won national awards consistently. And our students achieve so very, very much.” “It’s the community that makes that happen,” Behme said. “It’s every aspect – the teaching staff, the support staff, the board, the administration, the folks that run the cafeteria and drive the buses.” “And all the taxpayers who strongly support that school,” Todey added. “It isn’t going to be easy, but I am confident we can do it, bring the team back together, all the stakeholders back together and really focus on what this is really all about, and that is providing the best possible education we can for all the kids in the school district. I think we’re at a very exciting time here with the school district. We can use these changes as a springboard. We have a new elementary principal on board.” “She’s fantastic,” Behme said of Principal Kathy Hoppe. “A very experienced woman who knows her way around elementary schools and special education services,” Todey said. “We have Steve Cromell back as our superintendent. Steve was with us for five years and retired. As he always says, he fails retirement all the time. He knows the district. He knows a lot of the staff. He’s a very calming force. We will have a new dean of students shortly when the interviews are finished, and we have a wonderful building plan out there that got put on hold with all of this drama. We need to be focusing on that. Curriculum and technology is a constant challenge. The state has some new requirements for academic and career planning which are extremely positive. There’s a lot to be focusing on and this is what our board needs to do. This is a state budget year. Our school district, along with Gibraltar and the island, get next to no state aid. We need to be focusing on Madison right now. We need to be working with [1st District Assemblyman] Joel Kitchens. It’s critical to our kids and our taxpayers.” Todey points out that the Sevastopol School district’s annual meeting will be held the evening of the recall election, on Aug. 23. “We’d love to have more people come, learn about the district, see what’s happening, and then if they have some input, fine. Let’s do it in a civil manner,” she said. Tim Bley and Keith Volkmann are the candidates advanced by the recall group.

CITY OF STURGEON BAY sturgeonbaywi.org 920.746.2900 421 Michigan St. Sturgeon Bay, WI 54235 Clerk: Stephanie Reinhardt info@sturgeonbaywi.org

TOWN OF STURGEON BAY townofsturgeonbay.us 920.743.3908 2445 Sand Lane Sturgeon Bay, WI 54235 Clerk: Nancy Anschutz

TOWN OF UNION townofuniondoor.com 920.825.7569 Mailing: 1621 Tru Way Rd, Brussels, WI 54235 Meetings: 1242 S. Bayshore Rd., Brussels Clerk: Rena LaLuzerne Laluzerne@centurytel.net

WASHINGTON ISLAND washingtonisland-wi.gov 920.847.2522 910 Main Road Washington Island, WI 54246 Clerk/ Treasurer: Valerie Carpenter townoffice@ washingtonisland-wi.gov


COMMUNITY LIFE NOTES As a free public service to our readers, Peninsula Pulse presents Life Notes, devoted to the notable milestones in life, from birth to significant birthdays to engagements, weddings and passings. The deadline for submissions is noon on Friday. Send submissions to lifenotes@ppulse.com. The Pulse reserves the right to edit submissions to conform to space. Call 920.839.2121 for details.

BIRTH A nearly three-acre grass and brush fire on the east side of Washington Island was extinguished through a team effort of Northern Door firefighters on Tuesday, Aug. 2. The fire was reported about 2 pm. In addition to the Washington Island Fire Department, departments from Sister Bay/Liberty Grove, Ephraim and Baileys Harbor also responded, with the help of the Washington Island Ferry Line, which carried personnel and equipment to and from the island. Photo by Tad Dukehart.

Jena Charles and Bradley Bouche, Casco, are the parents of a son born July 26, 2016, at Ministry Door County Medical Center, Sturgeon Bay. Maternal grandparents are Kristi and Jay Charles, Algoma. Paternal grandparents are Joann Lyon, Green Bay, and Paul Bouche, Dyckesville.

PASSINGS Ellen Kate Sprogø-Topelmann April 29, 1926 – Aug. 1, 2016

OUR REPS Governor Scott Walker The governor told state agencies he plans to extend the University of Wisconsin tuition freeze in the next two-year state budget he’ll introduce in early 2017. Walker said in a letter to state agencies last week that most should submit budgets for the next two years that don’t spend any more money than they were allotted this year. He said there will be exceptions, including for aid to K-12 public schools, cost increases for Medicaid, the state prison system and institutions run by the state Department of Health Services. Walker also issued similar “no-increase” budget instructions in 2014 and 2012. The UW tuition freeze is in its fourth year. Walker previously indicated he wanted to see the freeze continue. State agency budget requests are due Thursday, Sept. 15. Source: Wisconsin Public Radio Representative Reid Ribble Ribble joined Dan Benishek (R-Mich.), Jim Cooper (D-Tenn.), Cynthia Lummis (R-Wyo.), Scott Rigell (R-Virg.), and Todd Rokita (R-Ind.) in introducing the Save Our Social Security (S.O.S.) Act, a balanced and comprehensive bipartisan 75-year fix for Social Security. “Social Security is the single biggest step we have taken to reduce senior poverty, and if we do nothing, seniors will see their benefits cut by 21 percent in 2034,” Ribble said. “The problem gets worse the longer we wait, and I am very proud to be working with a bipartisan group of members to put forth a sensible solution today that will preserve Social Security for generations to come.” The S.O.S. Act uses a combination of revenues, benefit adjustments, and raising the retirement age while preserving early retirement to fill the tremendous funding gap. Source: Ribble press release

REPS CONTACT INFORMATION

John ‘Jack’ Weber Oct. 22, 1956 – July 30, 2016

State Assembly Representative Joel Kitchens 608.266.5350 Room 10 West State Capitol PO Box 8952 Madison, WI 53708 Rep.Kitchens@legis.wisconsin.gov State Senator Frank Lasee 608.266.3512 Room 316 South State Capitol PO Box 7882 Madison, WI 53707-7882 Sen.Lasee@legis.wisconsin.gov Governor Scott Walker 608.266.1212 Office of Governor Scott Walker 115 East Capitol Madison, WI 53702 govgeneral@wisconsin.gov U.S. Senator Tammy Baldwin baldwin.senate.gov 202.224.5653 14 West Mifflin Street, Suite 207 Madison, WI 53703

John “Jack” Weber, 59, of Town of Sevastopol died at St. Vincent Hospital in Green Bay after a short and courageous battle with cancer. He was born in Sturgeon Bay, the youngest of nine children to the farming family of Arthur and Theresa (Neuchter) Weber. Jack graduated from Sevastopol High School in 1975 before receiving his Associate degree in Industrial Scale Model Building. He worked for PBI, and more recently Bay Ship where he was a steel cutter. On Aug. 27, 1977, Jack married Sue Brungraber. A Mass of Christian Burial was celebrated Aug. 3. In lieu of flowers, memorials may be given in his memory. Condolences may be offered at huehnsfuneralhome.com. Stella R. Irwin Nov. 23, 1927 – July 29, 2016

U.S. Senator Ron Johnson ronjohnson.senate.gov 202.224.5323 386 Russell Senate Office Building Washington, DC 20510 U.S. Representative Reid Ribble ribble.house.gov 202.225.5665 1513 Longworth HOB Washington, DC 20515 President Barack Obama whitehouse.gov/administration/ president-obama 202.456.1111 The White House 1600 Pennsylvania Avenue NW Washington, DC 20500

Our beloved mother, Stella R., 88, slipped her bonds at Ministry Door County Medical Center. She was born Stella Rose Wright in Little Rock, Ark. At the age of 5, Stella’s mother died and she was raised by her aunts. Through high school, she worked at a neighborhood drug store when she met a dashing Army Air Corps

Eileen Copiskey March 25, 1935 – July 29, 2016

Eileen Copiskey, 81, of Sturgeon Bay, died at the home of her daughter and son-in-law, Lisa and Ryan Thompson. She was born in Sturgeon Bay to Clarence and Helen (Weckler) Cumber. On Aug. 25, 1973, she married Charles L. Copiskey in Michigan. He preceded her in death on March 19, 2007. Eileen worked as head housekeeper at the Dorchester for 16 years. She had also worked for Hardee’s and Culver’s, retiring in 2003. Services were held Aug. 2. Forbes Funeral Home is in charge of arrangements. Judith J. D’Amico

Judith J. (Jorgensen) D’Amico, 82, of Mequon, and longtime summer resident of Sister Bay, died July 25, 2016. Beloved wife of the late Frank N. D’Amico, loving mother of John (Sharon), Charles (Cheryl), Peter (Rhonda) and Lynda (Kevin) Orfield. Proud grandma of Christina (Andrew) Tibesar, Lisa (Dan) Lewis, Frank, Stephen, Lauren, John, Leland, Nicholas, Andrew, Zachary and Melanie (Chris) Roland. Dearest great-grandma of Ben, Anna, Gavin, Jade and Ella. Beloved sister-in-law of Katherine Balistreri and Patricia Jorgensen. Further survived by nieces, nephews, other relatives and friends. Services were held Aug. 1 in Mequon. In lieu of flowers, memorial donations may be directed to the American Cancer Society, Lumen Christi Catholic Church or the charity of your choice. schmidtandbartelt.com. David Townley Debenham July 31, 1941 – June 19, 2016

David Townley Debenham, 74, of Sturgeon Bay, died at home on. He was born the son of Roger and Margaret Debenham, and raised in Wilmette, Ill. From 1963 to 1969, he served in the Illinois Army National Guard. In 1965 he graduated from the Coastal School of Deep Sea Diving in California before opening North Central Suzuki in Antioch, Ill. On Oct. 11, 1969, he married Barbara Heiden, and they raised their son, David, on the shores of Loon Lake. In 1983 he became a certified financial adviser and worked for Waddell and Reed in before retiring in Door County. A memorial service will be held at Hope United Church of Christ in Sturgeon Bay on Wednesday, Aug. 24 at 3 pm. In lieu of flowers memorials may be given to Door County Land Trust, Unity Hospice, Hope United Church of Christ.

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Senator Ron Johnson Johnson and his Democratic challenger Russ Feingold are scheduled to debate Oct. 14. The debate was announced Monday by the Wisconsin

President Barack Obama President Obama declared Donald Trump unfit for office on Tuesday, calling on Republicans to distance themselves from their party’s presidential nominee. “Yes, I think the Republican nominee is unfit to serve as president,” Obama said at a press conference with the prime minister of Singapore. “I said so last week, and he keeps on proving it. The notion that he would attack a Gold Star family that has made such extraordinary sacrifices on behalf of our country, the fact that he doesn’t appear to have basic knowledge around critical issues in Europe, in the Middle East, in Asia, means that he’s woefully unprepared to do this job.” Source: USA Today

Ellen Kate Sprogø-Topelmann died peacefully, surrounded by her family. For 90 years she lived a beautiful, full and happy life. Born in Hamburg, Germany, Ellen was part of a big family that often had to struggle to make ends meet. She lived through the ravages of WWII during her teens in Germany. In 1953, Ellen decided to move to America for a better life. In Chicago, she met her husband, Karsten Topelmann, and the two like-minded artists married in 1959. Their three children were born in Chicago: Tanja born in 1961, an aspiring artist who sadly passed in 1983; Lars born in 1963, a photographer in Portland, Ore.; and Lisa born in 1965, an art historian, curator and teacher in Adelaide, Australia. Summer holidays were always spent in beautiful Door County. In the summer of 1972, Ellen and Karsten opened the Hanseatic Art Gallery. They both painted and filled the gallery with their artwork. Honoring Ellen’s wishes, a family ceremony will be held at a later date. The family requests that instead of flowers or donations that friends simply let memories of Ellen warm their hearts and to not cry because she is gone, but to smile because she was here. Caspersonfuneralhome.com.

pilot from Spooner, Wis. On Jan. 12, 1946, they married in Kenilworth, Ill. Upon retirement from the U.S. Air Force, they moved their three children to Sturgeon Bay. As Barney managed the Door County Chamber of Commerce, Stella found time to volunteer at Door County Memorial Hospital while raising three children. After retiring from what is known as the visitor’s bureau, they divided their time between winters in Southern Calif. and summers in Sturgeon Bay. Services were held Aug. 4. Forbesfuneralhome. com.

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Senator Tammy Baldwin Baldwin and Representative Joe Courtney (D-CT), Senator Patrick Leahy (D-VT), and Senator Bob Casey (D-PA), were joined by a bipartisan coalition of 57 other members of the House and Senate, in sending a letter to U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) Secretary Tom Vilsack asking for assistance for dairy producers struggling with declining milk prices. Specifically, the members are asking for the USDA to use its authority under the Commodity Credit Corporation Charter Act to expand and maintain U.S. domestic markets. “Wisconsin dairy farmers work hard every day moving our economy forward, so we need to do everything we can to reward their hard work by giving them a fair shot at getting ahead,” Baldwin said. “Keeping our economy strong means ensuring our rural communities and farms make it through this challenging time for the dairy industry.” Farm milk prices have dropped 40 percent since 2014, due to both an increase in U.S. production levels and changes in the European Union’s regulation of milk production. In vastly different dairy market regions of the United States, farmers are facing similar margin shortfalls while still adjusting to changes in federal dairy support programs from the 2014 Farm Bill. Source: Baldwin press release

Broadcasters Association Foundation. The hour-long debate on a Friday night, a little more than three weeks before the Nov. 8 general election, will be somewhere in the Green Bay-Appleton market, but the exact location was not announced. This is the first announced debate of the campaign between Johnson and Feingold. It marks the first time the two have debated since their first contest in 2010. Johnson won that year, ending Feingold’s bid for a fourth term. Source: Fox6now.com

CELEBRATING 20 YEARS • 1996–2016

Grass Fire on Washington Island


CELEBRATING 20 YEARS • 1996–201

Pet Talk

COMMUNITY

Q. My dog doesn’t like getting his teeth brushed. I see that Milk-Bone has a treat to clean a dog’s teeth. Do you think they really work?

DOOR NOTES

– 6 pm; Main Street Market in Egg Harbor, 7:30 am – 7:30 pm.

Timber

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SPORTS

by Sally Salopek

• On July 25, Door County Habitat for Humanity closed on the former Kimberley House. The Kimberley House closed their doors in July 2015. In May, the Kimberley Foundation Board of Directors decided to offer the home, located at 33 N. Joliet in Sturgeon Bay, to Door County Habitat for Humanity. Steve Wilkie, Kimberley House board president, said, “With Habitat’s history of success in helping families within our community, the property will be well used.” The Board of Directors of Door County Habitat for Humanity agreed to accept the gift of the former Kimberley House. The first thought was to use the house for partner families, but the home is too large and costly to maintain. The home will be sold and the proceeds used to build more decent and affordable housing in Door County.

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Brushing is Best for Dog’s Teeth

• It is with heavy hearts that the Door County Humane Society (DCHS) announces the passing of Timber, the unofficial mascot of DCHS and beloved dog companion of DCHS Assistant Animal Care Coordinator Debbie Barnes. Timber died suddenly July 24. During his time as a therapy dog, he visited all of the Door County libraries, Dorchester Golden Living Center and Ministry Door County Medical Center. DCHS is holding Timber a memorial service on Aug. 6 at 10:30 am at the Door County Humane Society, 3475 Park Drive, Sturgeon Bay. • Sturgeon Bay Veterans of Foreign Wars Post 3088 will conduct their annual Buddy Poppy Drive on Aug. 5 & 6. The VFW will be at the following locations and times for the drive: Econo Foods, Pick ‘N Save & Walgreen’s in Sturgeon Bay, 8 am

• Come to Lakeside Park, Hwy. 57, in Jacksonport for the 22nd Annual Cherry Fest on Aug. 6, 7 am – 4 pm. The day is packed with fun for the whole family. Savor the great food including fresh cherries, cherry brats and cherry hamburgers as well as an assortment of cherry desserts. Stroll through the Juried Arts & Crafts Fair or experience a horse-drawn wagon ride. Live music will be played throughout the day under the big tent. Enjoy the third annual Car Show on display at the Erskine Rest Area from 8 am to 2 pm; the People’s Choice Award will be given out at 3 pm. There will also be a JHS Raffle with wonderful prizes, and a Penny Hunt on the beach for younger children ages 3 to 8 years old. Take a step back in time and tour the Root Cellar in the Erskine Rest Area or check out Jacksonport Family memorabilia. The Loritz and Cote Cabins will be open for tours just south of town on Hwy. 57. • St Peter’s Lutheran Church, Sturgeon Bay, is sponsoring “St. Peter’s Cares Walk” on Aug. 20, 8:30 to 10:30 am. All registration monies will be donated to Neighbor to Neighbor, a local nonprofit. The walk is 1- to 2.5-miles long through Sturgeon Bay. Maps will be available. Pre-registration is due Aug. 13. The cost is $15 for an individual and $30 for a family. The fee the day of the walk is $20. All registrants will receive a water bottle. Completed forms, along with checks (made payable to Neighbor to Neighbor) can be mailed to Linda Kintopf, 3855 Park Drive, Sturgeon Bay WI 54235. Forms can be obtained by calling Kintopf at 920.743.6755 or Bev at 920.743.4926. Forms can also be found at stpeterslutheran.net.

FEATURED PET Chloe is a very distinguished 10-year-old feline. She came to the Door County Humane Society as a stray a few months ago and now spends her days looking for her forever home. Her stunning long gray coat, beautiful warm eyes, and petite little face resembles the Persian cat breed. Chloe is front declawed and enjoys the company of other cats as long as she is in charge. She is sweet, calm and

loving. This mature lady is just looking for a warm lap to lie in and a calm, loving home to spend the rest of her days. So if you are looking for a great girl with a beautiful face, come and visit Chloe today! The Door County Humane Society, located at 3475 County PD in Sturgeon Bay, is open 12 – 6 pm Monday, Wednesday and Friday; and 12 – 4 pm Saturday. For more information call 920.746.1111 or visit doorcountyhumanesociety.org.

A. I have seen the product advertised and wondered that myself. Looking up the product, below are its claims. “Milk-Bone Brushing Chews help provide an easy and effective way to take care of your dog’s teeth. These daily dental treats are clinically proven to reduce tartar and fight bad breath. The revolutionary dental twist bone is designed to help clean even hard to reach back teeth and down to the gumline. Dogs love the irresistible chicken taste of Milk-Bone Brushing Chews and you’ll love giving them a daily dental treat that’s fortified with 12 essential vitamins and minerals including calcium for strong bones and teeth.” Most of the product reviews on the internet seem favorable. Dogs seem to love them, but there are some dogs who get ill from swallowing big pieces or the ingredients don’t agree with them, causing vomiting and diarrhea. The chews have received the Veterinary Oral Health Council (VOHC) Seal of Acceptance. This is awarded to home oral hygiene products for pets that meet or exceed the VOHC standard for retarding accumulation of dental plaque or dental tartar. If you go to their website, VOHC.org, there is a list of products awarded the seal along with information on dental disease in pets. When giving any a dog a treat like this it is important to supervise them. If your canine is a gulper, this is probably not the product to use. Swallowing a piece that’s too big could cause serious internal problems such as a blockage. They would also not be getting the benefit of the chew doing the job of cleaning off plaque by gnawing on it. I would research the ingredients in these chews to make sure it is something you are comfortable giving your dog and he can tolerate them. If your canine is not a gulper and will chew it into small pieces you may consider giving it to him as part of his oral care. It will probably not remove existing tartar, that will need to be done by your veterinarian, but it should cut down on more accumulation. Milk-Bone claims that when fed daily they are as effective as brushing a dog’s teeth twice a week. The Veterinary Oral Council recommends daily tooth brushing for optimal effectiveness. So with this information, I would still try to get your dog accustomed to getting his teeth brushed, which is by far the best choice for a canine’s oral hygiene. Sally Salopek is the owner and operator of AttendA-Pet pet sitting services in northern Door County. She has also worked professionally with animals in health care, pet grooming, training, wildlife rehab and rescue. Send your pet-related questions to her at info@ attendapet.com.

DESTROYERS STAY STRONG IN SIXTH WEEK OF SEASON On July 30, the Door County Destroyers traveled to Racine to take on the Threat in the sixth week of MidStates Football League (MSFL) regular season play. The Threat held tough in the first half, keeping the Destroyers to a 13-3 lead. The Destroyers came back strong in the second half and piled on the points, winning 52-3. With the win the Destroyers are 5-1; the Threat dropped to 1-5. Standout performers of the day: running back TaMar Scott – 85 rushing yards, 1 touchdown; wide receiver Tristan Wohlrabe-Fritsch – 3 passes for 44 yards, 2 touchdowns; safety Craig Polifka – 5 tackles, 1 forced fumble, 1 interception; linebacker Donny Johnson – 5 tackles, 2 fumble recoveries, 1 sack; defensive end Adam Brandt – 3 tackles, 2 sacks; defensive tackle Alex Klein – 3 tackles, 1 sack, 1 interception; safety T.J. Hulbert – 1 interception; cornerback Tydus Morrow – 1 interception; cornerback Jake Hall – 1 interception, touchdown; kicker Eric Natwick – 3-4 on field goals, 5-5 on extra points. The Destroyers next play at the Baileys Harbor Rec Park on Aug. 6 at 4 pm. They will face the Milwaukee County Chargers. They also have a home game on Aug. 13 against the Racine Raiders. For more information visit doorcountydestroyers. com.

DOOR COUNTY LEAGUE BASEBALL STANDINGS As of July 31 Egg Harbor 11-2 Sister Bay 9-2 Kolberg 8-3 Maplewood 6-7 West Jacksonport 6-7 Washington Island 5-8 Institute 4-8 Baileys Harbor 0-12 RESULTS July 29 Egg Harbor W, Baileys Harbor L (forfeit) Institute 4, Washington Island 10 July 31 Sister Bay 10, West Jacksonport 1 Kolberg 2, Maplewood 5 Washington Island 11, Institute 7 SCHEDULE All games start at 1:30 pm unless otherwise noted. Aug. 7 Egg Harbor @ Institute West Jacksonport @ Kolberg Maplewood @ Sister Bay Washington Island @ Baileys Harbor

NORTHERN DOOR VOLLEYBALL LEAGUE STANDINGS As of July 27 1. PC Junction 33-3 2. Blue Horse Beach Café 32-4 3. Husby’s 32-4 4. Sister Bay Bowl 23-16 5. Wilson’s 18-18 6. Nicolet Beach 12-24 7. Main Street Market 7-29 8. Camp David 5-25 9. Team Tomato 0-36 RESULTS July 27 Husby’s 3, Camp David 0 PC Junction 3, Wilson’s 0 Nicolet Beach 1, Sister Bay Bowl 2 PC Junction 3, Sister Bay Bowl 0 Husby’s 2, Main Street Market 1 Blue Horse 3, Team Tomato 0 SCHEDULE August 10 7 pm Blue Horse vs. Wilson’s Team Tomato vs. Main Street Market Camp David vs. Sister Bay Bowl 8 pm PC Junction vs. Husby’s Blue Horse vs. Camp David Main Street Market vs. Nicolet Beach Check doorcountypulse.com for upto-date standings and results.


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(4) (Clockwise from top left) Crane collage by Gail McCoy. “Fall Field” by Carol Schalla. Iris stained glass lamp by Julie Rutherford. “Moon Vision Earrings” and “Waterfall Cuff” by Emilie Shapiro. “Calliope & Nectarines” by Rebecca Korth. (Center) Laura Tanner Jewelry.

(1) Julie Rutherford, of Rice Lake, Wis., has spent more than 20 years perfecting her stained glass art pieces. Focusing on art glass and intricate design, Rutherford combined that with the beauty of nature in her pieces. She often features poppies, irises, dragonflies, hummingbirds and lotus flowers. Rutherford will be at a meet-the-artist reception at Angela Lensch Gallery on Aug. 6, 10 am – 5 pm. Come bask in the kaleidoscope of color exemplified by Rutherford’s stained glass pieces. New to the gallery this year are Rutherford’s custom stained glass lamps. Each lamp takes on a different form, like that of her one-of-a-kind butterfly lamp. Angela Lensch Gallery, open daily 10 am to 5 pm, is located at the south end of Egg Harbor, halfway between the Patricia Shoppe and Chief Oshkosh. For more information visit angelalenschgallery.com or call 920.868.5088.

(2) Blessed with an “artistic” eye at an

(3) Edgewood Orchard Galleries will

to host New York City-based jewelry artist Emilie Shapiro for a trunk show on Aug. 6 & 7. Shapiro will be at the gallery from 10 am to 5 pm both days, showing her unique metal and gemstone jewelry. Shapiro grew up on the edge of the Atlantic Ocean, and water has always been a constant in her life and a huge inspiration. She now concentrates on the ancient craft of lost wax casting, which dates back to the Egyptians. Sculptural pieces are carved into hard wax and casted into metal, and rough gemstones are incorporated into Shapiro’s work as a celebration of the beauty of natural imperfection. “Emilie’s jewelry has a loyal following, and her designs are rugged yet delicate and beautiful,” says Fine Line Designs Gallery owner Shari Gransee. “We’re thrilled to have a large body of her work for this twoday trunk show, and we’re excited to have so many of her unique pieces in one place.” For more information, visit finelinedesignsgallery.com or call 920.854.4343.

The Miller Art Museum is hosting its 11th annual Art & Treasures Sale from 10 am to 4 pm, Aug. 6-20 (except Sundays) on the Ruth Morton Miller Mezzanine of the museum, inside the Sturgeon Bay Library at 107 S. 4th Avenue. This annual fundraiser is a cross between an estate and yard sale with a focus on all things art. Patrons will discover a treasure trove of gently used original art, prints & posters by notable Door County artists, art books, ceramics, collectibles, art supplies, frames, textiles, kitsch, china, jewelry, housewares and more. New items will be added throughout the duration of the sale. Donations can be made at the Miller Art Museum office between the hours of 10 am to 4 pm through Aug. 15. Call 920.746.0707 or visit millerartmuseum.org or the MAM Facebook Art & Treasures Sale Event Page.

(5) Plum Bottom Pottery and Gallery will

host “Art Show 8: Painters, Paper, and Printmakers,” beginning with an artists reception and demonstrations on Aug. 6, 4 – 7 pm. Come enjoy a class of Von Stiehl wine and see the artists at work with a demo by print artist Erin Nolan starting at 4 pm and paper collage artist Gail McCoy at 4:30 pm. An Illinois artist whose heart belongs to Door County, Nolan creates works

that truly capture the heart and soul of the county. New for this show is Nolan’s woodblock loon. McCoy captures the serene beauty of the crane in her paper collages. Working with National Geographic magazines, McCoy creates color washes and patterns by breaking down and manipulating the ink on the pages of the magazine. Door County painter Mary White will debut a collection of new Door County landscapes. White captures the delicate beauty and beautiful colors of Door County’s abundant wildflowers. Nik Garvoille will present his newest collections of hand-dyed paintings. He paints with naturally derived pigments and treats his paper much like fabric. For example, he creates paint from carrots and from the leaves of a dandelion. Plum Bottom Pottery & Gallery is open daily from 10 am to 5 pm at 4999 Plum Bottom Rd. in Egg Harbor. For more information, visit PlumBottomPottery.com or 920.743.2819.

(6) Patricia Shoppe of Egg Harbor will wrap up their summer trunk show series with a 10-day show of Laura Tanner Jewelry (LTJ). LTJ is a newer collection to the shop but quickly became a customer favorite. The LTJ look is marked by the combination of exquisite gemstone beads and pearls with precious metals to create sophisticated, versatile jewelry that is contemporary and timeless. The beauty of her jewelry is that you can mix, match or layer pieces together, and build a coordinated collection of LTJ over time. Laura Tanner Jewelry trunk show will be at Patricia Shoppe Aug. 4-13. Meet Tanner on Aug. 12, 3-6 pm. The trunk show special is 10 percent off any sale more than $100 of LTJ jewelry, and with each trunk show purchase customers will be entered into a drawing for a free piece. For more information visit patriciashoppe.com.

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host the Exhibit V reception on August 6, 4-7 pm. Wine and hors d’oeuvres will be served and the public is welcome.

(4) Fine Line Designs Gallery is excited

James May Gallery of Algoma presents their August exhibition, curated by Kara Slamka, at Algoma’s Friday Night Art Walk and their opening reception on Aug. 5, 5:308 pm. Artists in the exhibit are: Donny Gettinger, mixed media artist from Minneapolis, Minnesota; Emily Rogstad, jeweler/metalsmith from Asheville, North Carolina; Elysia Michaelsen, mixed media/ installation artist from Egg Harbor; Ashely Peifer, painter from Minneapolis, Minnesota. James May Gallery will also host a popup gallery by local artist Brilliant Stranger. Select Algoma businesses will also show off some mobiles for their new event, Mobiles in Algoma. Clay on Steele will have clay demos, The Jabberwock has a mobilethemed exhibit and a pop-up gallery of his own, and more to come.

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early age, Carol Schalla, pastel artist, is the featured artist of the week at The Gallery of the Door County Art League in the courtyard at the Top of the Hill Shops in Fish Creek beginning Aug. 6. Art has always been a part of Schalla’s life, from sketching animals as a child, portrait work as a young adult, a long successful career in interior design, and now developing and honing her skills as a pastel artist in retirement. “I have always viewed the world with the study of color at the forefront, so working with the immediacy that pure pigment pastel sticks offers is satisfying for me,” said Schalla. During August, oil painter Karen Lee DeNoto will join Schalla and other Door County artists daily from 11 am to 5 pm in displaying more than 300 works of affordable fine art in a variety of 2D and 3D medias. For more information, email dcalgallery@gmail.com or visit doorcountyartleague.org.

The exhibit features the artwork of painters Rebecca Korth, William A. Suys, Jr., and Tal Walton, jewelry designs by Ed Levin, and sculpture by C.T. Whitehouse. The artists will speak briefly about their artwork at 5 pm in the gallery courtyard. The Courtyard Gallery will be filled with Korth’s realistic oil paintings. Award-winning painter Suys, Jr. is known for both his excellent portrait work and his artistic take on animals and people. Walton paints in oil on prepared ground marble highlighted with gold leaf, which imparts luminosity to the overlaying pigments used. Levin’s pieces are crafted only with the finest metals and stones using age-old techniques. Whitehouse creates simple forms using the lost wax method, and implements controlled tarnishing or oxidation of the metal. Exhibit V runs through Aug. 31. Edgewood Orchard Galleries is located at 4140 Peninsula Players Road, midway between Egg Harbor and Fish Creek. For more information, call 920.868.3579 or visit edgewoodorchard.com.

On Aug. 10 at 7 pm, Sharon Auberle is the featured reader at the Unitarian Universalist Fellowship of Door Sharon Auberle County’s Dickinson Poetry Series. Auberle grew up in the Midwest, exploring fields, woods and waters, often in the company of her grandfather, who passed his love of the outdoors to her. With this heritage, her years of living in the Southwest, and now in Door County, she finds much to draw on in her writing and photography. Besides poetry, photography, collage and paper arts are her passion, samples of which may be found on her blog, “Mimi’s Golightly Café.” Auberle is the author of three books: Saturday Nights at the Crystal Ball, Crow Ink, and EVErywoman; and a poetry collection co-authored with Ralph Murre; as well as collaborations with poets Jeanie Tomasko and Alice D’Alessio, which feature her photography. “Writing memoir helps me to write poetry, and my poems distill the uncountable events of my days down to their essence – the ‘aha’ moments, the joys and sorrows of my life, those things I wish never to forget.” On the second Wednesday of every month the Dickinson Poetry Series features a renowned local or regional poet followed by an open mic and reception. The public is welcome and there is no charge. The UUF is located at 10341 Hwy. 42 in north Ephraim. For more information visit uufdc.org or call 920.854.7559.

CELEBRATING 20 YEARS • 1996–2016

ART


CELEBRATING 20 YEARS • 1996–201

MUSIC

(From left to right) Andria Nikoupolis-Weliky, Jeanne Kuhns, Marybeth Mattson (Photo by Suzi Hass), Jenny Bienemann and Carley Baer.

BLUEGRASS AT PEG EGAN, WISE WOMEN AT WOODWALK Woodwalk Concert Series presents an evening of “Wise Women” in music and dance on Aug. 5 at 7 pm. Singer/songwriters Jenny Bienemann, Carley Baer, Marybeth Mattson and Jeanne Kuhns will perform in Nashville songwriters semi-circle style, taking turns performing their original music on the Woodwalk stage. Local belly dancer from Dancin’ on the Door, Andria Nikoupolis-Weliky will start off each half of the show with dance. Bienemann’s crystal clear vocals, looping talents and innovative guitar combined with

wise and quirky lyrics offer a sense of peace and joy. Baer’s original blend of “folk/pop with a ukulele twist” turns heads everywhere she goes. Dazzling the masses with her crystalclear voice and high-energy performance, she entertains audiences on guitar, ukulele and accordion. Kuhns’ earthy voice floats skywards with a bell-like quality. She writes progressive folk ballads, telling stories about her view of the world with the eye of an artist. Mattson has an edgy, folk-rock voice with a hint of dark in it, lending credence to her deep lyrical content talking about life journeys in a deceptively poetic way. Nikoupolis-Weliky has studied dance since the age of two and teaches various dance forms to all ages. Tickets are $20 cash at the door. Doors open at 5:30 pm. Drinks and pie will be for sale. Call 414.897.6569 or 920.495.2928 for

ticket reservations. For more information, visit jeannekuhns.net or woodwalkgallery.com. Woodwalk Gallery is located at 6746 Cty. G, south of Egg Harbor. Grammy nominated Dailey & Vincent will be back at Peg Egan Performing Arts Center (PAC) on Aug. 7 at 7 pm. The Dailey and Vincent concert will also serve as a tribute to the late Marian Hislop. Jamie Dailey (guitar, bass, lead and harmony vocals) was hired by Doyle Lawson & Quicksilver in 1998 as lead, baritone and tenor singer and bass player. Three years later he switched to guitar, but he continued to sing lead and harmony vocals on the concert trail and on nine of the band’s albums. During Dailey’s tenure the band won 13 International Bluegrass Music Awards. He has recorded with Dolly Parton and Rhonda Vincent, appeared on five Gaither Homecoming DVDs, and was a

guest on Ricky Skaggs’ Grammy-winning Brand New Strings album. Darrin Vincent (mandolin, bass, guitar, lead and harmony vocals) started singing at age three and playing music at age six as part of his family band, The Sally Mountain Show, along with sister Rhonda Vincent. He has played on Grammy-winning albums by Dolly Parton (The Grass is Blue) and Jimmy Sturr (Top of the World). He has performed and recorded with a multitude of other artists including Norah Jones, Emmylou Harris, Earl Scruggs, Bruce Hornsby, Vince Gill, John Hartford and Keith Urban. Concerts are free and begin at 7 pm at the Egg Harbor amphitheater located on Church Street. Lawn chairs and carry-ins are welcome. In case of rain, all events will be held at Calvary Methodist Church, 4650 County Road E, Egg Harbor. For concert information call 920.493.5979.

HAPPENINGS FRI 8/5 FESTIVALS

Door County Fair John Miles County Park, 812 N 14th Ave, Sturgeon Bay. 920.746.7126. Carnival rides, food stands, 4-H animal barns, grandstand events, kids and family tents. Visit www.doorcountyfair. com for more information. Sturgeon Bay Maritime Week Throughout Sturgeon Bay. 920.743.5958. “A Salute to the U.S. Coast Guard.” A variety of maritime events happening in various places around Sturgeon Bay. Call or visit www.dcmm. org for more information.

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LIVE MUSIC

Wise Women Woodwalk Gallery, 6746 Cty Rd G, Egg Harbor. 920.495.2928. 5:30pm. Doors open, picnics welcome. 7pm. Jeanne Kuhns, Marybeth Mattson, Jenny Bienemann, Carley Baer, & Andrea Nikopoulis Weliky. $20/person, cash. Tim Bell and the Alpiners Hof Restaurant at the Alpine Resort, 7715 Alpine Rd, Egg Harbor. 920.868.3000. 6:30-7:45pm & 8:45pm. Live music. Acoustic Song Circle Prince of Peace Lutheran Church Coffee House, 1756 Michigan St, Sturgeon Bay. 920.743.7750. 10am-12pm. For more information call or go to “Door County Acoustic Song Circles & Jams” on Facebook. Marybeth Mattson Bearded Heart Coffee, 8101 Hwy 57, Baileys Harbor. 920.839.9111. 1-3pm. Acoustic folk/rock. Ryan Thompson Brilliant Stranger Ecotique, 7821 Hwy 42, Egg Harbor. 920.366.0301. 2:30-5pm. Plays Dale Kumbalek’s handmade guitars on the porch of the purple building. Mark Hendee Florian II Lakeshore Supper Club, 8048 Hwy 57, Baileys Harbor. 920.839.2361. 5pm. Pianist.

Open Mic Glas Coffeehouse, 67 E Maple St, Sturgeon Bay. 920.743.5575. 5:30-7:30pm. Hosted by Peter Jens. Big Mouth Trio Door County Brewing Company, 2434 Cty F, Baileys Harbor. 920.839.1515. 7pm. Blues, rock, jazz. Free. Wild Irish Gerry Kitty O’Reilly’s Irish Pub, 59 E Oak St, Sturgeon Bay. 920.743.7441. 7pm. Celtic favorites. Free. Matt Wahl Gibraltar Grill, 3993 Main St, Fish Creek. 920.868.4745. 7:30pm. Playing humorous folk on guitar. Scotty Meyer Band The Garage at Husby’s, 400 Maple Dr, Sister Bay. 920.854.2624. 8-11pm. Original music. Velveetatones Door County Fire Company, 38 S 3rd Ave, Sturgeon Bay. 920.818.0625. 8pm. Blues and humor. Free. The Del Rays Stone Harbor Restaurant & Pub, 107 N 1st St, Sturgeon Bay. 920.746.0700. 8:30pm. Playing a variety of rock & roll from the 50s, 60s, and 70s. Free. Shower’oke’ Peninsula Pub, 7899 Cty A, Baileys Harbor. 920.839.9001. 9pm. No excuses karaoke with DJ Hope Reyes. Burgundy Ties Juniper’s Gin Joint, 4170 Main St, Fish Creek. 920.868.2667. 9:30pm. Americana rock. Free. The Dead Soldiers Husby’s Food & Spirits, 400 Maple Dr, Sister Bay. 920.854.2624. 11pm. Original music.

THEATER

“Julius Caesar” Bjorklunden, 7590 Boynton Ln, Baileys Harbor. 920.839.1500. 6:30 pm. “Will-in-theWoods”. Lively discussion and interactive lessons including creating your very own folio page. Informal and inviting. Appropriate for all ages. Free. 8pm. Door Shakespeare presents “Julius Caesar”. $29/

adult. $19/student. $9/ Children under 12. “The Full Monty” Peninsula Players, 4351 Peninsula Players Rd, Fish Creek. 920.868.3287. 6:30pm. Pre-show discussion/seminar with artistic director, Greg Vinkler, and music director, Valerie Maze. 8pm. Performance. A big pop-rock musical based on the Oscar-nominated film of the same name, this adult musical comedy has a very warm heart at the center of its raucous fun. $40-$46/tickets. “Madame Sherry” Third Avenue Playhouse, 239 N 3rd Ave, Sturgeon Bay. 920.743.1760. 7:30pm. Vintage 1910 musical comedy when a man-about-town’s secret life is about to be discovered by his stuffy benefactor, the ensuing amorous misadventures take him from his Manhattan dance studio to a yacht. $27/general admission. $10/student. “Grace and Glorie” Sturgeon Bay Jaycee Hall, 340 Jaycee Ct, Sturgeon Bay. 920.818.0816. 7:30pm. Lola DeVillers and Keri Grimsley star in this powerful Tom Ziegler drama about a feisty 90 year old cancer patient and her hospice worker. $15/ adults. $10/students. “Doctor! Doctor!” Northern Sky Theater, Peninsula State Park Amphitheater, 10169 Shore Rd, Fish Creek. 920.854.6117. 8pm. The world premiere of a play, in which a retiring small town physician recruits his young big city nephew to take over his practice. Music, lyrics and book by Matt Zembrowski. $22/ adult. $11/student. $6/ child 12 & under. $7 more/ ticket for reserved seats.

PERFORMANCE

Jazz II Concert Birch Creek Music Performance Center, 3821 Cty E, Egg Harbor. 920.868.3763. 7pm. Pre-show music in the Courtyard Gazebo. 7:30pm. “Ellington, Basie & Miller Vol. 2” in the Dutton Barn. $29/adult. $10/student. $6/ child. $34/premium seating.

Washington Island Music Festival Trueblood Performing Arts Center, 870 Main Rd, Washington Island. 920.847.2528. 10am. Inside the Notes with Samantha George & Guests. In the Red Barn. Free. Birch Creek Jazz Ambassadors Vino! Vino! Wine Bar at Stone’s Throw Winery, 3382 Cty Rd E, Egg Harbor. 920.839.9660. 2-4pm. Live music on the patio. Birch Creek Jazz Ambassadors Anderson Dock, Ephraim. 920.868.3763. 6-8pm. Jazz performance.

GALLERIES

Open House Clay on Steele, 221 Steele St, Algoma. 920.487.3501. 5:30-8pm. Family fun will include Raku firing, wheel throwing demos, ceramic painting parties, and other interactive activities. Free or nominal fees. Light refreshments will be served. Opening Reception James May Gallery, 213 Steele St, Algoma. 262.753.3130. 5:30-8pm. Featuring guest curator Kara Slamka, the August exhibit features mixed media by Donny Gettinger, jewelry/metalsmithing by Emily Rogstad, mixed media by Elysia Michaelsen and paintings by Ashley Peifer. Light refreshments will be served.

INDOOR

Salsa Dancing Florian II Lakeshore Supper Club, 8048 Hwy 57, Baileys Harbor. 920.306.4576. 8:30pm. Group dance lesson. $10. 9:30pm. Open dancing to Salsa, Cha-cha, Bachata & Merengue ’til close. Free. Appetizer & drink specials. NO partner required. Great for beginners. Duplicate Contract Bridge Stella Maris Church, 7710 Hwy 42, Egg Harbor. 920.868.6113. 9am. A tournament style duplicate contract bridge. Operated by ACBLsanctioned Certified Director and Life Master Barbara

Piester; eligible players receive masterpoints. Solo players should contact Barbara Piester to arrange for a partner. $8/player. “Victorian Wedding Customs and Gowns” Alexander Noble House Museum, 4167 Hwy 42, Fish Creek. 920.868.2091. 10am-3pm. Turn back the clock and revisit memories of vintage gowns, wedding gifts, Victorian customs and more. Mahjongg Door County YMCA – Northern Door Program Center, 3866 Gibraltar Rd, Fish Creek. 920.868.3660. 10:30am-12:30pm. Social play for those who know the game. Open to all in the community. MAC Users Group Sister Bay/Liberty Grove Library, 2323 Mill Rd, Sister Bay. 920.854.2721. 1pm. Share MAC computer discoveries, quandaries and solutions. Second hour may feature a presentation. Contacts: Rich 920.370.7311 or Tony 920.495.2419

OUTDOOR

Community Garage Sale Throughout Baileys Harbor. 920.839.2366. Location maps can be picked up at the Visitor Center, the Town Hall and various businesses throughout town. Activities at Peninsula State Park Peninsula State Park, 9462 Shore Rd, Fish Creek. 920.868.3258. 10am-12pm. Eye Spy Nature Hunt. Drop by the Nature Center any time for this on-your-own treasure hunt, and create your own Eye Spy bottle to keep. Takes about 20 minutes. Activities at Newport State Park Newport State Park, 475 Cty Hwy NP, Ellison Bay. 920.854.2500. 11am. Monarch Watch. There are many larvae (caterpillars) in the monarch nursery. If any of the monarchs are ready to go, you can help release them. Meet at the Nature Center. 1pm. “Our Night Sky” Lecture Series. Lecture Three: Using Binoculars and Backyard Telescopes.

DVD presentation is part of “The Great Courses” series. There is a total of 12 weekly sessions, which will include a 30 minute lecture as well as discussions of the topic and of preserving our dark skies. Meet at the Nature Center.

TOURS

Glow Stick Zip Line Tour Egg Harbor Fun Park, 7340 Hwy 42, Egg Harbor. 920.854.9292. Fly through the night sky with glow sticks. Experience the thrill of a guided zip line tour at night. For all ages. Walk-ins welcome, reservations recommended. Activities at Ephraim Historical Foundation Ephraim Historical Foundation & Museums, 3060 Anderson Ln, Ephraim. 920.854.9688. 10:30am. Stroll through the village of Ephraim with knowledgeable guides. Approximately 90 minutes. Tickets include admission to the EHF Museums. $8/ adult. $5/student age 6-18. Free/child under 6 & EHF members. 10:30am. Classic Tram Tour. Learn Ephraim’s history from the comfort of an electric tram. Preregistration for tram tours recommended. Tickets include admission to the EHF Museums. $8/adult. $5/ student age 6-18. Free/child under 6 & EHF members. 10am-4pm. “Two Roads Diverged: Camp Meenahga & Camp Peninsular. Learn about two unique camps that once existed in Peninsula State Park. $5/adult. $3/ student age 6-18. Free/child under 6 & EHF members. Death’s Door Tours Ellison Bay Boat Ramp, 12033 Cedar Shore Rd, Ellison Bay. 920.559.6106. Travel around the bluffs of Death’s Door to the lighthouses on Plum and Pilot Islands. Learn about the history of the islands and lighthouses along with the ships that sank around them. Call for more info. $45/adults. $29/kids under 13. $105/hour, whole boat. Trolley Tours Door County Trolley Station, 8030 Hwy 42, Egg Harbor. 920.868.1100. 10am-3pm. Lighthouse Tour.


Our trolley will navigate you to Door County’s most treasured lighthouses. Top it off with a fabulous scenic lunch at Top Deck restaurant at Gordon Lodge. $64.95+tax/person. 11am3pm. Foodie Tour. Soak up the rich regional delicacies this peninsula has to offer. Get the behind-the-scenes look and participate in mouth watering tastings at 5 unique Door County culinary destinations. $57.95/person. 1pm. Beer and Burger Tour. Experience locally brewed craft beer at three unique beer destinations followed by an iconic burger at a Door County landmark. $55/person. 7pm. Haunted Pub Tour. Enjoy the “intoxicating” tales of the peninsula’s haunted pubs and taverns. The tour will spend approximately 30 minutes in each of the four establishments. This unique tour has been designed for young adults, and those of you who can relate to, and keep up with those “spirited” souls. $39/ person. 21 and over only. Glowstick Zip Line Tour Door County Adventure Center, 4497 Ploor Rd, Sturgeon Bay. 920.746.9539. Ascend the 35 foot tower and plunge into the darkness. Feel the adrenaline rush as you soar through the night air with glowsticks and starlight leading your way. Walk-ins welcome, reservations recommended. Book online or by phone. Corner of the Past Corner of the Past & Old Anderson House Museum, Hwy 57 & Country Ln, Sister Bay. 920.854.7680. 10am-3pm. Tour the 100+ year old furnished farmhouse that was brought over the ice from Marinette, WI in 1895. See other historic buildings filled with antiques, tools, photos and artifacts. Children participate in a scavenger hunt and other docent-led activities. Use of audio system included in admission. $5/ adults. Free/children. Lake, Paddle, & Pub Gravity Trails, 7340 Hwy 42, Egg Harbor. 920.854.9292. 5:30pm. Join Gravity Trails on a historical journey of North Bay shipwrecks followed by a sampling of local beers and cherry cider for the kids. The tour is a 1.5 hour clear bottom kayak sunset paddle which also includes photos. No reservations required.

SAT 8/6 FESTIVALS

LIVE MUSIC

THEATER

“A Midsummer Night’s Dream” Bjorklunden, 7590 Boynton Ln, Baileys Harbor. 920.839.1500. 5pm. Four runaway lovers find themselves in the middle of a dispute between the king and queen of the fairies while a group of rude mechanicals attempt to produce a play. A Door Shakespeare production. $29/adult. $19/student. $9/children under 12. “Madame Sherry” Third Avenue Playhouse, 239 N 3rd Ave, Sturgeon Bay. 920.743.1760. 7:30pm. Vintage 1910 musical comedy when a man-about-town’s secret life is about to be discovered by his stuffy benefactor, the ensuing amorous misadventures take him from his Manhattan dance studio to a yacht. $27/general admission. $10/student. “Grace and Glorie” Sturgeon Bay Jaycee Hall, 340 Jaycee Ct, Sturgeon Bay. 920.818.0816. 7:30pm. Lola DeVillers and Keri Grimsley star in this powerful Tom Ziegler drama about a feisty 90 year old cancer patient and her hospice worker. $15/ adults. $10/students. “The Full Monty” Peninsula Players, 4351 Peninsula Players Rd, Fish Creek. 920.868.3287. 8pm. A big pop-rock musical based on the Oscar-nominated film of the same name, this adult musical comedy has a very warm heart at the center of its raucous fun. $40-$46/tickets. “Lumberjacks in Love” Northern Sky Theater, Peninsula State Park Amphitheater, 10169 Shore Rd, Fish Creek. 920.854.6117. 8pm. The play by Fred Alley and James Kaplan, celebrates its 20th Anniversary. $22/ adult. $11/student. $6/ child 12 & under. $7 more/ ticket for reserved seats.

PERFORMANCE

Jazz II Concert Birch Creek Music Performance Center, 3821 Cty E, Egg Harbor. 920.868.3763. 7pm. Pre-show music in the Courtyard Gazebo. 7:30pm. “Swinging Through the Ages” in the Dutton Barn. $29/adult. $10/student. $6/ child. $34/premium seating. Washington Island Music Festival Trueblood Performing Arts Center, 870 Main Rd, Washington Island. 920.847.2528. 10am. Open Rehearsal. Stephenson’s “The Devil’s Tale”. Free. Birch Creek Jazz Ambassadors Corner of the Past & Old Anderson House Museum, Hwy 57 & Country Ln, Sister Bay. 920.868.3763. 10am-12pm. Perform during the Sister Bay farm market. Peninsula Music Festival Door Community Auditorium, 3924 Hwy 42, Fish Creek. 920.854.4060. 7:30pm. Alexander Sevastian, accordion. Pieces by Massenet, Galliano, Ticheli, Dvorak, Weber, Gindin & Enescu. $35-$65/ticket. $10/student or child.

GALLERIES

Artist Demo and Reception Plum Bottom Pottery & Gallery, 4999 Plum Bottom Rd, Egg Harbor. 920.743.2819. 4-5pm. Artist Demonstrations. Erin Nolan will demonstrate wood block techniques, and Gail McCoy will demonstrate her paper collage process. 4-7pm. Artist Reception. New paintings by Mary White and Nik Garvoille. Enjoy Von Stiehl wine, light snacks and Door County coffee. Stained Glass Exhibition Angela Lensch Gallery, 7653 Highway 42, Egg Harbor. 920.868.5088. 10am-5pm. Julie Rutherford will spend the day at the gallery debuting her latest collection. Meet the Artist Fine Line Designs Gallery, 10376 Hwy 42, Ephraim. 920.854.4343. 10am-5pm. Jewelry artist Emilie Shapiro will be on site for a trunk show. Opening Reception Edgewood Orchard Galleries, 4140 Peninsula Players Rd, Fish Creek. 920.868.3579. 4-7pm. Exhibit V features painters Rebecca Korth, William A. Suys, Jr., and Tal Walton, jewelry designs by Ed Levin, and sculpture by C.T. Whitehouse.

INDOOR

Church Festival Church of the Precious Blood, County C and County N, Brussels. 920.824.5061. 11am. High mass. Annual Festival honoring Saint Mary the Virgin. A Belgian themed meal follows as well as a bake sale and bazaar. Annual Pancake Breakfast Scholarship Fundraiser Ephraim Village Hall, 9996 Hwy 42, Ephraim. 7:30-11am. Annual pancake breakfast sponsored by the Ephraim Men’s Club to raise money for Northern Door students’ scholarships. Door prizes. $10/adults. $6/children. “Victorian Wedding Customs and Gowns” Alexander Noble House Museum, 4167 Hwy 42, Fish Creek. 920.868.2091. 10am-3pm. Turn back the clock and revisit memories of vintage gowns, wedding gifts, Victorian customs and more.

LEGACY NATURE PRESERVE HIKE, INSECT SAFARI In August, Crossroads at Big Creek in Sturgeon Bay continues to nurture learners of all ages by offering free family programs at 10 am, Mondays through Thursdays. Summer educator Joan Wilkie and naturalist Joel Kaminski will share the teaching responsibilities. Below are dates and topics for the family programs for the week. On Aug. 8, study the amazing journey of migrating birds, then discuss the insects that also take enormous flights, like the monarch butterfly during the “Fantastic Flyers” program. On Aug. 10, go on an “Insect Safari,” and hike into the fields and forests with collecting nets to find the insects and their hiding places. These one-hour family programs, held rain or shine, are free and open to the public. Programs are held at the Collins Learning Center. Pre-registration is not required but if a large group will be attending, Crossroads appreciates advanced notice by calling 920.746.5895. Summer programs are made possible with a grant from the MMG Foundation. The Collins Learning Center, located at 2141 Michigan just east of the roundabout, is open during the summer from noon to 3 pm daily and during scheduled activities. The Door County Land Trust will host a free “Farm to Nature Preserve” hike on Aug. 6, 9 – 11 am. The 90-acre Legacy Nature Preserve contains an old field, a white cedar wetland, meandering stream and clay bluff bordering more than one-half mile of Lake Michigan. In August, fields which were once farmed will be awash with tall grasses and young woody plants. This is a good time to walk an easy-to-moderate trail while experienced hike leaders share their knowledge of the natural transition from farm to nature preserve. Hikers will find the two-mile trail easy to walk, with natural wonders for kids of all ages to enjoy. The hike is free, no registration required. Register in advance to receive a free copy of “A Guide to the Places We Protect.” The hike takes place at the Legacy Nature Preserve, 1188 South Lake Michigan Drive, Sturgeon Bay. For more information, call 920.746.1359 or explore@ doorcountylandtrust.org. Join a Ridges Sanctuary naturalist on Aug. 7 at 2 pm for a guided hike through the varied landscape of Appel’s Bluff. Acquired by The Ridges in 2015, this 67-acre tract features dense lowland cedar forest with ephemeral ponds and wetlands in the southern portion and upland forests of maple and birch in the middle. This diversity provides opportunities to see a variety of habitats during a moderate-to-easy hike. Hikers should meet at The Ridges Cook-Albert Fuller Nature Center. Wear good hiking boots. The cost is $5 for Ridges members, $8 for the general public, and free for children under 18. For more information, visit RidgesSanctuary.org or call 920.839.2802.

OUTDOOR

31st Annual Quality Meat Auction John Miles County Park, 812 N 14th Ave, Sturgeon Bay. 920.493.7448. 6pm Registration. 7pm Auction. Support Door County Youth by bidding and purchasing their animal projects: beef, poultry, hogs, lambs & rabbits. 93% of the sale goes directly back to the kids. Open to the public. Community Garage Sale Throughout Baileys Harbor. 920.839.2366. Location maps can be picked up at the Visitor Center, the Town Hall and various businesses throughout town. Activities at Peninsula State Park Peninsula State Park, 9462 Shore Rd, Fish Creek. 920.868.3258. 9-9:30am. Mapping Peninsula. Meet at Nicolet Shelter Building. Program will feature the people and events behind names like Weborg, Game Farm Hill, and Sven’s Bluff. Free Peninsula history checklists for participants. Geared for adults and older youth. 11-11:45am. Butterfly Magic. Stories, songs and science about our favorite pollinators. In the Nature Center. Activities at Newport State Park Newport State Park, 475 Cty Hwy NP, Ellison Bay. 920.854.2500. 9-10:30am. Navigation Skills. Join park naturalists and guest instructor Ken Foszcz and learn about how

navigation was done in early days, outdoor skills, how to read a map and correctly use a compass. Start in the Nature Center with outdoor activities to follow. 12-4pm. Happy Birthday Smokey Bear. Celebrate the 72nd birthday of America’s most loved fire fighter. There will be games, birthday cake and a chance to meet Smokey himself! The true story of Smokey Bear will be read throughout the afternoon. In the Nature Center. Farmers Market & Heritage Program Corner of the Past & Old Anderson House Museum, Hwy 57 & Country Ln, Sister Bay. 920.854.7680. 8am-12pm. Fresh locally grown vegetables and flowers, plus a wide variety of prepared foods from local certified kitchens. Heritage Program: Dianne Saron, pastels. Farmers Market Market Square, 421 Michigan St, Sturgeon Bay. 920.746.2912. 8:30am-12pm. Large assortment of locally grown produce as well as foods and baked goods. Hand crafted items. Market accepts FoodShare benefits. Guided Nature Preserve Hike Legacy Nature Preserve, 1188 South Lake Michigan Drive, Sturgeon Bay. 920.746.1359. 9-11am. The 90-acre Legacy Nature Preserve contains an old field, a white cedar wetland, meandering stream and

clay bluff bordering over 1/2 mile of Lake Michigan. Walk an easy-to-moderate trail as experienced hike leaders share their knowledge of the natural transition from farm to nature preserve. Two mile trail with natural wonders for kids of all ages to enjoy. Free, no registration required. Register in advance to receive a free copy of “A Guide to the Places We Protect.” For more information, contact the Door County Land Trust. Docent-Led Hikes The Clearing, 12171 Garrett Bay Rd, Ellison Bay. 920.854.4088. 1pm. The terrain is a bit rugged in places, and sturdy walking shoes are highly recommended. The 2-hour walking tours leave from the Jens Jensen Visitor Center.

SPORTS

Pro Mini Golf Tournament Red Putter, 10404 Water St, Ephraim. 920.854.5114. 8am. Sign in. 9am. Tournament play. Players must qualify with a round under par. 3 rounds of golf are played followed by lunch. $30 entry fee. 1st place wins a trophy, $2000 cash, and the Red Jacket. DC Destroyers Baileys Harbor Recreation Park, 2623 Summit Rd, Baileys Harbor. 920.609.7615. 3pm. Destroyers vs. Milwaukee County Chargers. $8/tickets.

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Tim Bell and the Alpiners Hof Restaurant at the Alpine Resort, 7715 Alpine Rd, Egg Harbor. 920.868.3000. 6:30-7:45pm & 8:45pm. Live music. Josh Gregory & Friends Kick Coffee, 148 N. 3rd Ave., Sturgeon Bay. 920.746.1122. 9am-12pm. Outside in the Kick-Back Garden. Weather permitting; Sunday morning if it rains. Bedrock Acoustic Song Circle Corner of the Past & Old Anderson House Museum, Hwy 57 & Country Ln, Sister Bay. 920.854.7680. 10am. During the Sister Bay Farmer’s Market. Traditional bluegrass instruments only. Modern Day Drifters Lakeside Park, Hwy 57, Jacksonport. 920.823.2288. 12-4pm. Classic rock and country. Part of Cherryfest. The Outpatients von Stiehl Winery, 115 Navarino St, Algoma. 920.487.5208. 12:30-4pm. Enjoy acoustic music matched with cuisine by Skaliwags. Free admission. Jamie Fletcher Vino! Vino! Wine Bar at Stone’s Throw Winery, 3382 Cty Rd E, Egg Harbor. 920.839.9660. 1-5pm. Live jazz on the patio. Jaimie Shores Stone Harbor Restaurant & Pub, 107 N 1st St, Sturgeon Bay. 920.746.0700. 3-7pm. Steel drum on the patio. Free. Mark Hendee Florian II Lakeshore Supper Club, 8048 Hwy 57, Baileys Harbor. 920.839.2361. 5pm. Pianist. The Charmless Few Sonny’s Pizzeria, 129 N Madison, Sturgeon Bay. 920.743.2300. 5-9pm. Rock. Tony Brown & the 608 Riddim Section Waterfront Park Main Stage, 10693 N Bay Shore Dr/Hwy 42, Sister Bay. 6-9pm. R&B, soul rock. Bring your own chair, blanket or beach towel and snag a spot. Free. Modern Day Drifters Tranquil Timbers Campground, 3668 Grondin Rd, Sturgeon Bay. 920.743.7115. 7-10pm. Classic rock and country. Lisa Floer Tin Plate, 4849 Glidden Drive, Valmy. 920.818.1177. 7-9pm. Music for all ages. Folk & blues rock. Jim Counter Kitty O’Reilly’s Irish Pub, 59 E Oak St, Sturgeon Bay. 920.743.7441. 7pm. Rock, R&B. Free. Danami and the Blue Door County Brewing Company, 2434 Cty F, Baileys Harbor. 920.839.1515. 7-9pm. Hip hop. Free. Matt Wahl Gibraltar Grill, 3993 Main St, Fish Creek. 920.868.4745. 7:30pm. Playing humorous folk on guitar. Burgundy Ties The Garage at Husby’s, 400 Maple Dr, Sister Bay. 920.854.2624. 8-11pm. Original music. Adam Trask Stone Harbor Restaurant & Pub, 107 N 1st St, Sturgeon Bay. 920.746.0700. 8:30pm. Rock. Free. Shower’oke’ Peninsula Pub, 7899 Cty A, Baileys Harbor. 920.839.9001.

9pm. No excuses karaoke with DJ Hope Reyes. Karaoke Carrington Pub at the Landmark Resort, 7643 Hillside Rd, Egg Harbor. 920.868.3205. 9pm. Hosted by Cheryl Simon. R. Thomas Kofler Wave Pointe Marina & Resort, 3600 Cty Rd CC, Sturgeon Bay. 920.824.5440. 9pm. Various rock. Free. Lil’ Davy Max Band Mojo Rosa’s, 7778 Hwy 42, Egg Harbor. 920.868.3247. 9:30pm. Vintage Chicago blues. Free.

DOORCOUNTYPULSE.COM  AUGUST 5–12/2016 • v22i32  PENINSULA PULSE

Czech Fest/Kolache Fest Agricultural Heritage & Resources Farm, N2251 Hwy 42, Kewaunee. 920.388.0604. The largest Czech Festival in Northeastern Wisconsin. Enjoy 2 days of Czech food, Kolache baking demonstrations, Kolache sales, Czech music, beer gardens, Czech vendors and displays. Polka Mass and Czech dinner on Sunday. Visit www. agriculturalheritage.org for more information. Scandinavian Dance Festival Throughout Washington Island. 920.847.2179. Scandinavian Kaffe and Stavkrike open house at Trinity Lutheran Church, Scandinavian brunch at Bethel Church, dance festival in the evening and worship service at Trinity Lutheran Church. Call or visit www. washingtonisland-wi.com for more information. Door County Fair John Miles County Park, 812 N 14th Ave, Sturgeon Bay. 920.746.7126. Carnival rides, food stands, 4-H animal barns, grandstand events, kids and family tents. Visit www.doorcountyfair.com for more information.

Sturgeon Bay Maritime Week Throughout Sturgeon Bay. 920.743.5958. “A Salute to the U.S. Coast Guard.” A variety of maritime events happening in various places around Sturgeon Bay. Call or visit www.dcmm. org for more information. Cherry Fest Lakeside Park, Hwy 57, Jacksonport. 920.823.2288. 7am-4pm. Historical display, car show, fine arts & crafts, food, live music, family fun and more. Visit www.jacksonport.net for more information.

OUTDOOR

CELEBRATING 20 YEARS • 1996–2016

HAPPENINGS


CELEBRATING 20 YEARS • 1996–201 PENINSULA PULSE  AUGUST 5–12/2016 • v22i32  DOORCOUNTYPULSE.COM

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HAPPENINGS TOURS

Glow Stick Zip Line Tour Egg Harbor Fun Park, 7340 Hwy 42, Egg Harbor. 920.854.9292. Fly through the night sky with glow sticks. Experience the thrill of a guided zip line tour at night. For all ages. Walk-ins welcome, reservations recommended. Activities at Ephraim Historical Foundation Ephraim Historical Foundation & Museums, 3060 Anderson Ln, Ephraim. 920.854.9688. 10:30am. Stroll through the village of Ephraim with knowledgeable guides. Approximately 90 minutes. Tickets include admission to the EHF Museums. $8/ adult. $5/student age 6-18. Free/child under 6 & EHF members. 10:30am. Classic Tram Tour. Learn Ephraim’s history from the comfort of an electric tram. Pre-registration for tram tours recommended. Tickets include admission to the EHF Museums. $8/adult. $5/student age 6-18. Free/ child under 6 & EHF members. 10am-4pm. “Two Roads Diverged: Camp Meenahga & Camp Peninsular. Learn about two unique camps that once existed in Peninsula State Park. $5/adult. $3/ student age 6-18. Free/child under 6 & EHF members. Glowstick Zip Line Tour Door County Adventure Center, 4497 Ploor Rd, Sturgeon Bay. 920.746.9539. Ascend the 35 foot tower and plunge into the darkness. Feel the adrenaline rush as you soar through the night air with glowsticks and starlight leading your way. Walk-ins welcome, reservations recommended. Book online or by phone. Walking Tours of Historic Fish Creek Old Gibraltar Town Hall, 4176 Maple St, Fish Creek. 920.868.2091. 10am. Our docent will show and tell you about 23 interesting histories of the oldest town buildings. Corner of the Past Corner of the Past & Old Anderson House Museum, Hwy 57 & Country Ln, Sister Bay. 920.854.7680. 10am-3pm. Tour the 100+ year old furnished farmhouse that was brought over the ice from Marinette, WI in 1895. See other historic buildings filled with antiques, tools, photos and artifacts. Children participate in a scavenger hunt and other docent-led activities. Use of audio system included in admission. $5/ adults. Free/children. Haunted Trolley Pub Crawl Door County Trolley Station, 8030 Hwy 42, Egg Harbor. 920.868.1100. 7pm. This unique haunted tavern tour will get you up close to the “spirits” of Door County. You’ll enjoy the “intoxicating” tales of the peninsula’s haunted pubs and taverns. The Trolley tour will spend approximately 30 minutes in each of the four establishments. This

unique Trolley Tour has been designed for young adults, and those of you who can relate to, and keep up with those “spirited” souls. $39/ person. 21 and over only.

SUN 8/7 FESTIVALS

Czech Fest/Kolache Fest Agricultural Heritage & Resources Farm, N2251 Hwy 42, Kewaunee. 920.388.0604. The largest Czech Festival in Northeastern Wisconsin. Enjoy 2 days of Czech food, Kolache baking demonstrations, Kolache sales, Czech music, beer gardens, Czech vendors and displays. Polka Mass and Czech dinner on Sunday. Visit www. agriculturalheritage.org for more information. Door County Fair John Miles County Park, 812 N 14th Ave, Sturgeon Bay. 920.746.7126. Carnival rides, food stands, 4-H animal barns, grandstand events, kids and family tents. Visit www.doorcountyfair.com for more information. Sturgeon Bay Maritime Week Throughout Sturgeon Bay. 920.743.5958. “A Salute to the U.S. Coast Guard.” A variety of maritime events happening in various places around Sturgeon Bay. Call or visit www.dcmm. org for more information.

LIVE MUSIC

Mark Hendee The Garage at Husby’s, 400 Maple Dr, Sister Bay. 920.854.2624. 12pm. Original music. Jeanne Kuhns w/Small Forest MacReady Artisan Bread Company, 7828 Hwy 42, Egg Harbor. 920.495.2928. 12:30-2:30pm. Folk. Jim Counter Simon Creek Vineyard & Winery, 5896 Bochek Rd, Carlsville. 920.746.9307. 1-5pm. Live music. Part of the Music on the Deck series. Katie Dahl Door County Brewing Company, 2434 Cty F, Baileys Harbor. 920.839.1515. 1pm. Singer/ songwriter. Free. SPICE Stone Harbor Restaurant & Pub, 107 N 1st St, Sturgeon Bay. 920.746.0700. 2-6pm. Playing all your favorite oldies but goodies on the patio. Free. Ryan Thompson Brilliant Stranger Ecotique, 7821 Hwy 42, Egg Harbor. 920.366.0301. 2:30-5pm. Plays Dale Kumbalek’s handmade guitars on the porch of the purple building. Ben Larson Fred & Fuzzy’s Waterfront Bar & Grill, 360 Little Sister Rd, Sister Bay. 920.854.6699. 3-7pm. Live music.

Modern Day Drifters Wave Pointe Marina & Resort, 3600 Cty Rd CC, Sturgeon Bay. 920.824.5440. 3-7pm. Country. Free. Scotty Cash Kitty O’Reilly’s Irish Pub, 59 E Oak St, Sturgeon Bay. 920.743.7441. 6pm. Country swamp grass. Free. David Hatch & Lynn Gudmundsen Sister Bay Bowl, 504 N Bayshore Dr, Sister Bay. 920.854.2841. 6-8pm. Beatles to Beethoven, violin, guitar, tight vocal harmonies. Dailey & Vincent Peg Egan Performing Arts Center, 7840 Church St, Egg Harbor. 920.493.5979. 7pm. Grammy Award nomination for Best Country Performance by a Duo or Group with Vocals, and won the 2011 Dove Award for Best Bluegrass Album with “Singing From the Heart.” Lawn chairs and carry-in’s allowed. Free. Tim Grimm & Carolyn Carter Camp David, 3927 Cty F, Fish Creek. 920.839.2981. 7pm. Original mountain ballads and folk music from the Ozarks and the Midwest. Mike Malone Mojo Rosa’s, 7778 Hwy 42, Egg Harbor. 920.868.3247. 7pm. Jazz. Cookee Gibraltar Grill, 3993 Main St, Fish Creek. 920.868.4745. 7:30pm. Folk and fun timeless music.

THEATER

“Madame Sherry” Third Avenue Playhouse, 239 N 3rd Ave, Sturgeon Bay. 920.743.1760. 2pm. Vintage 1910 musical comedy when a manabout-town’s secret life is about to be discovered by his stuffy benefactor, the ensuing amorous misadventures take him from his Manhattan dance studio to a yacht. $27/general admission. $10/student. “Grace and Glorie” Sturgeon Bay Jaycee Hall, 340 Jaycee Ct, Sturgeon Bay. 920.818.0816. 2pm. Lola DeVillers and Keri Grimsley star in this powerful Tom Ziegler drama about a feisty 90 year old cancer patient and her hospice worker. $15/ adults. $10/students. “The Full Monty” Peninsula Players, 4351 Peninsula Players Rd, Fish Creek. 920.868.3287. 7:30pm. A big pop-rock musical based on the Oscar-nominated film of the same name, this adult musical comedy has a very warm heart at the center of its raucous fun. $40-$46/tickets.

PERFORMANCE

Washington Island Music Festival Trueblood Performing Arts Center, 870 Main Rd, Washington Island. 920.847.2528. 4:30pm. The Devil’s Tale.

Co-production with Island Players. Pieces by Haydn, Whitacre, Carter, Stephenson.

GALLERIES

Meet the Artist Fine Line Designs Gallery, 10376 Hwy 42, Ephraim. 920.854.4343. 10am-5pm. Jewelry artist Emilie Shapiro will be on site for a trunk show.

INDOOR

SingAlong Ephraim Village Hall, 9996 Hwy 42, Ephraim. 920.854.9688. 7:30pm. An evening of music, song, and laughter for people of all ages. Free.

OUTDOOR

Activities at Peninsula State Park Peninsula State Park, 9462 Shore Rd, Fish Creek. 920.868.3258. 9-9:45am. Life on the Ledge. Meet at the Nature Center, stroll Hidden Bluff Trail to learn about the plants and bluffs of Peninsula State Park. Easy walking, about 1/2 mile. 10:30am-1pm. Open Art in the Nature Center. An assortment of art projects will be available. Farmers Market Baileys Harbor Town Hall, 2392 Cty F, Baileys Harbor. 920.839.2366. 9am-1pm. Browse locally made & grown products from Door County farmers & artisans featuring everything from produce to handmade clothing. Come hungry and grab lunch and dessert from one of our food vendors with ready to eat items. Rain or shine. Live music by David Hatch & Lynn Gudmundsen starts at 11am. Farmers Market Flying Pig, N6975 Hwy 42, Algoma. 920.487.9902. 10am-3pm. Organic locally grown fruits, veggies, herbs, honey, eggs, meat, preserves, bread and more. Docent-Led Hikes The Clearing, 12171 Garrett Bay Rd, Ellison Bay. 920.854.4088. 1pm. The terrain is a bit rugged in places, and sturdy walking shoes are highly recommended. The 2-hour walking tours leave from the Jens Jensen Visitor Center. Guided Appel’s Bluff Hike Ridges Sanctuary – CookAlbert Fuller Center, 8166 Hwy 57, Baileys Harbor. 920.839.2802. 2pm. Meet at the Ridges Nature Center. $5/ members, $8/adults, Free/18+under.

SPORTS

Door County League Baseball Throughout Door County. 920.743.4456. All games at 1:30pm. Egg Harbor @ Institute. West Jacksonport @ Kolberg. Maplewood @ Sister Bay. Washington Island @ Baileys Harbor.

Online Only Door County WI Land Auction Ends Aug 11th, 2016 6PM S Shiloh Rd, Sturgeon Bay, WI 54235

• 41.17+/- Total acres • 20+/- Acres of Ag ground & 13+/- acres of Woods • Bear Creek running through • Great Building Site • Lake Michigan approx. 1 mile away • Potential Organic Farmland • Great Hunting & Recreational Land

Bloody Mary & Brunch Tour Door County Trolley Station, 8030 Hwy 42, Egg Harbor. 920.868.1100. 10am. Trolley guests will enjoy three unique stops for those popular Sunday morning cocktails, Bloody Mary’s & Mimosa’s. This tour also includes a traditional Sunday Brunch at the rustic Log Den restaurant. $57.95/ adults. $52.95/children.

MON 8/8 FESTIVALS

Sturgeon Bay Maritime Week Throughout Sturgeon Bay. 920.743.5958. “A Salute to the U.S. Coast Guard.” A variety of maritime events happening in various places around Sturgeon Bay. Call or visit www.dcmm. org for more information.

LIVE MUSIC

Matt Endres Band Hof Restaurant at the Alpine Resort, 7715 Alpine Rd, Egg Harbor. 920.868.3000. 6:30-7:45pm & 8:45pm. Live music. Peninsula Ukulele Club The Cookery Restaurant & Wine Bar, 4135 Hwy 42, Fish Creek. 920.868.3634. 3:30-5:30pm. Open practice/performance. Cheryl Murphy White Gull Inn, 4225 Main St, Fish Creek. 920.868.3517. 5-8pm. Playing the harp during dinner. Nick Hoover The Garage at Husby’s, 400 Maple Dr, Sister Bay. 920.854.2624. 7pm. Live music. Aurora Baer The Garage at Husby’s, 400 Maple Dr, Sister Bay. 920.854.2624. 8-11pm. Acoustic blues, folk and jazz singer/songwriter. Derrick Lee Brick Lot Pub, 253 North 3rd Ave, Sturgeon Bay. 920.743.9339. 9pm. Spinning all the latest hits and electronic music. Drink specials for everyone in the service industry.

THEATER

“Julius Caesar” Bjorklunden, 7590 Boynton Ln, Baileys Harbor. 920.839.1500. 6:30 pm. “Will-in-theWoods”. Lively discussion and interactive lessons including creating your very own folio page. Informal and inviting. Appropriate for all ages. Free. 8pm. Door Shakespeare presents “Julius Caesar”. $29/ adult. $19/student. $9/ Children under 12. “Doctor! Doctor!” Northern Sky Theater, Peninsula State Park Amphitheater, 10169 Shore Rd, Fish Creek. 920.854.6117. 6pm. The world premiere of a play, in which a retiring small town physician recruits his young big city nephew to take over his practice. Music, lyrics and book by Matt Zembrowski. $22/ adult. $11/student. $6/ child 12 & under. $7 more/ ticket for reserved seats. “No Bones About It” Northern Sky Theater, Peninsula State Park Amphitheater, 10169 Shore Rd, Fish Creek. 920.854.6117. 8:30pm. A play set in the world of competitive barbecue. $22/adult. $11/ student. $6/child 12 & under. $7 more/ticket for reserved seats.

GALLERIES

• Rolling Terrain

Wheel Throwing Demonstration TR Pottery, 4133 Main St, Fish Creek. 920.868.1024. 2-3pm. Tony will be making pots and will be available to talk about his work.

RWA Travis Hamele #2224-052 & Dave Bell #2679 10% Buyer’s Fee. See Website for Additional Terms. In conjunction with Dave Bell Auctions LLC

608-742-5000

TOURS

INDOOR

HameleAuctions.com

Ballroom Dancing Sturgeon Bay Jaycee Hall, 340 Jaycee Ct, Sturgeon

Bay. 920.306.4576. 7pm. Learn a variety of Ballroom Dance Styles, tonight features East Coast Swing dancing. No partner required, beginners welcome. $10/ person at the door. 8pm. Free open dancing. Community Playgroup Sturgeon Bay Moravian Church, 323 S 5th Ave, Sturgeon Bay. 920.743.6218. 10:30-11:30am. Come to meet and have fun with other parents and young children. All families welcome.

OUTDOOR

Activities at Peninsula State Park Peninsula State Park, 9462 Shore Rd, Fish Creek. 920.868.3258. 11-11:30am. Tower BINGO. Play a fast-paced game of BINGO while learning about the park’s two towers. Prizes. In the Nature Center. Family Program Crossroads at Big Creek, 2041 Michigan St, Sturgeon Bay. 920.746.5895. 10am. Fantastic Flyers. Study the astounding journeys of migrating birds and then explore insects which also make amazing flights. Meet at the Collins Learning Center. Free and open to the public.

TOURS

Trolley Tours Door County Trolley Station, 8030 Hwy 42, Egg Harbor. 920.868.1100. 10am-3pm. Lighthouse Tour. Our trolley will navigate you to Door County’s most treasured lighthouses. Top it off with a fabulous scenic lunch at Top Deck restaurant at Gordon Lodge. $64.95+tax/person. 11am3pm. Foodie Tour. Soak up the rich regional delicacies this peninsula has to offer. Get the behind-the-scenes look and participate in mouth watering tastings at 5 unique Door County culinary destinations. $57.95/person.

TUE 8/9 FESTIVALS

Sturgeon Bay Maritime Week Throughout Sturgeon Bay. 920.743.5958. “A Salute to the U.S. Coast Guard.” A variety of maritime events happening in various places around Sturgeon Bay. Call or visit www.dcmm. org for more information.

LIVE MUSIC

Katie Dahl White Gull Inn, 4225 Main St, Fish Creek. 920.868.3517. 5-8pm. Original folk music over dinner. Frank Maloney Sister Bay Bowl, 504 N Bayshore Dr, Sister Bay. 920.854.2841. 6pm. Throwback country. Matt Endres Band Hof Restaurant at the Alpine Resort, 7715 Alpine Rd, Egg Harbor. 920.868.3000. 6:30-7:45pm. Live music. Lynn Gudmundsen & David Hatch Fred & Fuzzy’s Waterfront Bar & Grill, 360 Little Sister Rd, Sister Bay. 920.854.6699. 7-10pm. Beatles to Beethoven, violin, guitar, tight vocal harmonies. Aurora Baer The Garage at Husby’s, 400 Maple Dr, Sister Bay. 920.854.2624. 8-11pm. Acoustic blues, folk and jazz singer/songwriter. Open Mic Waterfront Mary’s Bar & Grill at Beach Harbor Resort, 3662 N Duluth Ave, Sturgeon Bay. 920.743.3191. 9pm. Live music.

THEATER

“A Midsummer Night’s Dream” Bjorklunden, 7590 Boynton Ln, Baileys Harbor. 920.839.1500. 6:30 pm. “Will-in-the-


(1) Matthew Scott

(2) Madame Sherry

Campbell, Harter Clingman and Adrian Aguilar in the Peninsula Players production of The Full Monty. Photo by Len Villano.

Photo by Ed DiMaio.

PEN PLAYERS’ LATEST MUSICAL, Q&A AT TAP (1) Peninsula Players Theatre, in conjunction with its production of with the lively, pop-rock musical The Full Monty, will host a pre-show seminar, “How to Produce a Musical.” Greg Vinkler, Peninsula Players artistic director and director of The Full Monty, and Valerie Maze, music director, will host a discussion before the Aug. 5 performance, starting at 6:30 pm in the theater. Tickets to the performances are available; admission to the pre-show seminar is free.

The Full Monty performs through Aug. 14 and contains adult themes, language and nudity. Vinkler has directed several musicals at Peninsula Players including Chicago, A Little Night Music and Sunday in the Park with George. Vinkler made his Broadway debut as Doc in the Tony Award-winning revival of the musical, West Side Story and is a veteran stage performer and director. Vinkler has directed 28 productions at Peninsula Players and has received three Joseph Jefferson Awards (nominated 12 times), two Artisan Awards and an After Dark Award. Maze served as assistant conductor on The King and I, Carousel, The Sound of Music, Oklahoma! and Showboat at Lyric Opera of Chicago as well as assistant conductor and dance pianist for several operas. Peninsula Players continues to offer theater tours and post-show discussions as listed in the

program and website. Contact the Box Office at 920.868.3287 for more information on free seminars, tours or to purchase tickets.

(2) Third Avenue Playhouse’s (TAP) summer/

fall season continues with the merry and madcap musical comedy, Madame Sherry, now through Sept. 3. “I got a chance to step in on the Madame Sherry first read-through/sing-through,” said TAP staff member Amy Ensign, “and I couldn’t stop smiling all day.” When a man-about-town’s secret life is about to be discovered by his stuffy benefactor, the ensuing amorous misadventures take him from his Manhattan dance studio to a yacht. It’s music and merriment on the high “C’s” in a show which was one of the iconic hits of its era, but which hasn’t been seen in a professional production in more than 30 years.

CELEBRATING 20 YEARS • 1996–2016

THEATER & PERFORMANCE

TAP’s own James Valcq has put a bit of 21st Century polish on the delightful gem by Otto Harbach and Karl Hoschna. With musical direction by popular Milwaukee pianist/ performer Jack Forbes Wilson, the comical cast of characters includes Debra Babich, Anna Mae Beyer, Drew Brhel, Anna Cline, Adam Estes, Kaleigh Rae Gamaché, Ryan Patrick Shaw and Kelsey Wang. Singing and dancing alongside his talented crew, Valcq also directs. The cast, production, and creative team of Madame Sherry will be on hand Aug. 7, 14, 21 & 28, immediately after 2 pm matinee performances to answer questions in these informal talk-back sessions. Valcq will lead the sessions. Performances will be held at 7:30 pm Wednesday through Saturday, and at 2 pm on Sunday. A special Tuesday evening performance will be held on Aug. 30. For more information visit thirdavenueplayhouse.com.

HAPPENINGS

PERFORMANCE

GALLERIES

Pottery Demonstration Ellison Bay Pottery, 12156 Garret Bay Rd, Ellison Bay. 920.854.5049. 10am-12pm. Come see how our pottery is made. Free.

INDOOR

“Victorian Wedding Customs and Gowns” Alexander Noble House Museum, 4167 Hwy 42, Fish Creek. 920.868.2091. 10am-3pm. Turn back the clock and revisit memories of vintage gowns, wedding gifts, Victorian customs and more. Duplicate Contract Bridge Stella Maris Church, 7710 Hwy 42, Egg Harbor. 920.868.6113. 12pm. A tournament style duplicate contract bridge. Operated by ACBLsanctioned Certified Director and Life Master Barbara Piester; eligible players receive masterpoints. Solo players should contact Barbara Piester to arrange for a partner. $8/player. Genealogical Research Assistance Sister Bay/Liberty Grove Library, 2323 Mill Rd, Sister Bay. 920.854.2721. 1-4pm. The Northern Door Genealogical Society representatives will help patrons do genealogical research. Just stop in. Readers Rampant Sister Bay/Liberty Grove Library, 2323 Mill Rd, Sister Bay. 920.854.2721.

2:30pm. “Lisette’s List” by Susan Vreeland will be discussed in the Community Room. Listeners and participants welcome. Light refreshments served.

OUTDOOR

Activities at Peninsula State Park Peninsula State Park, 9462 Shore Rd, Fish Creek. 920.868.3258. 10-11am. Bug Woman. Welcome DNR Forest Entomologist, Linda Williams at the Nature Center. Sweep a meadow, then create a six-legged critter to keep. Farmers Market Lakeside Park, Hwy 57, Jacksonport. 920.823.2288. 9am-1pm. Do your shopping locally with a wide variety of local farm products and hand crafts. Blacksmith Demonstration Heritage Village at Big Creek, 2041 Michigan St, Sturgeon Bay. 920.421.2332. 1-3pm. Observe the skills in a historic setting. Wares are available for purchase.

TOURS

Activities at Ephraim Historical Foundation Ephraim Historical Foundation & Museums, 3060 Anderson Ln, Ephraim. 920.854.9688. 10:30am. Classic Tram Tour. Learn Ephraim’s history from the comfort of an electric tram. 1:30pm Moravian Tram Tour. Learn about the heritage of the Moravian faith on this unique tour. Pre-registration for tram tours recommended. Tickets include admission to the EHF Museums. $8/ adult. $5/student age 6-18. Free/child under 6 & EHF members. 10am4pm. “Two Roads Diverged:

Camp Meenahga & Camp Peninsular. Learn about two unique camps that once existed in Peninsula State Park. $5/adult. $3/ student age 6-18. Free/child under 6 & EHF members. Lakeside Shipwreck Tours Bues Point Boat Ramp, Bues Point Rd, Baileys Harbor. 920.559.6106. Get a unique perspective on the Cana Island and Birdcage Lighthouses, learn a little about their history, and get amazing views of the ships that sank around them. Call for more info. $45/adults. $29/kids under 13. $105/hour, whole boat. Trolley Tours Door County Trolley Station, 8030 Hwy 42, Egg Harbor. 920.868.1100. 10am-3pm. Lighthouse Tour. Our trolley will navigate you to Door County’s most treasured lighthouses. Top it off with a fabulous scenic lunch at Top Deck restaurant at Gordon Lodge. $64.95+tax/person. 1pm. Beer and Burger Tour. Experience locally brewed craft beer at three unique beer destinations followed by an iconic burger at a Door County landmark. $55/person. 7pm. Haunted Pub Tour. Enjoy the “intoxicating” tales of the peninsula’s haunted pubs and taverns. The tour will spend approximately 30 minutes in each of the four establishments. This tour has been designed for young adults, and those of you who can relate to, and keep up with those “spirited” souls. $39/person. 21 and over only. Corner of the Past Corner of the Past & Old Anderson House Museum, Hwy 57 & Country Ln, Sister Bay. 920.854.7680. 10am-3pm. Tour the 100+ year old furnished farmhouse

that was brought over the ice from Marinette, WI in 1895. See other historic buildings filled with antiques, tools, photos and artifacts. Children participate in a scavenger hunt and other docent-led activities. Use of audio system included in admission. $5/ adults. Free/children.

WED 8/10 FESTIVALS

Sturgeon Bay Maritime Week Throughout Sturgeon Bay. 920.743.5958. “A Salute to the U.S. Coast Guard.” A variety of maritime events happening in various places around Sturgeon Bay. Call or visit www.dcmm. org for more information.

LIVE MUSIC

Matt Endres Band Hof Restaurant at the Alpine Resort, 7715 Alpine Rd, Egg Harbor. 920.868.3000. 6:30-7:45pm & 8:45pm. Live music. Birch Creek Jazz Ambassadors Waterfront Park Main Stage, 10693 N Bay Shore Dr/Hwy 42, Sister Bay. 3-5pm. Student jazz musicians. Bring a chair or blanket and snag a spot in the park. Free. Last Man Standing Fireside Restaurant, 11934 Hwy 42, Ellison Bay. 920.854.7999. 5-7pm. Local 4 piece band that specializes in bluegrass, folk, original music with humor and other “stuff” included. Copper Box Waterfront Park Main Stage, 10693 N Bay Shore Dr/Hwy 42, Sister Bay. 6-9pm. Zydeco swamp &

blues. Bring your own chair, blanket or beach towel and snag a spot. Free. Open Mic Red’s Pub N Grill, N6318 Hwy 42, Algoma. 920.487.5431. 7pm. Live music. Big Mouth & the Power Tool Horns Martin Park, 207 S 3rd Ave, Sturgeon Bay. 920.746.2912. 7-9pm. Blues & jazz. Free. David Hatch & Lynn Gudmundsen Gibraltar Grill, 3993 Main St, Fish Creek. 920.868.4745. 7:30pm. Acoustic guitar, violin & vocals. Katie Dahl The Cookery Restaurant & Wine Bar, 4135 Hwy 42, Fish Creek. 920.868.3634. 8pm. This Door County folksinger is known for her sharp-witted lyrics, intricate melodies, and engaging performances. Deathfolk The Garage at Husby’s, 400 Maple Dr, Sister Bay. 920.854.2624. 8-11pm. Jess Holland and Nick Hoover playing oldtimey, folk music peppered with tight harmonies.

THEATER

“Madame Sherry” Third Avenue Playhouse, 239 N 3rd Ave, Sturgeon Bay. 920.743.1760. 7:30pm. Vintage 1910 musical comedy when a man-about-town’s secret life is about to be discovered by his stuffy benefactor, the ensuing amorous misadventures take him from his Manhattan dance studio to a yacht. $27/general admission. $10/student. “Julius Caesar” Bjorklunden, 7590 Boynton Ln, Baileys Harbor. 920.839.1500. 8pm. Experience conspiracy, passion, betrayal and

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Washington Island Music Festival Trueblood Performing Arts Center, 870 Main Rd, Washington Island. 920.847.2528. 10am. Lecture & discussion with cellist Scott Tisdel. Free. Birch Creek Jazz Ambassadors Lakeside Park, Hwy 57, Jacksonport. 920.823.2288. 10am-12pm. In the pavilion during the Farmers Market. Birch Creek Jazz Ambassadors Martin Park, 207 S 3rd Ave, Sturgeon Bay. 920.868.3763. 7-9pm. Free.

Peninsula Music Festival Door Community Auditorium, 3924 Hwy 42, Fish Creek. 920.854.4060. 7:30pm. Igor Yuzefovich, violin. Lura Johnson, harpsichord. Pieces by Vivaldi, Piazzola/ Desyatnikov. $35-$65/ ticket. $10/student or child.

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Woods”. Lively discussion and interactive lessons including creating your very own folio page. Informal and inviting. Appropriate for all ages. Free. 8pm. Door Shakespeare presents “A Midsummer Night’s Dream”. $29/adult. $19/student. $9/Children under 12. “The Full Monty” Peninsula Players, 4351 Peninsula Players Rd, Fish Creek. 920.868.3287. 8pm. A big pop-rock musical based on the Oscar-nominated film of the same name, this adult musical comedy has a very warm heart at the center of its raucous fun. $40-$46/tickets. “When Butter Churns to Gold” Northern Sky Theater, Peninsula State Park Amphitheater, 10169 Shore Rd, Fish Creek. 920.854.6117. 8pm. A play that allows for audience interaction and is performed in a very tongue-in-cheek style. $22/adult. $11/student. $6/ child 12 & under. $7 more/ ticket for reserved seats.


CELEBRATING 20 YEARS • 1996–201

INDOOR VARIED SEMINARS AT BJÖRKLUNDEN From Aug. 14-20, Lawrence University’s Björklunden is offering these seminars: “The Apostle Thomas in Scripture” with Bill Urbrock; “Watercolor: The Expressive Medium” with Helen Klebesadel; and “What

Next for Israel in the New Middle East?” with Jon Greenwald. In the New Testament, the Apostle Thomas is featured in only a few episodes in the Gospel of John. He was highly regarded, however, in various early Christian communities and still is renowned as the Apostle to India. The mid-20th-century discovery of the now famous Gospel of Thomas with its “secret sayings” has spurred even more interest in this fascinating apostle. Discussions will center on Thomas in the New Testament as well as on traditions and the

veneration of Thomas in Western Christianity and in the Thomas Churches of India. The watercolor seminar is for novice through experienced artists. Drawing skills are useful but not required. Participants will be a part of a creative community that invites them to experiment with a wide-range of traditional and non-traditional watercolor techniques and learn to create strong, individualized artistic statements. The Middle East seminar will review the factors that make the region more unstable and dangerous than ever and attempt to

assess what it means for an Israel that remains militarily dominant but whose national character may be changing as its religious right gains greater political influence. Seminar classes are held at Björklunden’s lodge, just south of Baileys Harbor, and meet weekday mornings and some evenings. For complete course descriptions, fees and registration dates, call 920.839.2216, email bailey.e.koepsel@lawrence.edu or visit lawrence.edu/s/bjorklunden/bjorkseminars.

HAPPENINGS politics in this actionpacked Door Shakespeare production. $29/ adult. $19/student. $9/ Children under 12. “The Full Monty” Peninsula Players, 4351 Peninsula Players Rd, Fish Creek. 920.868.3287. 8pm. A big pop-rock musical based on the Oscarnominated film of the same name, this adult musical comedy has a very warm heart at the center of its raucous fun. $40-$46/tickets. “Doctor! Doctor!” Northern Sky Theater, Peninsula State Park Amphitheater, 10169 Shore Rd, Fish Creek. 920.854.6117. 8pm. The world premiere of a play, in which a retiring small town physician recruits his young big city nephew to take over his practice. Music, lyrics and book by Matt Zembrowski. $22/ adult. $11/student. $6/ child 12 & under. $7 more/ ticket for reserved seats.

PERFORMANCE

Jazz II Concert Birch Creek Music Performance Center, 3821 Cty E, Egg Harbor. 920.868.3763. 7pm. Pre-show music in the Courtyard Gazebo. 7:30pm. “A Century of Swing” in the Dutton Barn. $29/ adult. $10/student. $6/child. $34/premium seating. Washington Island Music Festival Trueblood Performing Arts Center, 870 Main Rd, Washington Island. 920.847.2528. 11am. Children’s Concert. Pieces by Grieg & Petering.

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GALLERIES

Scrimshaw Demonstrations Scrimshanders, 10353 N Water St, Ephraim. 920.854.5407. 2-4pm. Resident Scrimshander Gary Kiracofe invites guests to stop in and experience the creation of an American folk art “two hundred years behind the times.” Located in the Shops and Gardens of Green Gables.

INDOOR

Rotary Club of Door County North Meeting Ridges Sanctuary – CookAlbert Fuller Center, 8166 Hwy 57, Baileys Harbor. 920.839.2802. 7:45am. Breakfast. 8-9:15am. Aubrey Immel speaks about NexGen Young Professionals. Reservations by calling 920.421.2897 appreciated. Nominal charge for breakfast. All are welcome. Women’s Coffee Club Glas Coffeehouse, 67 E Maple St, Sturgeon Bay. 920.746.0781. 8-9am. Tara Pierre, a local Edward Jones financial advisor, will host. Job Fair Door County Job Center, 1300 Egg Harbor Rd Ste 124, Sturgeon Bay. 920.743.6915. 9am-4:30pm. Tractor Supply Company open interview event.

“Victorian Wedding Customs and Gowns” Alexander Noble House Museum, 4167 Hwy 42, Fish Creek. 920.868.2091. 10am-3pm. Turn back the clock and revisit memories of vintage gowns, wedding gifts, Victorian customs and more. Memoir Writing Group Crossroads at Big Creek, 2041 Michigan St, Sturgeon Bay. 920.868.1457. 10am-12pm. For people interested in writing a memoir. Free. Mahjongg Door County YMCA – Sturgeon Bay Program Center, 1900 Michigan St, Sturgeon Bay. 920.743.4949. 1-3pm. Social play for those who know the game. Open to all in the community. Aging Mastery Program Information Meeting Meadows Art Gallery at Scandia Village, 10560 Applewood Rd, Sister Bay. 920.743.4949. 1:30pm. Learn more about the fun, innovative educational program for seniors. Ice cream social to follow. Contact Christine Webb-Miller with questions 920.743.4949 Perfect Pairings Schoolhouse Artisan Cheese, 7813 Hwy 42, Egg Harbor. 920.868.2400. 2-5pm. Stop by for free cheese tasting and pairing insights. Tetragon 2 Club Sturgeon Bay Library, 107 S 4th Ave, Sturgeon Bay. 920.743.6578. 7-8pm. Come and play. Emily Dickinson Poetry Series Unitarian Universalist Fellowship of Door County, 10341 Hwy 42, Ephraim. 920.854.7559. 7pm. Featuring Sharon Auberle followed by an open mic, providing an opportunity for others to read their poetry, and reception. Free. Team Trivia Night Brick Lot Pub, 253 North 3rd Ave, Sturgeon Bay. 920.743.9339. 7-9pm. Teams of 2 or more can compete for great prizes. Multiple categories each night. Hosted by Eric Natwick. No entry fee. Community Discussion Church of the Atonement, Main St. and Cottage Row, Fish Creek. 920.868.3811. 7pm. Rev. Scott Stoner speaks on the topic of “Biblical Views of Healing, Wholeness, and Wellness”.

OUTDOOR

Activities at Peninsula State Park Peninsula State Park, 9462 Shore Rd, Fish Creek. 920.868.3258. 10am-12pm. Wacky Wednesday. Something wacky is going on at the Nature Center. Walk the Wisconsin UnNature Trail to see if you can find items that don’t belong. Try ‘Whose Poop?’ to earn a scatologist certificate. Madam Bomba is visiting from Madagascar, telling silly “fortunes” using animal playing cards. Earn an extra prize for wearing your shirt backwards.

Farmers Market Settlement Shops, 9106 Hwy 42, Fish Creek. 920.868.3788. 9:30am-1:30pm. Fresh locally grown produce, plants, flowers, homemade breads, delicious jams, salsa and canned goods along with homemade arts & crafts. Family Program Crossroads at Big Creek, 2041 Michigan St, Sturgeon Bay. 920.746.5895. 10am. Insect Safari. Hike into the fields and forests with collecting nets to find the insects and their hiding places. Meet at the Collins Learning Center. Free and open to the public. Nets provided. Blacksmith Demonstration Heritage Village at Big Creek, 2041 Michigan St, Sturgeon Bay. 920.421.2332. 1-3pm. Observe the skills in a historic setting. Wares are available for purchase. Farmers Market Country Walk Shops, 508 Country Walk Dr, Sister Bay. 2:30-5:30pm. Featuring homegrown/handcrafted goods from Door County and Wisconsin. Docks-ology Sunset Service Anderson Dock, Ephraim. 920.854.2804. 7:30pm. Rev. Joel Rose, Bethel Baptist. Bring a chair or blanket for your comfort. Rain location: Ephraim Village Hall, 9996 Hwy 42.

TOURS

Activities at Ephraim Historical Foundation Ephraim Historical Foundation & Museums, 3060 Anderson Ln, Ephraim. 920.854.9688. 10:30am. Classic Tram Tour. Learn Ephraim’s history from the comfort of an electric tram. Pre-registration recommended. Tickets include admission to EHF Museums. $8/adult. $5/ student age 6-18. Free/child under 6 & EHF members. 10am-4pm. “Two Roads Diverged: Camp Meenahga & Camp Peninsular. Learn about two unique camps that once existed in Peninsula State Park. $5/adult. $3/ student age 6-18. Free/child under 6 & EHF members. Lakeside Shipwreck Tours Bues Point Boat Ramp, Bues Point Rd, Baileys Harbor. 920.559.6106. Get a unique perspective on the Cana Island and Birdcage Lighthouses, learn a little about their history, and get amazing views of the ships that sank around them. Call for more info. $45/adults. $29/kids under 13. $105/hour, whole boat. Trolley Tours Door County Trolley Station, 8030 Hwy 42, Egg Harbor. 920.868.1100. 10am-3pm. Lighthouse Tour. Our trolley will navigate you to Door County’s most treasured lighthouses. Top it off with a fabulous scenic lunch at Top Deck restaurant at Gordon Lodge. $64.95+tax/person. 11am3pm. Foodie Tour. Soak up the rich regional delicacies this peninsula has to offer. Get the behind-the-scenes

look and participate in mouth watering tastings at 5 unique Door County culinary destinations. $57.95/person. Corner of the Past Corner of the Past & Old Anderson House Museum, Hwy 57 & Country Ln, Sister Bay. 920.854.7680. 10am-3pm. Tour the 100+ year old furnished farmhouse that was brought over the ice from Marinette, WI in 1895. See other historic buildings filled with antiques, tools, photos and artifacts. Children participate in a scavenger hunt and other docent-led activities. Use of audio system included in admission. $5/ adults. Free/children.

THU 8/11 FESTIVALS

Sturgeon Bay Maritime Week Throughout Sturgeon Bay. 920.743.5958. “A Salute to the U.S. Coast Guard.” A variety of maritime events happening in various places around Sturgeon Bay. Call or visit www.dcmm.org for more information.

LIVE MUSIC

Last Man Standing Orchard Country Winery & Market, 9197 Hwy 42, Fish Creek. 920.868.3479. 2-5pm. Local 4 piece band that specializes in bluegrass, folk, original music with humor and other “stuff” included. Cheryl Murphy White Gull Inn, 4225 Main St, Fish Creek. 920.868.3517. 5-8pm. Playing the harp during dinner. Katie Dahl Tin Plate, 4849 Glidden Drive, Valmy. 920.818.1177. 6-8pm. Original folk music. Aurora Baer Kitty O’Reilly’s Irish Pub, 59 E Oak St, Sturgeon Bay. 920.743.7441. 6pm. Acoustic blues. Free. Dave Steffen Band Heritage Park, by the City Marina and Crescent Beach, Algoma. 920.487.2041. 6-9:30pm. Blues. Opening act: TBD. Free. Matt Endres Band Hof Restaurant at the Alpine Resort, 7715 Alpine Rd, Egg Harbor. 920.868.3000. 6:30-7:45pm. Live music. WRiTERS NiGHT Holiday Music Motel, 30 N 1st Ave, Sturgeon Bay. 920.743.5571. 7-9pm. Songsters, jokesters, and poets unite at this open mic for original work. Spectators and performers welcome. Hosted by Tarl KNiGHT. Complimentary coffee and snacks, beer and malt beverages for sale. No cover. Big Mouth Trio Gibraltar Grill, 3993 Main St, Fish Creek. 920.868.4745. 7:30pm. Join these peninsula favorites for a rockin’ good time.

Gary Weber The Cookery Restaurant & Wine Bar, 4135 Hwy 42, Fish Creek. 920.868.3634. 8pm. Gary Weber is best known for his ability to accurately reproduce James Taylor’s finger picking style (he also performs 250 songs from other popular artists). Copper Box The Garage at Husby’s, 400 Maple Dr, Sister Bay. 920.854.2624. 8-11pm. A melting pot of Americana, roots, rock, polka, country, jazz, blues and Zydeco.

THEATER

Door Shakespeare Wine Night Bjorklunden, 7590 Boynton Ln, Baileys Harbor. 920.839.1500. 6:45pm. Enjoy a pre-show tasting of wines and small plates. $25/in addition to ticket price. 8pm. Door Shakespeare presents “A Midsummer Night’s Dream”. $29/adult. $19/student. $9/Children under 12. “Lumberjacks in Love” Northern Sky Theater, Peninsula State Park Amphitheater, 10169 Shore Rd, Fish Creek. 920.854.6117. 6pm. The play by Fred Alley and James Kaplan, celebrates its 20th Anniversary. $22/ adult. $11/student. $6/ child 12 & under. $7 more/ ticket for reserved seats. “Madame Sherry” Third Avenue Playhouse, 239 N 3rd Ave, Sturgeon Bay. 920.743.1760. 7:30pm. Vintage 1910 musical comedy when a man-about-town’s secret life is about to be discovered by his stuffy benefactor, the ensuing amorous misadventures take him from his Manhattan dance studio to a yacht. $27/general admission. $10/student. “The Full Monty” Peninsula Players, 4351 Peninsula Players Rd, Fish Creek. 920.868.3287. 8pm. A big pop-rock musical based on the Oscar-nominated film of the same name, this adult musical comedy has a very warm heart at the center of its raucous fun. $40-$46/tickets. “No Bones About It” Northern Sky Theater, Peninsula State Park Amphitheater, 10169 Shore Rd, Fish Creek. 920.854.6117. 8:30pm. A play set in the world of competitive barbecue. $22/adult. $11/ student. $6/child 12 & under. $7 more/ticket for reserved seats.

PERFORMANCE

Jazz II Concert Birch Creek Music Performance Center, 3821 Cty E, Egg Harbor. 920.868.3763. 7pm. Pre-show music in the Courtyard Gazebo. 7:30pm. “The Great American Big Band” in the Dutton Barn. $29/adult. $10/student. $6/child. $34/premium seating. Peninsula Music Festival Door Community Auditorium, 3924 Hwy 42,

Fish Creek. 920.854.4060. 6:15pm. Pre-concert talk with Maestro Yampolsky. $5/person. 7:30pm. Performance. Olga Kern, piano. Pieces by Glinka, Stravinsky, Rimsky-Korsakov & Rachmaninoff. $35-$65/ ticket. $10/student or child. Washington Island Music Festival Trueblood Performing Arts Center, 870 Main Rd, Washington Island. 920.847.2528. 10am. Inside the notes with Samantha George & Guests. With Eric Ewazen in the Red Barn. Free. Birch Creek Jazz Ambassadors Harborview Park, 7809 Hwy 42, Egg Harbor. 920.868.3717. 5pm. Don’t miss these tremendous young musicians. Bring a lawn chair or blanket. Free. Part of Concert in the Park series.

INDOOR

Rotary Club of Sturgeon Bay Meeting Sturgeon Bay Yacht Club, 600 Nautical Dr, Sturgeon Bay. 920.743.6934. 12pm. Lunch. 12:201:15pm. Program. Visiting Rotarians welcome. Swing Dancing Sturgeon Bay Jaycee Hall, 340 Jaycee Ct, Sturgeon Bay. 920.306.4576. 7pm. Group dance lesson. No partner required. $10. 8pm. Free Open Dancing til close. Beginners welcome. Job Fair Door County Job Center, 1300 Egg Harbor Rd Ste 124, Sturgeon Bay. 920.743.6915. 9am-4:30pm. Tractor Supply Company open interview event. Trillium Quilt Guild Meeting Sister Bay Fire Station, 2258 Mill Rd, Sister Bay. 920.854.4021. 10am. Dedicated to promoting interest in all areas of quilting. Guests are welcome. “Victorian Wedding Customs and Gowns” Alexander Noble House Museum, 4167 Hwy 42, Fish Creek. 920.868.2091. 10am-3pm. Turn back the clock and revisit memories of vintage gowns, wedding gifts, Victorian customs and more. Mother’s Group Door County Yoga, 143 N. 4th Ave., Sturgeon Bay. 920.495.2899. 11am-12:30pm. Children 0-5 and mothers encouraged to come. Coffee and light refreshments provided. Toys and books for the children. Discussion and community for the mothers. $3/suggested donation. Trivia Night Stone Harbor Restaurant & Pub, 107 N 1st St, Sturgeon Bay. 920.746.0700. 6-8pm. Hosted by Nick Freimuth. Come with friends or on your own and join in. An Evening of Wine and Cheese Horseshoe Bay Golf Club, 5335 Horseshoe Bay Rd, Egg Harbor. 920.818.1046. 6-8:30pm. Wine and


cheese pairings, silent and live auction. Black tie optional. Boys and Girls Club of Door County Fundraiser. $50/person. Lake Lessons Ridges Sanctuary – CookAlbert Fuller Center, 8166 Hwy 57, Baileys Harbor. 920.839.2802. 7pm. Summer speaker series featuring presentations and programs by leaders in various fields including botany, geology, birding, ecology, entomology and more. Free.

OUTDOOR

Activities at Peninsula State Park Peninsula State Park, 9462 Shore Rd, Fish Creek. 920.868.3258. 10-11am. Jessy Thorp at Blossomburg Cemetery. Meet at Blossomburg Cemetery on Mengelberg Lane. 6:30-8pm. Meet the Masked Bandit. Drop by the Tennison playground to learn about the critter that excels at opening coolers. Kids can color a paper raccoon hat to keep. Farmers Market Stand Door County Senior Resource Center, 832 N. 14th Ave., Sturgeon Bay. 920.746.2542. 11am-1pm. Blacksmith Demonstration Heritage Village at Big Creek, 2041 Michigan St, Sturgeon Bay. 920.421.2332. 1-3pm. Observe the skills in a historic setting. Wares are available for purchase. Farmers Market Heritage Park, by the City Marina and Crescent Beach, Algoma. 920.487.2041. 5-7pm. Local produce, bakery, and other homemade products before the concert.

TOURS

FRI 8/12 FESTIVALS

Shanty Days Celebration of the Lake Throughout Algoma. 920.487.2041. Featuring a parade, car cruise and show, 150+ arts and crafts & street fair vendors, 5k walk/run as part of the Bellin Title Town Series, food, beach volleyball tourney, fireworks, kid’s area, fishing contest, book sale and entertainment for the entire family. Live music all weekend/8 bands. Visit www.algomachamber. org for full schedule. Sturgeon Bay Maritime Week Throughout Sturgeon Bay, Sturgeon Bay. 920.743.5958. “A Salute to the U.S. Coast Guard.” A variety of maritime events happening in various places around Sturgeon Bay. Call or visit www.dcmm. org for more information.

LIVE MUSIC

Shower’oke’Peninsula Pub, 7899 Cty A, Baileys Harbor. 920.839.9001. 9pm. No excuses karaoke with DJ Hope Reyes. Jim Counter Juniper’s Gin Joint, 4170 Main St, Fish Creek. 920.868.2667. 9:30pm. R&B, rock, pop. Free.

Birch Creek Jazz Ambassadors Vino! Vino! Wine Bar at Stone’s Throw Winery, 3382 Cty Rd E, Egg Harbor. 920.839.9660. 2-4pm. Live music on the patio. Birch Creek Jazz Ambassadors Anderson Dock, Ephraim. 920.868.3763. 6-8pm. Don’t miss these tremendous young performers. Washington Island Music Festival Trueblood Performing Arts Center, 870 Main Rd, Washington Island. 920.847.2528. 7:30pm. “Island Songs & Landscapes”. Festival Chorus – Jenny Gettel, soprano & Douglas Anderson, baritone. Pieces by Vivaldi, Mozart, Bruch & Ewazen.

THEATER

GALLERIES

“Madame Sherry” Third Avenue Playhouse, 239 N 3rd Ave, Sturgeon Bay. 920.743.1760. 7:30pm. Vintage 1910 musical comedy when a man-about-town’s secret life is about to be discovered by his stuffy benefactor, the ensuing amorous misadventures take him from his Manhattan dance studio to a yacht. $27/general admission. $10/student. “Grace and Glorie” Sturgeon Bay Jaycee Hall, 340 Jaycee Ct, Sturgeon Bay. 920.818.0816. 7:30pm. Lola DeVillers and Keri Grimsley star in this powerful Tom Ziegler drama about a feisty 90 year old cancer patient and her hospice worker. $15/ adults. $10/students. “Julius Caesar” Bjorklunden, 7590 Boynton Ln, Baileys Harbor. 920.839.1500. 8pm. Experience conspiracy, passion, betrayal and politics in this actionpacked Door Shakespeare production. $29/ adult. $19/student. $9/ Children under 12. “The Full Monty” Peninsula Players, 4351 Peninsula Players Rd, Fish Creek. 920.868.3287. 8pm. A big pop-rock musical based on the Oscar-nominated film of the same name, this adult musical comedy has a very warm heart at the center of its raucous fun. $40-$46/tickets. “Doctor! Doctor!” Northern Sky Theater, Peninsula State Park Amphitheater, 10169 Shore Rd, Fish Creek. 920.854.6117. 8pm. The world premiere of a play, in which a retiring small town physician recruits his young big city nephew to take over his practice. Music, lyrics and book by Matt Zembrowski. $22/ adult. $11/student. $6/ child 12 & under. $7 more/ ticket for reserved seats.

PERFORMANCE

Jazz II Concert Birch Creek Music Performance Center, 3821 Cty E, Egg Harbor. 920.868.3763. 7pm. Pre-show music in the Courtyard Gazebo. 7:30pm. “The Great American Big Band” in the Dutton Barn. $29/adult. $10/student. $6/child. $34/premium seating.

Meet the Artist Patricia Shoppe, 7681 Hwy 42, Egg Harbor. 920.868.1537. 3-6pm. Jewelry artist Laura Tanner will be on site for a trunk show.

INDOOR

Salsa Dancing Florian II Lakeshore Supper Club, 8048 Hwy 57, Baileys Harbor. 920.306.4576. 8:30pm. Group dance lesson. $10. 9:30pm. Open dancing to Salsa, Cha-cha, Bachata & Merengue ’til close. Free. Appetizer & drink specials. NO partner required. Great for beginners. Duplicate Contract Bridge Stella Maris Church, 7710 Hwy 42, Egg Harbor. 920.868.6113. 9am. A tournament style duplicate contract bridge. Operated by ACBLsanctioned Certified Director and Life Master Barbara Piester; eligible players receive masterpoints. Solo players should contact Barbara Piester to arrange for a partner. $8/player. “Victorian Wedding Customs and Gowns” Alexander Noble House Museum, 4167 Hwy 42, Fish Creek. 920.868.2091. 10am-3pm. Turn back the clock and revisit memories of vintage gowns, wedding gifts, Victorian customs and more. Mahjongg Door County YMCA – Northern Door Program Center, 3866 Gibraltar Rd, Fish Creek. 920.868.3660. 10:30am-12:30pm. Social play for those who know the game. Open to all in the community. Notable Women Series Ephraim Village Hall, 9996 Hwy 42, Ephraim. 920.854.2014. 2pm. Join Historical impressionist Jessica Michna, who will portray Laura Ingalls Wilder. A tea will be held in her honor. $20/ticket. Call 920.854.2014.

OUTDOOR

Door County Classic & Wooden Boat Festival Door County Maritime Museum – Sturgeon Bay, 120 N Madison St, Sturgeon Bay. 920.743.5958. The entire family can take in beautiful classic and wooden boats, enjoy watching the two personteam boat building/

Visit the Sturgeon Bay Farm and Craft Market for all of your homegrown produce as well as a wonderful selection of handcrafted items. From Apples to Zucchini From Adirondacks to Quilts There is something for everyone!

racing Sikaflex event and much more. Call or visit www.dcmm.org for more information. Movie in the Park Martin Park, 207 S 3rd Ave, Sturgeon Bay. 920.746.2912. “Game Plan” will be shown. Dusk (approximately 8:30pm). Bring your blanket or lawn chairs. Activities at Peninsula State Park Peninsula State Park, 9462 Shore Rd, Fish Creek. 920.868.3258. 10:30-11am. Animal Stories with Joyce. Nature Center. Designed for young children, this program features stories and rhymes about favorite park critters. Activities at Newport State Park Newport State Park, 475 Cty Hwy NP, Ellison Bay. 920.854.2500. 1pm. “Our Night Sky” Lecture Series. Lecture Six: Meteor Showers, Comets, Eclipses, and More. In preparation for the Perseid Meteor Shower, this is the sixth in a series of weekly lectures. DVD presentation is part of “The Great Courses” series. There is a total of 12 weekly sessions, which will include a 30 minute lecture as well as discussions of the topic and of preserving our dark skies. Meet at the Nature Center. 3pm. Monarch Watch. There are many larvae (caterpillars) in the monarch nursery. If any of the monarchs are ready to go, you can help release them. Meet at the Nature Center. 8:30pm. Universe in the Park and Perseid Meteor Shower. Join guest astronomers from UW-Madison for a presentation and a chance to view the night skies through a high powered telescope. Be sure to bring a lawn chair or blanket, flash lights or headlamps with a red lens (protects night vision). Meet at Lot 3.

TOURS

Glow Stick Zip Line Tour Egg Harbor Fun Park, 7340 Hwy 42, Egg Harbor. 920.854.9292. Fly through the night sky with glow sticks. Experience the thrill of a guided zip line tour at night. For all ages. Walkins welcome, reservations recommended. Activities at Ephraim Historical Foundation Ephraim Historical Foundation & Museums, 3060 Anderson Ln, Ephraim. 920.854.9688. 10:30am. Stroll through the village of Ephraim with knowledgeable guides. Approximately 90 minutes. Tickets include admission to the EHF Museums. $8/ adult. $5/student age 6-18. Free/child under 6 & EHF members. 10:30am. Classic Tram Tour. Learn Ephraim’s history from the comfort of an electric tram. Pre-registration for tram tours recommended. Tickets include admission to the EHF Museums. $8/ adult. $5/student age 6-18. Free/child under 6 & EHF members. 10am4pm. “Two Roads Diverged: Camp Meenahga & Camp Peninsular. Learn about two unique camps that once existed in Peninsula State Park. $5/adult. $3/student age 6-18. Free/child under 6 & EHF members.

t ccep We a e Shar Food fits Bene

Death’s Door Tours Ellison Bay Boat Ramp, 12033 Cedar Shore Rd, Ellison Bay. 920.559.6106. Travel around the bluffs of Death’s Door to the lighthouses on Plum and Pilot Islands. Learn about the history of the islands and lighthouses along with the ships that sank around them. Call for more info. $45/adults. $29/kids under 13. $105/hour, whole boat. Trolley Tours Door County Trolley Station, 8030 Hwy 42, Egg Harbor. 920.868.1100. 10am-3pm. Lighthouse Tour. Our trolley will navigate you to Door County’s most treasured lighthouses. Top it off with a fabulous scenic lunch at Top Deck restaurant at Gordon Lodge. $64.95+tax/person. 11am3pm. Foodie Tour. Soak up the rich regional delicacies this peninsula has to offer. Get the behind-the-scenes look and participate in mouth watering tastings at 5 unique Door County culinary destinations. $57.95/person. 1pm. Beer and Burger Tour. Experience locally brewed craft beer at three unique beer destinations followed by an iconic burger at a Door County landmark. $55/person. 7pm. Haunted Pub Tour. Enjoy the “intoxicating” tales of the peninsula’s haunted pubs and taverns. The tour will spend approximately 30 minutes in each of the four establishments. This unique tour has been designed for young adults, and those of you who can relate to, and keep up with those “spirited” souls. $39/ person. 21 and over only. Glowstick Zip Line Tour Door County Adventure Center, 4497 Ploor Rd, Sturgeon Bay. 920.746.9539. Ascend the 35 foot tower and plunge into the darkness. Feel the adrenaline rush as you soar through the night air with glowsticks and starlight leading your way. Walk-ins welcome, reservations recommended. Book online or by phone. Corner of the Past Corner of the Past & Old Anderson House Museum, Hwy 57 & Country Ln, Sister Bay. 920.854.7680. 10am-3pm. Tour the 100+ year old furnished farmhouse that was brought over the ice from Marinette, WI in 1895. See other historic buildings filled with antiques, tools, photos and artifacts. Children participate in a scavenger hunt and other docent-led activities. Use of audio system included in admission. $5/ adults. Free/children. Lake, Paddle, & Pub Gravity Trails, 7340 Hwy 42, Egg Harbor. 920.854.9292. 5:30pm. Join Gravity Trails on a historical journey of North Bay shipwrecks followed by a sampling of local beers and cherry cider for the kids. The tour is a 1.5 hour clear bottom kayak sunset paddle which also includes photos. No reservations required.

Saturday’s June 4th—October 29th 8:30 a.m. until noon Market Square 421 Michigan Street In Downtown Sturgeon Bay

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Michael McDermott Woodwalk Gallery, 6746 Cty Rd G, Egg Harbor. 920.495.2928. 5:30pm. Doors open, picnics welcome. 7pm. Show starts with Small Forest. $20/person, cash. Matt Endres Band Hof Restaurant at the Alpine Resort, 7715 Alpine Rd, Egg Harbor. 920.868.3000. 6:30-7:45pm & 8:45pm. Live music. Acoustic Song Circle Prince of Peace Lutheran Church Coffee House, 1756 Michigan St, Sturgeon Bay. 920.743.7750. 10am-12pm. For more information call or go to “Door County Acoustic Song Circles & Jams” on Facebook. Marybeth Mattson Bearded Heart Coffee, 8101 Hwy 57, Baileys Harbor. 920.839.9111. 1-3pm. Acoustic folk/rock. Ryan Thompson Brilliant Stranger Ecotique, 7821 Hwy 42, Egg Harbor. 920.366.0301. 2:30-5pm. Plays Dale Kumbalek’s handmade guitars on the porch of the purple building. Mark Hendee Florian II Lakeshore Supper Club, 8048 Hwy 57, Baileys Harbor. 920.839.2361. 5pm. Pianist. Dead Soldiers Door County Brewing Company, 2434 Cty F, Baileys Harbor. 920.839.1515. 7pm. American roots rock. Free. Wild Irish Gerry Kitty O’Reilly’s Irish Pub, 59 E Oak St, Sturgeon Bay. 920.743.7441. 7pm. Celtic favorites. Free. Unity Stone Harbor Restaurant & Pub, 107 N 1st St, Sturgeon Bay. 920.746.0700. 7-10:30pm. Rock, roots and reggae grooves on the patio. Free.

The Fourcast Gibraltar Grill, 3993 Main St, Fish Creek. 920.868.4745. 7:30pm. Live music. Pine Travelers The Garage at Husby’s, 400 Maple Dr, Sister Bay. 920.854.2624. 8-11pm. Original music. Erin Krebs & the Swingin’ Johnsons Door County Fire Company, 38 S 3rd Ave, Sturgeon Bay. 920.818.0625. 8pm. Blues and jazz. Free.

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Activities at Ephraim Historical Foundation Ephraim Historical Foundation & Museums, 3060 Anderson Ln, Ephraim. 920.854.9688. 10:30am. Classic Tram Tour. Learn Ephraim’s history from the comfort of an electric tram. Pre-registration recommended. Tickets include admission to EHF Museums. $8/adult. $5/ student age 6-18. Free/child under 6 & EHF members. 10am-4pm. “Two Roads Diverged: Camp Meenahga & Camp Peninsular. Learn about two unique camps that once existed in Peninsula State Park. $5/adult. $3/ student age 6-18. Free/child under 6 & EHF members. Death’s Door Tours Ellison Bay Boat Ramp, 12033 Cedar Shore Rd, Ellison Bay. 920.559.6106. Travel around the bluffs of Death’s Door to the lighthouses on Plum and Pilot Islands. Learn about the history of the islands and lighthouses along with the ships that sank around them. Call for more info. $45/adults. $29/kids under 13. $105/hour, whole boat. Walking Tours of Historic Fish Creek Old Gibraltar Town Hall, 4176 Maple St, Fish Creek. 920.868.2091. 10am. Our docent will show and tell you about 23 interesting histories of the oldest town buildings. Lighthouse Tour Door County Trolley Station, 8030 Hwy 42, Egg Harbor. 920.868.1100. 10am-3pm. Our trolley will navigate you to Door County’s most treasured lighthouses. Top it off with a fabulous scenic lunch at Top Deck restaurant at Gordon Lodge. $64.95/person. Corner of the Past Corner of the Past & Old Anderson House Museum, Hwy 57 & Country Ln, Sister Bay. 920.854.7680. 10am-3pm. Tour the 100+ year old furnished farmhouse that was brought over the ice from Marinette, WI in 1895. See other historic buildings filled with antiques, tools,

photos and artifacts. Children participate in a scavenger hunt and other docent-led activities. Use of audio system included in admission. $5/ adults. Free/children. Historic Iverson House & Moravian Church Guided Walking Tour Ephraim Moravian Church, 9970 Moravia St, Ephraim. 920.854.9688. 1:30pm. An in-depth look at the Moravian faith and how it contributed to the creation of Ephraim. Approximately 90 minutes. $5/person. Free/EHF members. Sunset Zip Line Tour Door County Adventure Center, 4497 Ploor Rd, Sturgeon Bay. 920.746.9539. 8pm. Enjoy a breathtaking sunset from 45 feet in the air. Fly high on a 3-spanned zip line soaring over 1500 feet. Walk-ins welcome, reservations recommended. Book online or by phone.

CELEBRATING 20 YEARS • 1996–2016

HAPPENINGS


CELEBRATING 20 YEARS • 1996–201

PERSPECTIVES LETTERS TO THE EDITOR LETTERS POLICY Do you have an opinion you’d like to share? To see it on Peninsula Pulse’s letters page, please follow the guidelines here and send to: Peninsula Pulse, PO Box 694, Baileys Harbor, WI 54202; (preferred) email letters@ppulse.com; or submit online at doorcountypulse.com. • Letters must be addressed to the editor in order to appropriately distinguish them from general company correspondence. • Generally, we limit letters to 500 words. • Letters must include contact information, including name, daytime telephone, mailing address and email address. Only the author’s name and town of residence will appear in the paper. • Anonymous submissions will not be accepted. • Peninsula Pulse reserves the right to edit, to add titles to and/or retitle submissions, to print at the time of our discretion, and to refuse. • Peninsula Pulse reserves the right to refuse any letter at any time due to limited space or for any reason deemed appropriate. • Multiple letters addressing the same or similar topics may be omitted. • Letters not appearing in the print edition may, but are not guaranteed to, be printed online. • Opinions expressed within the letters on our pages – regardless of political, religious or philosophical content – should be accepted as those of their authors and not those of Peninsula Pulse, its owners or its staff. • Questions regarding our policy can be sent in writing, or call 920.839.2121 for more information.

A DA to Assure Our Safety with Intelligence, Integrity District Attorney Ray Pelrine has served the citizens of Door County with integrity and distinction for more than a decade and has more than 30 years of experience as a prosecutor. He has taught hundreds of other prosecutors the basics of prosecution

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HELLERTOON

as well as the finer points of trial and evidentiary procedure. New prosecutors often learn on the job as assistant district attorneys, the District Attorney does not have that luxury. The District Attorney must be able to charge and try the most complicated embezzlement or homicide or drug case, on day one and possess the wisdom to resolve those same cases appropriately, balancing the rights of victims and the needs of the community while holding the defendant accountable. This wisdom accrues over time. Crime victims deserve a District Attorney who can and will prosecute their cases effectively without fear the case will be lost, not because the defendant is innocent, but because an inexperienced prosecutor did not effectively try the case or the conviction is overturned by an Appeals Court because an inexperienced prosecutor did or said something improper at trial. The District Attorney must have the knowledge and experience to answer questions from law enforcement at 2 am after a fatal drunk driving crash or a homicide or burglary or an active shooter situation. It takes years of experience to master the fine points of the law, both statutory and as decided by the Courts. The position of District Attorney is not a popularity contest. No prosecutor is likely to win the congeniality award from those he or she has prosecuted or from a victim who wanted a defendant to get a maximum sentence, when the District Attorney, applying the necessary sentencing factors, recommends a lesser sentence because greater penalties would have been unfair or inappropriate under the circumstances. Please join us in voting for integrity, for District Attorney Ray Pelrine in the August 9th Primary Election. Door County needs an experienced District Attorney to work with law enforcement, crime victims and

the community, to continue to make Door County a safe and secure place for all while providing fairness and justice to those unfortunate enough to be involved with the criminal justice system. Jon Gilson, Sturgeon Bay, Wis. Joan Korb, Egg Harbor, Wis. Moody & Serena Tidwell, Sturgeon Bay, Wis. Frederic Will, MD, Egg Harbor, Wis. A Church, Reborn Is something missing or coming up short in your life? Perhaps it’s a nagging void that can only be filled with sense of purpose and spirituality. Maybe it’s the opportunity to share common, holy ground with others. Or possibly it’s a nagging need to get together with like-minded people in a communion of sharing, reflection, and thanksgiving…plain and simple. If you believe in the greater good and the power that calls us to come together, please consider Door County People of Faith. Look through our Facebook page for a rather good feeling about what we believe and, well, about what we’re all about (facebook. com/DoorCountyPeopleOfFaith). Here’s how Philip Gulley, a Quaker pastor and writer from Danville, Indiana, expressed it in his book, If the Church Were Christian: • If the church were Christian, Jesus would be not just an object of worship but a model for living; • If the church were Christian, affirming our potential would be more important than condemning our brokenness; • If the church were Christian, reconciliation would be valued over judgment;

• If the church were Christian, gracious behavior would be more important than right belief; • If the church were Christian, inviting questions would be more important than supplying answers; • If the church were Christian, encouraging personal exploration would be more important than communal uniformity; • If the church were Christian, meeting needs would be more important than maintaining institutions; • If the church were Christian, peace would be more important than power; • If the church were Christian, it would care more about love and less about sex; • If the church were Christian, this life would be more important than the afterlife. If this concept of church has caught your interest, please stay tuned…we’ll be sharing more. (And if this concept of a living church does more than just tickle your fancy, please contact me directly to help create an experience where Creator and creation are loving expressions of each other.) Door County People of Faith: Spiritual rather than religious, organic over organizational, and personal beyond institutional. Rev. Bruce H. Joffe, Ph.D., Door County People of Faith Sturgeon Bay, Wis. Support for Colleen Nordin It is a very important vote this coming Tuesday, August 9, for the District Attorney election. Mr. Pelrine recently stated he is experienced and an answerable candidate. Mr. Pelrine’s credentials/experience and other input was just vetted by State of Wisconsin attorneys the last few months. Ray Pelrine then lost the race to be


ABRAHAM LINCOLN

appointed the Circuit Court Judge of Door County. State of Wisconsin attorneys participated in the review process and provided input to Governor Walker and the final decision to appoint not Mr. Pelrine, but a more qualified Mr. David Weber Door County Circuit Court Judge. Attorney Colleen Nordin is vibrant and her platform speaks to the heart of the family. I had communicated to Colleen how I like her idea of diversion programs. Drug addiction and especially heroin addiction is growing in Door County. I am a father that painfully experienced six years of heroin’s attacks on young people. Colleen is on the right path to help those falling into the grips of dreaded heroin. I am voting for Colleen Nordin to be our next Door County District Attorney and she will be fabulous along with newcomer Judge David Weber. I leave the following written by Ms. Colleen Nordin, “I decided to run for this position because I think as a community, we deserve a leader that will pursue justice in a balanced and thoughtful way, without compromising our community’s values and beliefs.” Paul Larsen Baileys Harbor, Wis. Letter to the Natural Resources Board

50% Off Sale August 11 & 12 Half Off all cookware, silverware & glassware 204 N. 14th Ave. • Sturgeon Bay 54235 feedmypeopledoorcounty.com 920.743.9053 Hours: Monday & Thursday 2 pm - 6 pm Tues. Wed. Fri. 10 am - 2 pm

FLOORING

Send Gallagher to Washington

Come See What’s New In Carpeting

It’s rare that I get the chance to know someone personally who is running for office, especially for a congressional seat. When I first met Mike Gallagher about five months ago I remember feeling like I was talking to someone just like me. I could tell he was sincere and shared the same passion I do to see real change in our nation and in Washington. When someone runs for office, their character and sincerity matter to me just as much as the issues do. I can confidently say that as I’ve gotten to know Mike I have found him to be a person of honor and integrity who truly wants to fight for the people of this district. He has the attitude of wanting to serve others, which makes sense since he’s a Marine Veteran. Whether it be leading as a commander of intelligence teams during his two tours in Iraq, or serving as a Human Intelligence/ Counterintelligence Officer and Regional Affairs Officer in the Middle East and North Africa, or now working as a leader in the private sector at an energy company out of Green Bay, he has an impressive background that I believe uniquely qualifies him for the job. He has strong convictions and a moral compass, but has always shown an interest in hearing the concerns of the people he’s talking to. Mike Gallagher is a regular citizen like you and me, who has answered the call by the people of his community to run for office to serve the people of the eighth congressional district. I strongly believe he will work hard to solve problems and will fight to restore power back to the people where it belongs, instead of fighting to keep power in the hands of a few in Washington. I hope you will join me in giving him the opportunity to serve you by voting for Mike Gallagher in the August 9th primary, the first step in sending him to Washington to fight for us. Stephanie Soucek Sturgeon Bay, Wis.

2613 So. Bay Shore Drive, Sister Bay 854-2842 Mon. - Fri. 9am - 4:30pm; Sat. 10am - 1pm

$35

LOOKING FOR FREE WIFI OR COMPUTER TO USE? The Town of Liberty Grove now has computers available for the public to use during business hours as well as free WiFi inside and outside. Stop at the office, 11161 Old Stage Rd, north of Sister Bay, 8:30am - 4:00pm to access your email & catch up with friends on Facebook. For information call (920) 854-2934.

EXPERIENCE MATTERS

RAY PELRINE District Attorney Paid for by Pelrine for District Attorney

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Vote on August 9

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I have witnessed Wisconsin’s water degradation over an 18-year period as I lived six blocks south of the Wisconsin state line in Warren, Ill. I saw nitrate disclaimer signs appearing in restrooms in Grant, Lafayette, and Green Counties as CAFOs were approved and expanded. Diners, the drive-in movie theater, churches, township halls and gas stations, to name a few. I knew folks who would move to town from their original family farmstead just to have safer municipal water. Pregnant women and bovine drinking high-nitrate levels, assuming their water was pure, would miscarry. Discharges, spills and accidents with manure and water, are a form of trespass. An over abundance of these “nutrients” don’t stop at the edge of a neighbor’s property. Pollution doesn’t stop at a township, county or state line. Having permission to discharge, even with a permit, does not make this ok. The scale of industrial animal operations, concentration of manure produced in one location, makes this a crime against nature. We shouldn’t be expected to compromise our water or hold our breath to accommodate agribusiness over community. I’m a tourist of Wisconsin. I dreamed of retiring to the Door County area. That would be a foolish thing to invest in now. The idea of no swimming or consuming water, due to contamination, throws a wet blanket on vacations and investing in real estate. April 29, 2013 at 1:30 pm, my three children and I were victims of hazardous gases as we headed south from the Wisconsin Dells on Highway12 between Baraboo and Prairie Du Sac. Center pivots spraying liquid nutrients made us close windows and speed faster as we searched

for air that was not burning our lungs and nostrils. When we got a clean pocket of air, the caustic stench happened again. A service van on the opposite side of the road had pulled over with the driver sitting on the ground using an inhaler. He could not even operate his vehicle. This past week my husband and I vacationed in Bayfield, Wisconsin. We chose Bayfield County because it has the cleanest water. We can swim, boat, fish, and drink the water, for now. I am hoping that the good work of the Natural Resources Board to direct the Department of Natural Resources, will pull Wisconsin out of this dysfunctional tailspin before it is too late. Communities enacting local control to create ordinances that protect human health, property values, and tourism, are beneficial to the DNR. Local control lightens the workload for the DNR to stay on budget. Local control is a win for citizens and the DNR. Susan Turner Dubuque, Iowa

Feed and Clothe My People

CELEBRATING 20 YEARS • 1996–2016

We can complain because rose bushes have thorns, or rejoice because thorn bushes have roses.”


CELEBRATING 20 YEARS • 1996–201

Up s t a i r s a t M a x w e l t o n B r a e s

Hearty Home Cooked Meals

When I have fully decided that a result is worth getting, I go about it, and make trial after trial, until it comes.”

BUSINESS

THOMAS EDISON

Did You Know? We serve lunch Noon-2pm! Full Lunch Menu & Daily Specials Open Daily • Serving Breakfast 7am-Noon NEW for 2016 Lunch Noon - 2pm 7670 Hwy 57 • Baileys Harbor, WI 920.421.4270

TRUNK SHOW AT O’MEARA’S IRISH HOUSE ALAN CLANCY FROM SHANORE JEWELRY DUBLIN 10 AM - 6 PM SATURDAY, AUGUST 6th SPECIAL OFFERS - GIFT WITH PURCHASE

NEW JEWELRY COLLECTION LAUNCH

www.OMearasIrish.com FISH CREEK

Travel Discoveries II 920-854-4295 • Ellison Bay Home Office • Watseka, IL Call Amy or Julie (owners)

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Let us show you the world!

(Left to right) Al Duessler receives his check from Sam Perlman, DCEDC economic development manager, for winning the Door County Entrepreneurial Training Program award. Submitted.

BRIEFS • Al Duessler is the winner of the $1,200 cash award for the best business plan originating from the 15th annual Door County Entrepreneurial Training Program course conducted earlier this year by the Door County Economic Development Corporation (DCEDC). Duessler and his future business partner Bryan Kuehn are currently employed at a property management company in Door County that specializes in accounting and property management for residential condominium associations. Duessler’s plan involved evaluating and identifying the current market conditions and operational efficiencies to provide a strategy to eventually purchase and grow the business where they are employed. He wrote that the mission of their management firm is to provide industry-leading systematic management approaches to operate condominium associations in a professional and stressfree manner, calling itself “the aspirin for operational headaches.”

Duessler was among the 19 students representing 14 start-up or existing local businesses in the class. “Al wrote an outstanding plan, focused on increasing operational efficiency and growing their business to the next level,” said DCEDC Executive Director Bill Chaudoir. “His plan received some of the highest grades we have ever seen from our judges.” The $1,200 award was generously sponsored by Associated Bank, Bank of Luxemburg, FirstMerit Bank and Nicolet National Bank. The award is to be used for business expenses. The Entrepreneurial Training Program course will again be offered in Door County beginning January 2017. For more information call 920.743.3113 or visit doorcountybusiness. com. • Tara Pierre, a local Edward Jones financial adviser, will host a coffee club at 8 am on Aug. 10 for women interested in learning about financial topics, at GLAS Coffeehouse, 67 E. Maple

St., Sturgeon Bay. The coffee club is an informal gathering where Edward Jones financial advisers provide an update on the stock market and the economy in a relaxed environment. For more information visit edwardjones.com. • The Wisconsin Taxpayers Alliance (WISTAX) has received this year’s award for Most Distinguished Research from the Governmental Research Association, a national association of nonprofit research organizations that analyze policy at the regional and state level. The award, given at the group’s annual conference in Pittsburgh this month, recognized WISTAX for its groundbreaking 2015 report, “Evaluating Wisconsin’s Approach to Determining Prevailing Wages,” which examined how Wisconsin calculated prevailing wages used for public sector construction projects. The report received extensive statewide attention and was highlighted in The Wall Street Journal and Forbes. For more information, visit wistax.org.

GIBRALTAR AREA SCHOOL DISTRICT

REGISTRATION DAYS

MaryKay Shumway, ABR®, CRS®, CTA® Exclusive Buyer Agency Exceptional Listing Services

REGISTRATION for ALL STUDENTS PreK-12 Date & Time

Tuesday, August 9 9am to 12pm and 1pm to 4pm Wednesday, August 10 11am to 2pm and 3pm to 7pm Location

Gibraltar Secondary Schoo l 3924 State H wy 42, Fish Creek, WI Information Registration for the 2016-2017 school year takes between 30 and 60 minutes; students are to attend with a parent or guardian at a time that works best for your schedule during the dates and times listed. We encourage and appreciate Gibraltar families taking the time to attend one of these very important days. Thank you!

“We really enjoyed working with MaryKay. She was the perfect mix of friendliness and professionalism.”

–Steve and Doris W., Appleton & Ephraim, WI PO Box 108 / 2294 Sunset Drive Sister Bay, WI 54234 Phone: 920-854-2353 Mobile: 920-421-0038 Email: shumway.mk@gmail.com

Matthew House Thrift Shop PO Box 140 • 7896 HWY 42, Egg Harbor, WI 54209 920-868-2731 • friz1995@charter.net Thank you to volunteers: Chris, Dan, Dennis, Gary, Norma, Robert, Rosemarie, Tammy, Sue, Willow 3 more volunteers needed

Usually open every day 10 am to 4 pm Sales benefit developmentally disabled.


IEDS Regular deadline for line classifieds is noon on Tuesday for the Friday issue. Available online at doorcountypulse.com. To submit, email classifieds@ppulse.com or call 920.839.2121.

ANNOUNCEMENTS LOST AND FOUND Cat is lost! Reward!

Camry For Sale 2009 Toyota Camry LE SUPER Sharp Car! Well equipped $9,895. Young Auto Sales. 920.743.9228 or youngautomotive.net.

MISCELLANEOUS New Engine Hoist New engine hoist. Assembled, never used. $75.00 Call Mitch – 414.322.0617 Orange and white short-hair female, 12 lbs., greenish eyes, micro-chipped, spayed, no claws front. She slipped out (an indoor cat) on July 15 from near Beach Road and Hwy. 42. Mona Lisa is 11 years old, very friendly and sweet. Please call us at 941.313.1410 if you have seen her or sheltered her. We would be eternally grateful.

MISCELLANEOUS Meditation If you are seriously interested in forming a meditation community in Northern Door, please contact Peter Boice at 920.246.2044 or peterboice@gmail.com Breast Cancer Financial Assistance Are you dealing with breast cancer? Is a loved one? Do you need screening? The Sue Baldwin Fund, Inc. can help. To download an application or to learn more about financial assistance provided by The Sue Baldwin Fund visit www.suebaldwinfund. com or call 920.839.1114

AUTOS CARS

CONVERTIBLE 2002 Audi TT

MOPED FOR SALE 2005 Yamaha Zuma – 2,800 miles – $1500 – located between Sister Bay and Baileys Harbor – Call 920.421.0883

SUVS 2008 Grand Cherokee 2008 Jeep Grand Cherokee Laredo SUPER Sharp. Black! V-6 AWD. Local trade. Serviced at Young Automotive since 2009. Well equipped $10,250. Young Auto Sales 920.743.9228 youngautomotive.net

FOR RENT APARTMENT Now Leasing One Bedroom Apartments Must be 62+ years old or have a mobile impairment. We have off site parking, secure entry, laundry on site, and we are pet friendly. Income limits applied for eligibility. Rent is 30% of your adjusted annual income. For more information or for an application please call Laurie at 920.743.7762 or email at laurie.nordin@wimci. com This institution is an equal opportunity provider.

COMMERCIAL North Sister Bay commercial Beautiful space to rent 1400 sq feet of retail space + storage. Hardwood floors, high ceiling $1200/month. 920.421.2335

RESIDENTIAL HOME

Silver Audi TT Convertible. 2002 in Great Shape. 67000 miles. Local owner. $9,900 obo 651.295.6961 72 Eldorado Convertible Red, white int. Good Runner, body etc. Very usable but needs to be restored. Parade boot. 8.1L $4000. 920.819.4988

HOUSE FOR RENT $850.00/month–12 month lease required–located at Hwy 42 & A, Fish Creek–available early September–1200 sq.

Farmette 3br 2 ba Nice remodeled farmette 12month lease only. Hardwood newer kitchen and baths. Outbuildings. Avail. Aug. $1000. 920.819.4988

Used appliances in good condition Sale: $95.00 cash each. Kenmore propane gas stove. Super capacity gas propane Whirlpool dryer. Frigidaire dishwasher. 920.854.2827

Items For Sale LL BEAN cottage futon/ couch: white/denim cushions $50.00; GARDEN WAY cider/ fruit press $25.00; old cobalt blue LANGE wood stove/ pipe $25.00;silver tone parlor table oil lamp with white glass shade $25.00; antique spinning wheel $25.00; 1940’s vintage CAPADAMANTE lamp set $25.00; beautiful 1900’s Italian bowl back mandolin with wood inlay on face $300.00; MAY BELL 1920’s banjo uke $100.00; 1980’s med. frame FUJI mt. bike $25.00. Call 920.839.2733

STORAGE Indoor Storage, BOATS, CARS, TRAILERS, TRUCKS Indoor storage, Winter rates $14 per linear foot. (Oct. 15 through May 15) Hardt’s Acres LLC, Hwy 42 & A between Fish Creek and Ephraim. Call 920.868.5050 to reserve your space. Indoor Storage in Baileys Harbor Long term storage for boats, wave runners, RV’s, travel trailers, motorcycles, cars and snowmobiles. New facility with cement floor, safe and secure. Get a rate and call us to see if we can beat it. Call 920.839.2421

VACATION RENTAL COLE’S RESORT On beautiful Rowleys Bay, enjoy one of our spacious, modern rental cottages (2 or 3 bedrooms) or relax in our charming lighthouse suite. Privacy, easy parking, well-kept grounds, wi-fi, satellite tv, A/C, firepits, private beach. Bring your own canoe/kayak or rent one from us. Public boat ramp/ charter boats nearby, great bass/salmon fishing. Next to Newport Park & Mink River Estuary. Look for our stately pioneer home from 1875, in our family since 1953. Family run by Don & Mary Cole, 1081 County Road ZZ 920.421.1257 Vacation Rental Peace and beauty at affordable prices. $90 to $120/night. Suite/Cabin. Fish Creek. 520.403.2202 or doorcountydeb@aol.com.

FOR SALE

FURNITURE FOR SALE Antique vanity $150, desk & chair $60, antique oak pedastal table $200, 2 antique oak dressers $200 each, 6 ft long back porch bench with pad & pillows $100 – call to see 920.421.0884. Located near Sister Bay. Buffet for sale Two pieces. Bottom with drawers. Top has sliding doors and glass shelves. Charcoal in color. Excellent condition. Cost new $4000. Sell for $975. Call 920.854.4403 Door County Interiors & Design Free Measure. Free Estimate. Up to 25% off Hunter Douglas Blinds. Up to 40% off Carpeting and Tile. 7266 Highway 42 – 2 miles south of Egg Harbor. 920.868.9008, open 7 days a week. Air Conditioner Large in wall Carrier Air Conditioner. Call Mitch for more info. 414.322.0617 2 Couches Fainting couch, pink flowered pattern. Excellent condition. $250. Bronze colored with extra decorative pillows. $75. Both in Fish Creek. Contact Mitch at 414.322.0617

MERCHANDISE Burning Barrels Nelson’s Shopping Center, Baileys Harbor and Fish Creek. 920.839.2326

MISCELLANEOUS KATHY GLASNAP ORIGINALS 2 original watercolors, full sheets, framed by artist. Asking $1850 & $1650. For

PENCE PRINTS Robert L. Pence A/P remarqued prints (2). Wisconsin winter barn scenes. Asking $750 each. For details & photos email smkrause@newwis.com Yellow Barn Collectibles Open Fri & Sat 8/5 & 8/6 from 10-4pm. 11632 Lakeview Road, Ellison Bay. Discounted Bridgeport Resort Gift Certificate Gift Certificate for Bridgeport Report, Door County. Paid $509.00 I will sell for $409.00 Valid until June 2021. Can be used as cash for one or more rooms. You determine how to use it. 920.746.6709 75 Gallon Saltwater Aquarium Currently active with fish, corals and live rock. Includes 6-bulb T5 light, stand, and many extras. $500. 920.421.4013 HYLINE ORCHARD FARM MARKET 2 miles north of Egg Harbor on Hwy 42. (920.868.3067) OPEN DAILY 9-5. HOMEMADE CHERRY & APPLE PRODUCTS FROM OUR ORCHARDS. New in Bakery Dept, cinnamon, cinnamon chocolate chip, kiddush and butter cookies. A variety of cheese, cheese

spreads and cheese curds, including cherry, cranberry & apple. Door County beer and wines. Natural homemade soaps. Door County Watch Us Grow liquid fertilizer. Dried apples, large variety of fruit pie fillings including Cherry & Honey Crisp apple, ready to bake pies or baked, Jams, Jellies, Pies, Salsa, BBQ Sauce, (Cherries: frozen, canned and dried), Cherry Cider, Honey Crisp Blend Apple Cider, our new apple grape and peachy apple cider, Naturally Grown Fresh Eggs, Maple Syrup, Honey, Pickles, Spices, Fudge, Gifts & Gift Boxes and Much More. Pick Your Own Cherries and Apples in season. Six Generations Growing and Marketing Fruits and Vegetables. Wholesale and Retail products. We ship UPS. Accept WIC checks. Door County Kraut Co. Available now: Sauerkraut, smoked whitefish spreads, homemade sourdough and specialty breads, desserts, currants, kringle, danish, rhubarb, lettuce, radishes, spinach, pickles. Call 920.839.2288 to order, or see us at Jacksonport & Baileys Harbor Farm Markets. Case Endloader Crawler 1974, Under carriage tight, hydraulics and engine good. Includes a set of forks and tree scoop. $5000. 847.921.8201 Gas Furnaces 3 used gas furnaces: 1-40,000 BTU; 1-50,000 BTU; 1-90,000 BTU counterflow; 1 – 3 ton condenser; 1 – 3 ton cased 12-coil. 920.743.9404 Rod Schlise 920.495.9404 Shed For Sale 12 x 18 wooden shed, metal roof, thermal windows, movable. Call 920.743.4790 Vinotemp Wine Cellar Temperature controlled. Holds 360 bottles. 2 doors w/ glass windows. Never used. New cost $2800. Sell for $1500. Call 920.854.4403

FIREWOOD Firewood and Cedar Posts Dry cedar, cherry, apple and hard wood. Cedar posts also available. Call 920.256.0609 Honest Firewood Honest firewood-get what you pay for-campfire wood-mixed softwood. $75/ face cord. $175/full cord delivered. 920.421.4644 911 Lawncare and Firewood Services Hardwood firewood for sale by the cord face or bundle. Wood available for campfires. Order today before prices increase. Call for delivery and prices. 920.495.0559 Logcrafters, LLC Dry campwood delivered to your campsite. By the cord, 1/2 cord, face cord, or bundles. 920.746.0122

HOUSEHOLD ITEMS Items For Sale Kenmore sewing machine includes manual and all attachments, telescopes, antique chairs, china cabinet, hide a bed, outside door. 815.370.4471 Couch Hide a Bed Cabin style fabric. Neutral colors. Full Size mattress in excellent condition. $50 or OBO. Call 262.366.5749 or email for photos. edgewoodsurveying@att.net. Dining Room Set

Pedestal table 48” round, dark maple with 12” leaf from Amish Home Gallery with 4 upholstered seat chairs. 4 years old

Online Real Estate Auction 12249 Hwy 42, Ellison Bay, WI

Open House: August 12, 2016, 3:00 – 5:00pm or by appointment Bidding Closes September 1, 12:00 Noon

Furnished 2 bedroom cottage situated on 27 wooded acres in Northern Door County.

Online Real Estate Auction

1556 Utah Street, Sturgeon Bay, WI

Open House: August 12, 2016, 11:30am – 12:30pm Bidding Closes August 29, 12:00 Noon

3 Bedroom ranch home with shed situated on a spacious lot in Sturgeon Bay. Terms: Bidder packet required to bid. 10% Buyers fee will be added to bid price to make purchase price. High bidder will deposit $5,000 with Massart Auctioneers within 2 days of accepted offer. Taxes prorated to closing. No contingencies, 30 day closing. Real estate will be sold subject to seller approval. Auction has an auto extend feature. For details & bidder packet visit www.massartauctioneers.com. RWA#3 Damien, Michelle & Bob Massart CAI,AARE,AMM,BAS,CES,GPPA, MPPA 920-468-1113

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2003 Chevrolet Malibu 2003 Chevrolet Malibu Clean 53k MILES! 6 cyl, New tires, brakes. $4,695 Young Auto Sales 920.743.9228 youngautomotive.net

Home for RentFully Furnished Fully Furnished HomeSeptember 20 through May 01, 2017. Three BedroomsKing & 2 Queens. Full Bath, Kitchen w/washer-dryer. All Bed Linens/Towels, Large yard, gas grill, privacy, Direct TV, Wi-Fi, Water, Snow Removal included in Rent. (No Smoking, No Pets) $695.00 per month plus heat & utilities. Security Deposit Required. Five Miles North of Sturgeon Bay on Highway 42. Call 920.743.4959 or 920.559.9292. Leave message if no answer.

details & photos email: smkrause@newwis.com

DOORCOUNTYPULSE.COM  AUGUST 5–12/2016 • v22i32  PENINSULA PULSE

2004 Buick Century Custom Very clean 65k miles. New brakes & battery. $4,450 Young Auto Sales 920.743.9228 youngautomotive.net

MOTORCYCLES

in excellent condition. $1,000. 920.493.0691

CELEBRATING 20 YEARS • 1996–2016

CLA SSIF

ft.–includes appliances–No Pets. Call 920-868-5050


CELEBRATING 20 YEARS • 1996–201

UNITARIAN UNIVERSALIST A LIBERAL COMMUNITY OF FAITH

Joyfully Celebrating 20 Years! Youth Art Program “Everyone’s an Artist!” Sunday 10 - 11 am

FELLOWSHIP OF DOOR COUNTY

August 7 - 10:00 am Rev. Cynthia Barnes Johnson A Piece of the Puzzle: Women’s Liberation in the 1970s IN THE UU GALLERY Jack Anderson DICKINSON POETRY SERIES Wednesday, Aug. 10, 7 pm Sharon Auberle

10341 Hwy 42 ~ North Ephraim ~ 920.854.7559

Immanuel Lutheran Church-LCMC

Sunday Worship 10 AM Christmas Worship Christmas Eve Candlelight Service 7 PM Centered on God’s Word –10Learning to living it Christmas Day Worship AM

Immanuel Lutheran Church-LCMC 7973 Hwy 57 SUMMER WORSHIP SCHEDULE Baileys Harbor, WI 54202 Memorial Day through Labor Day 920.839.2224 Immanuel-Lutheran.org Saturday Night Praise Worship - 5 p.m. (communion on 2nd and 4th Saturdays) Sunday Morning Liturgical Worship - 9 a.m. (communion on 1st and 3rd Sundays)

handicapped accessible

Pastor Sue Gunderson 7973 Hwy 57, Baileys Harbor, WI 54202 Phone: 920.839.2224 Web: Immanuel-Lutheran.org

Baha’i Faith

DEVOTIONS & DISCUSSION

2nd Sunday, 7 p.m. at 9633 Cty Rd A, Fish Creek 4th Sunday, 7 p.m. at 4037 Main St., Fish Creek doorcountybahais.org • 920.868.9698 “The original foundation of all religions is love.”

The Cowboy Church of Door County SUNDAYS 10 AM In the Tidball Horse Barn located at 12376 Timberline Rd., Ellison Bay. One mile north of Uncle Tom’s Candy Store.

CLASSIFIEDS SPORTING EQUIPMENT Fishing Equipment 6 tray Kennedy tackle box/ over 100 lures; Fishing rods & reels – spinning, casting, & fly. Many with cases. Call 920.854.1910 Kayaks 2 Sun Dolphin Aruba 10ft sit-in KAYAKS, paddles, seat cushions, 2-wheel transport dolly, padded wall kayak storage hooks & paddle storage hook, 2 -CO2 Inflatable life jackets, USCG approved, Type v. YAKIMA car rack w/2 sets of hull risers & straps for 2 kayaks. ALL 1 YEAR OLD, Cost new – $1,400. Asking $750. Call 920.854.3314

GARAGE/ YARD SALE ESTATE SALE in EGG HARBOR-EVERYTHING MUST GO 7532 Hillside Road, Egg Harbor. Fri. 8/5 at 7a to Sun, 8/7 until 12p (Lt. Blue A-frame house 500 yards up hill from The Landmark Resort entrance). Home has sold and everything must go. Unique items, Original Austin Fraser paintings, Antique furniture and accessories, dishes, glasses and stemware sets, couch, chairs, dining room table set, bar stools, 2 twin beds (lightly used), 2 twin brass bed frames and King brass bed frame, gas grill, wood patio furniture and MORE. Everything must go. ANTIQUES, ROLLTOP DESK, XMAS,HALLOWEEN, BOOKS,TOYS

For Further Information Contact Pastor Lloyd at (920) 421-1327

A Caring Community with a Progressive Tradition Open and Affirming

August 7 Communion 10:30 am Outdoor Worship Service “CLAIMING OUR FAITH” Rev. Richard Feyen

Vintage & antiques—some Door County originals, artwork, roll top desk, vintage LIFE magazines, film & digital cameras, folk art, Halloween & Xmas décor, toddler table/

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PENINSULA PULSE  AUGUST 5–12/2016 • v22i32  DOORCOUNTYPULSE.COM

Birchwood Lodge-Hwy 42/57-Sister Bay. Brad Elkins-5th Degree Black Belt 850.766.9030 or 920.854.7724

LET’S MAKE A DEAL SALE We have a little of everything! 9055 Sunset Dr., Baileys Harbor WI 54202, Saturday August 6 9am-4pm

Specials at Hyline Orchards Farm Market Home grown apricots. Rainier and Golden Sweet cherries in the market at Hyline Orchard Farm Market. 8240 Highway 42 and EE, 2 miles North of Egg Harbor on Hwy 42. Open daily 9am-5pm. 920.868.3067

Garage Sale – Good Quality, Low Prices Aug 12-13 Side by Side Refrigerator, Ceramic Top Range, Washer & Dryer, Microwave, White Vanity, New Larson Storm Door, Radiator Style Space Heater, Dehumidifier, Extension Ladder, Steel Dock Ladder, Misc Home and Yard. 8-3pm. 7738 Eggers Point Rd, Baileys Harbor Too Old to Camp Plus Much More Canoe (Blackhawk, 15’) and paddles, tent with fly, Duluth bags, dry bags, duffles, Coleman stove and large cooler, thermorests, etc. Weight bench with full set of free weights. Christmas dishes, decorations, lights, etc. Much more! August 12 & 13, 9AM-3PM. 6729 Bay Shore Dr. Egg Harbor.

MISCELLANEOUS ACTIVITIES COLES CABINS Kayak and Canoe Rentals From our private beach. Lowest prices, best service, flexible hours, large 17’ canoes, single, double & fishing kayaks. A stone’s throw from the famous Mink River. Beginners lesson $15/1 hour, Mink River trip/$30. Happy customersno guides needed. Save $$. 1081 Cty ZZ, Rowleys Bay. 920.421.2157 or 920.421.1257 DANCE LESSONS & SOCIALS by Salsa with J-Ro BALLROOM, WEDDING, SALSA and LATIN Dance Classes for individuals, couples and groups. WEEKLY Classes and Dance Socials! 920.306.4576, DoorCountyDanceClasses. com Karate Classes Authentic Martial Arts instruction. Training is suitable for all ages 6+. Family oriented. Location:

Bethel Baptist Church

Nursery Available during Worship 12th & Michigan • Sturgeon Bay • www.hopechurchdc.org • 920-743-2701

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chairs, bikes, x-country skis/boots, camping stove and lanterns, ugly sweater, household items & more! Fri & Sat 8-3 JUNIPER RIDGE RD, BAILEYS HARBOR

bethelellisonbay.org | Pastor Joel Rose

THURSDAY Young Adult Bible Study

8:00 PM * Meets at The Brew Coffee Shop

SUNDAY

Sunday Classes Coffee Fellowship Worship Service

9:15 AM 10:15 AM 10:45 AM

836 Michigan St - Sturgeon Bay 920-743-3241

852 Europe Bay Rd. | Ellison Bay, WI | 920.854.4490

Worship Times: 7:45 and 10:30 a.m. Welcome Summertime Visitors

Ephraim Moravian Church

www.sturgeonbayumc.org

Rev. David Ruby, Pastor

Office (920) 868-3241

WEEKEND MASS SCHEDULE May 29 – September 4, 2016: Saturdays: 4 pm Fish Creek, 5 pm Sister Bay, 6 pm Egg Harbor Sundays: 7 am Egg Harbor, 8 am Baileys Harbor, 9 am Fish Creek, 10 am Sister Bay, 11 am Jacksonport and 1pm Washington Island

Visit our website: www.stellamarisparish.com

Now Fully Accessible!

SPECIALS

RESIDENTIAL Bluff Condo For Sale by Owner Awesome bluff condo with view in Egg Harbor. 3bdr, 2 bath, 2 story and fully furnished. 920.868.3750 Newer Duplex on 2 Secluded Acres

REAL ESTATE COMMERCIAL Office Condo Home office away from home, family, and other distractions. Or, earn money by owning and renting a comfortable office to a tenant, as an investment. Large corner office in twelveunit condo, conference room available, lovely foyer ambiance, unlimited parking, patio, quiet. Sister Bay. Greatly reduced price. Motivated seller. 920.854.4120 For Sale Prime retail or restaurant location for sale in the heart of downtown Fish Creek. Looking to run a restaurant, this location has a waterview and close to the marina. Great opportunity for restaurant or retail business. Need more information please email Paul at pdfjdc@gmail.com FOR SALE! Great Small Business Boutique Retiring and selling our beloved Small Business Children’s Boutique in Sister Bay – excellent location, opportunity and potential!! Great little store in a great community with loyal and very nice customers! For more information – please call 262.685.7714.

1100 sq. ft. per unit with 2 bedrooms each, cathedral ceilings in upper, energy efficient, all appliances included, ash/birch flooring and cedar trim, beautiful wooded setting near Garrett Bay. $155,000/entire building. Call 920.421.1001 Cozy Get-Away

THIS COZY GET-AWAY SHARES 3 ACRES WITH HISTORIC, BELGIAN BRICK SCHOOLHOUSE. North of the lake-side town of Algoma, architectural authenticity celebrates this 1240 SqFt restored farm granary. Native butternut, black walnut interior and more, with original heavily beamed ceiling, notched and pegged, hand-hewn framework. One mile from Door County line. $169,900. For more information call Jan Mangin at 608.544.4142 5 Bedroom Egg Harbor home

MISCELLANEOUS Timeshare Week at Little Sweden Off-season Flex week. Includes year- round use of all resort amenities at Little Sweden. This week can be used rented or traded through RCI or II for other resorts throughout the USA and the world. $729 annual maintenance fee. Must sell. $750. Call Len at 920.854.2026

7616 Brooks Lane, Egg Harbor: Hole #6 Alpine Golf Course frontage on 1.5 acres landscaped lot. Walkout stone and cedar ranch with 5 bedrooms, 3 baths, sunroom,

The Church of the Atonement (Episcopal)

Main St. at Cottage Row Fish Creek

EVERYONE WELCOME! August 7 and 14, 8 and 10 a.m.

The Rev. Dr. Scott Stoner Director Living Compass Ministry, Milwaukee and Nicholas Center, Chicago

Shorewood, WI

New Evangelical Free Church in Northern Door County

Sunday Services 8 a.m. & 10 a.m. All are invited to coffee & conversation following our services. 920-854-2804 9970 Moravia Street ephraimmoravian.org

Interested in being part of a new church? Work on Sunday? … Worship on Monday! Give us a call: 920-333-3544 Check out our web site: www.theorchardefca.org www.facebook.com/TheOrchardEFCA Now meeting on Monday evenings. Places vary.


Sunday Worship 9:30 AM

CLASSIFIEDS two fireplaces, two decks, open concept great room plan, cherry cabinets, 1st floor utility room and pantry, hardwood and slate floors, kitchenette in lower level, plastered garage. $534,900. www.eggharborcottage.com Steven Kassner 920.217.9076 Must Sell! 3bed, 2bath, 1100sf home. Open concept. 11636 Meadow Wood Lane, Ellison Bay. Originally $115G. Now $88,000. Call Chris 920.421.0334. chrisw1296@gmail.com Cottage for Sale in Fish Creek Cottage located on Hwy 42 across from Peninsula State Park. Totally furnished. 2 Bedrooms, full kitchen, dining area, bath and den. Porch, fire pit and exterior shed. Entire house updated. Has new insulation and thermal panes. All electric. Year round use. .42 Acres, turn key – asking $189,900. Call Mitch at 414.322.0617

VACANT LAND 6+ Buildable Acres, Jacksonport Prime location, partly wooded, very reasonable. Call for complete information. 920.823.2187

REC VEHICLES BOATS Kevlar Canoe Bell Morningstar, 15’6” tandem canoe. Layup is BlackGold (carbon fiber and Kevlar), with wood trim. Very versatile and maneuvers well. Excellent condition, always stored inside. $1850 obo. Prijon Capri Tour Kayak, 12 ft. Turquoise with paddles $525 obo Call 920.495.1339 Boat For Sale 14 ft Lund. 20hp motor, trailer and Lowranz Elite 5. $3995. 920.743.5772 or 920.495.7072 Houseboat, Fishing Boats, Sailboats & Dock Floats 24 ft houseboat on pontoons 80 hp Merc and tandem trailer – make an offer. Two 15 ft sailboats and two 14 ft Mirror Craft fishing boats negotiable. 3 Large dock floats. Call 920.256.0609

Thompson Classic Canoe Thompson Classic Canoe. 17t ft and lightweight. Lake canoe. Good condition but needs some repair. Paddles/cushions included. $300. 920.839.2536 Dinghy & Motor West Marine inflatable dinghy $500. 4 hp Mercury motor $300. Call 920.743.0037 Boat For Sale Sea Ray 240 Sundeck with trailer. Low hrs. Excellent condition. 350 Mag MPI engine with Bravo III dual prop. Many extras. Can be seen at Harbor Marine & Motorsports. 920.839.2930

CAMPER/MOTORHOME Roadtrek 190 Popular Motorhome 1997, excellent condition, 48,000 miles, $19,500. 920.535.0728

SERVICES Look for additional Service display advertisements within this section.

CLEANING Residential & Rental cleaning Ally’s Custom Clean is taking appointments for late summer/fall cleaning. Call 715.581.6146 for a quote.

COMPUTER Computer Help Available Now in Sturgeon Bay Independent, professional computer help available in Sturgeon Bay. We do it all-hardware and software upgrades, repairs, and new systems sales and installs. Authorized retailer for all major phone/internet/TV providers. 920.495.4667 G.A. Computer Services, 4140 Bluff Ln, Fish Creek Custom web design with online commerce. Web hosting. Business support plans. Virus, spyware removal. Guaranteed virus free, custom computer environment. Wireless networks. Custom built computers. www. pcdoctordc.com 920.421.1757

ELECTRIC TV, Satellite, etc. TV Installation, Custom Satellite Installation, TV tower construction/service, Coax, Cat5/6 wiring and

PRINCE OF PEACE LUTHERAN

We Are Merging Excitement and Hope IntoDoors. a Vital Faith. Open Hearts. Open Minds. Open

Calvary & Zion

Pat’s Painting Interior and exterior work. Power washing. 26 years experience, fully insured. Call 920.493.0345 or 920.868.3910

PRINTING/DESIGN

MISCELLANEOUS Clock Repair and Maintenance Antique and new. Mantel, wall hanging and grandfather clocks. Draeb Jewelers, 50 N. Third Ave., Sturgeon Bay. 920.743.4233 Excavating For jobs requiring a bucket or backhoe. Digging and Trenching. Removal of stumps. Moving landscaping materials. Free Estimates. Call Dale Vogel 920.495.3614

2forU Design Gallery. Photo Restoration, Printing Graphic Design. High quality archival fine art reproductions and photos, scanning. 2forU Gallery features: Ed Fenendael, Kerry Vavra, Heidi Atanasov. Fish Creek. 2forUDesign. com 920.854.7770

10:30 Calvary Calvary 10:15 4650CTY CTY 4650 E E Egg WI WI EggHarbor, Harbor,

A.M. Enterprises AutoCare Domestic/import vehicle diagnostics, maintenance, repair, detailing. For appointments: 920.839.2288, 2604 Grove Rd., Baileys Harbor, WI. www. amautocare.com

Sunday Service: 10:00 am Pastor Ed House Joyful Praise Praise &&Worship Joyful Worship Biblical Answersto to Today’s Today’s Challenges Biblical Answers Challenges ALL ALL ARE ARE WELCOME! WELCOME! Café ♥❤ Nursery & Youth Services Food Pantry Café Youth Services ❤ ♥Food Pantry

is alwayson on ♥Our is always open open Our Our lightlight is always Ourpantry pantry is always

ForFor More Information: More Information: www.Facebook.com/Doorofl ife 421-1525 www.Facebook.com/Dooroflife (920)(920) 421-1525

St. Luke’s Episcopal Church Canterbury Lane, Sister Bay - 1st left off Hwy. 57, south of 42/57 intersection The Rev. Barbara J. Sajna * 854-9600 http://stlukes-sisterbay.org

Sunday Worship 10:00 A.M. and 8:00 A.M. in July & August

MISCELLANEOUS Photography Submissions Photo submissions wanted for the Peninsula Pulse. Please email digital files to letters@ppulse.com. Scrap Metal, Brass, Copper, Aluminum, Stainless If you are looking to clean up around the yard, a fence line or just around the property in general, give me a call. I can help with the clean up. Your scrap metal could be turned into extra cash! Insured. Call Gary at 920.819.5741

10924 Old Stage Rd., Sister Bay

920.868.3112

9 a.m. Sunday School 10 a.m. Worship 920.854.4080: Office Phone All Who Follow Christ: Ministers Rev. Kerry D. Krauss: Pastor

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T h e E p i s c o p a l C h u r c h We l c o m e s Yo u !

St. Paul’s Lutheran Church (E.L.C.A.)

A Friendly Place to Worship - All Are Welcome Sunday Services Wednesdays 8:00am, 9:30am Worship with Communion 6 pm Adult Bible Class 6:30 pm Sunday School 9:20am Holy Communion Every Sunday

East of Hwy. 42 on Juddville Rd. • 920.868.2826 stpaulslutheranjuddville.org Rev. Frank Kauzlarich

ELCA, Ellison Bay, WI Frank Maxwell, interim pastor Church Office: 920-854-2988

Holy Nativity 3434 County Road V Jacksonport Saturday Eucharist at 5:00pm Rite Two, Full Mass with music

Christ the King

512 Michigan Street Sturgeon Bay Sunday Eucharist at 9:30am Rite Two, Full Mass with music

Join Us in Sunday Worship!

9:00 AM 9:15 AM 10:15 AM 10:45 AM

Traditional Worship Service with communion
 Sunday School (Sept. to mid-May) Coffee and Fellowship Contemporary Worship with communion

Celebrating 75 Years! For more information on church activities visit: www.shepherdofthebay.org

Donna Russell

Pastor Chris Leonard Bible Centered Worship Church Phone 868-3811

Piano Recital 9:00pm AM Sunday Worship 7:00 11 AM thPeninsula Park Friday, May 10 Amphitheater Service Calvary UMC

Reception Following 5:30 Saturday Service

Cottage Row & Main Fish Creek

Bible Study 1:30 Wednesday 8:15 Sunday

Handicap Accessible Hearing Assisted Loop System

www.ccfishcreek.com

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Vicar Father Olin Sletto

2731 Hwy 42 On the Hill Overlooking Sister Bay

SKILLED TRADES

SISTER BAY MORAVIAN CHURCH

www.calvaryzionumc.org www.calvaryzionumc.org

www.cckhn.org

CHRISTIAN CHURCH where faith meets real life

United Methodist services Sundays at 9:00

Message: Sacred Delight

743-3286

Door of Life

Corner of North Cave Point Road & Hwy 57

5 pm Fri 1/23 Acoustic Jam Open Mic & Meal @ Calvary

Worship services are streamed ‘live’ and archived at BethanyEphraim.org

WANTED

CLEAN IT…FIX IT…BUILD IT! Door County handyman available for all residential & business needs. Experienced, licensed, insured. Photos & references available. Call Tom at 920.743.9727

In essentials, unity. In non-essentials, liberty. In all things, love.

October 2 & 9 Rev. Martin Ruge VisitorsNeenah, always welcome. WI

Personal Chef and Catering Service “Unbelievably good food” prepared for you by an experienced, licensed and insured professional Chef. Call 561.929.7679 or adriana@a-to-z-cuisine.com

Celebrating 120 Years!

Worship

parishoffice@calvaryzionumc.org parishoffice@calvaryzionumc.org

Wildwood Painting Co. Long time local craftsman, 35 years experience. Live & work in the community. Interior/exterior. Individual contractor – I will give you the proposal and do the work! Marc, 920.421.0767

BETHANY

LUTHERAN CHURCH 3028 Church St. (Cty Hwy Q) Ephraim, WI 54211-0707

jacksonportmethodist.org

The United Methodist Church

Rev. Jane Michael Morris Rev. Sommers

PAINTING

Free Tree Removal Will come to your site and remove downed trees and firewood at no charge, no brush. Also custom log splitting & chainsaw work at a reasonable rate. Phone 920.421.4644

(920)743-7750 Paul Thierfelder M. Div., M.A.

8781CTY CTY FF 8781 Creek, WI betweenFish Fish Creek and Baileys Harbor

Russ’ Sharpening Service Specializing in cutlery and scissors. Drop off at Jungwirth’s Ace or Nelson’s Shopping Center, Fish Creek.

Triptow’s Tree Service, your trees, our experts Removal • thinning • view improvement • areal work/ climbing • emergency service • firewood prep • splitting upon request • brush chipping. Reliable & fully insured. 920.883.7480

Sturgeon Bay Christian Counseling

Pastor James Gomez 1756 Michigan Street Sturgeon Bay, WI 54235 920.743.7750 • princeofpeacesb.com

8:45 Zion

911 Lawn Care and Firewood Services Looking for more clients. We are now scheduling spring clean ups. Cuttings as Needed. Offering Maintenance Mulch Topsoil Plantings Seeding. Call with questions. Free Estimates. A Family Business 920.495.4740

August 7 October 2 & 9 Rev. Joy Rev. Mortensen-Wiebe Martin Ruge Saukville, Neenah,WI WI

DOORCOUNTYPULSE.COM  AUGUST 5–12/2016 • v22i32  PENINSULA PULSE

Tues-Fri, 9am - 4 pm FREE WIFI

LAWN/YARD CARE

Worship with us at the historic 1890s “Little White Church” in Jacksonport.

Sunday Bible Study 8:45 am SUNDAY WORSHIP 9:30 am Master’s Cup Coffee House Summer Hours

Erica’s Blooming Inspirations 20% off of any wedding. I am a florist and I make artificial and fresh flowers for all events. Please look at my website at ericasbloominginspirations. com. 920.664.8718

cell phone boosters. Call Paul with Communication Specialists at 920.743.5320

Visiting Pastor

CELEBRATING 20 YEARS • 1996–2016

2016 • Our 134th Year


CELEBRATING 20 YEARS • 1996–201

Tim Bley

TOTAL

LawnCare 920.333.0252

Organic & Conventiona l Lawn Care Treatments

General Property Management • Lawn Care Treatments • Snow Plowing

www.doorcountylawns.com

920.493.3085 tim.totallawncare@ gmail.com

Townline Timber services, inc

Commercial and Residential Tree Service • Lot, Road and Driveway Clearing • Tree Maintenance and Removal • Brush and Whole-tree Chipping • View Improvement • Bobcat “Brushcat” Brush Cutting • Aerial Bucket Work and Climbing • Power Stump Grinding • Firewood and Woodchips Delivered

CLASSIFIEDS TO RENT Seek to rent humble apt/ home/cabin in Sister Bay I am looking for a small apartment, cabin or home in Sister Bay as I have recently been offered a permanent job. I am not a seasonal employee. I am not a tourist. I am a hard working, honest, respectful, professional and a wonderful tenant with exemplary references. I do not do drugs or smoke and neither does my small quiet dog. I appreciate your consideration in helping me find a home. PLEASE text or call. I work seven days a week but I will get back to you asap. Thank you. 920.606.5894 LOOKING FOR YEAR ROUND RENTAL Looking for a 3 bedroom for rent in any part of Door County for September. I have no pets. Am smoke, drug, and alcohol free. I pay rent early and have utility credits almost every month. Call or Text 715.563.4372

Local Mulch - Firewood - Free Delivery

HELP WANTED Look for additional Help Wanted display advertisements within this section.

HEALTH CARE Assisted Living CNA Part Time CNA for Assisted Living Home. Call 920.854.7225. Hearthside. Sister Bay.

HOTEL/LODGING Year ‘Round Guest Service Representative The Hilltop Inn is now hiring a part time, year round guest service representative. Flexible schedule is required. No experience needed-we will train the right person. Call Kelly at 920.493.3556 to set up an interview. Front Desk-Country House Resort Year Round Position – The Country House Resort, in Sister Bay, is looking for an outstanding individual to join our exclusive year-round staff as a Guest Service Representative. You must have a passion for people and providing outstanding customer service. You can help us provide an extraordinary experience

for our guests and we can help you take the next step in your hospitality career. Join our team at a highly respected property and enjoy the family atmosphere and ownership; stable, professional management and core of reliable longterm coworkers. This is a year round position, 32-40 hours May-October, and part-time Nov-April, majority of shifts will be evenings 3pm–10:30pm. Contact us for additional information or stop in to meet our manager and year-round staff. Manager@ country-house.com Hotel Fish Creek Now Hiring ASST MANAGER -Flexible. HOUSEKEEPERS -9am-2pm. FRONT DESK -2pm-10pm. REQUIRED: WEEKENDS & AMBITION. Opportunity for Advancement. End of Season Bonus. Call: Lynne 920.421.0663 Resume: lynne@ applecreekresort.com AmericInn Sturgeon Bay – Night Audit Position This year ’round part time position of Night Audit duties include, but are not limited to the following: Front desk duties and performing all end of day reports, setting up breakfast, assisting

in laundry and providing exceptional customer service. Apply in person. AmericInn Sturgeon Bay – Night Auditor This year ’round part time position of Night Audit duties include, but are not limited to the following: Front desk duties and performing all end of day reports, setting up breakfast, assisting in laundry and providing exceptional customer service. Apply in person at 622 S. Ashland Ave, Sturgeon Bay. The Water Street Inn – Ephraim Housekeepers The Water Street Inn – Ephraim, 9944 Water St., is looking for housekeepers who can work through October. We are a fun, friendly and energetic Inn. Starting pay is $14/hour. If you are interested stop by to fill out an application. Or call 920.854.2831 Come Join us at Rowleys Bay Resort! We are looking for good people to join our fastgrowing business! Openings available for front desk and housekeeping. Experience is appreciated but we can train anyone with a great attitude. We need full and part-time help from early

Public Recycling Event

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854-9135 OR (920) 493-3400

Saturday Aug 13th 8-Noon Nicolet Bank

2438 South Bay Shore Drive Sister Bay, (Old BayLake Bank)

920.743.9999 or 877.330.6333

You are invited to Door-Tran’s FUN Event at the Egg Harbor FUN Park on Saturday, August 20th from 2:00 pm-5:00 pm (Rain Date set for 8/21/16)

Indoor/Outdoor Activities - Unlimited Go Kart Rides & Mini Golf for $20 ~ Raffles ~ Silent Auction Event Sponsored by: Ministry Door County Medical Center and Main Street Market. Door-Tran is dedicated to connecting people to transportation services that are affordable, available, and accessible. ******************************************************

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PENINSULA PULSE  AUGUST 5–12/2016 • v22i32  DOORCOUNTYPULSE.COM

Find Door-Tran at: 1009 Egg Harbor Rd ~ Sturgeon Bay www.door-tran.org ~ info@door-tran.org

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Charge For All TVs/Monitors

Computers Laptops Dehumidifiers Monitors Telephone Systems Wire & Cabling Keyboards/Mice Servers

Proceeds Benefit United Way

Hair Dryers TVs/Monitors Refrigerator Video Equipment Bread Makers Appliances Stereos Frying Pans Exercise Equipment Mechanical Equipment Water Heaters Curling Iron All Batteries Copiers Stoves Modems Cell Phones Washers Business Equipment Radios Dryers Printers Air Conditioner Appliances Cyber Green LLC 920-246-7143 CyberGreenLLC.com

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Green Door Drafting & Design Residential Design Consultants

Elliot Goettelman Nick Hoover

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Cleaning Staining ■ Clear Coating

920.333.0323 elliot@greendoordrafting.com

Over 30 Years Experience Call 920-743-4073

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Commercial and Residential Tree Service

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OPEN 7 DAYS 6am - 9pm

920.839.2114 Groceries • Beer • Wine • Movies LOCAL Renards Cheese & Marchants Meats

Made to order PIZZA by the slice or pie Downtown Baileys Harbor A ‘Gas Station’ with a VIEW!

John Tong John Tong John Tong Tong Jean Jean Tong

Salzsieder Nursery.com

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3886 M 3886 County County M 3886Bay, County M Sturgeon Bay, WI Sturgeon WI54235 54235 Sturgeon Bay, WI 54235 Phone 920•746•4416 Phone: 920.746.4416 Phone 920•746•4416 www.idlewildkennel.com www.idlewildkennel.com www.idlewildkennel.com

Find us at the Sturgeon Bay and Baileys Harbor Farmers Markets or call for an appointment 920.327.0471

Heat / Central Air

Hours Hours M-F 8-4 Hours M-F 8a-4p SatM-F 8-11:30 8-4 Sun 3-5 Sat7:30, 8-11:30 Sat 8a-11a 7:30,3-5p 3-5 SunSun 7:30a,


May to late October. Housing and meals available with competitive wages. Please call Jewel to discuss and/ or make an appointment at 920.854.2385 x 894. www. rowleysbayresort.com Gordon Lodge is hiring for the 2016 Season! Enjoy a beautiful, friendly work environment, competitive hourly wages and a 50% discount on meals at Top Deck. Experience is a plus, but not required. Housing is available. Full time seasonal maintenance, Front desk staff, Event bartenders, Event waitstaff & Houseman. Visit us athttp:// gordonlodge.com/ to fill out an application or pick one up. Please send application to glodge@gordonlodge. com or drop off. Please call Dawn 920.495.4363 or Gordon Lodge 920.839.2331 with any questions.

LANDSCAPING/ MAINTENANCE Landscape Maintenance Team Leader

PENINSULA PROPERTY MANAGEMENT is looking for an experienced landscape maintenance team leader in residential & commercial settings. Ability to manage crew of 1 – 3 members. Experience with mowing, trimming, installation & pruning of plants, shrubs, and trees, mulching, fertilizing. Ability to run skid steer as well as all basic landscape equipment. Team Leaders must have and maintain a valid drivers license. Contact Dan 920.495.0079 or dharnois@dcwis.com

MISCELLANEOUS Peninsula State Park Golf Course Looking for part time staff. Positions include driving range, ranger/starter, restaurant server, line cook & outside services. Come join the great team at Peninsula! If interested please contact Jason at 920.854.5068 or stop by the clubhouse to pick up an application. Moving help Two nice people from Colorado relocating to Sister Bay- need one person to help unload a UHaul truck – 2 hours evening of Wed. Aug.10 and 2-3 hours morning, Wed. Aug.11. $20/hour. Please call Mary at 970.319.0918

Dave’s Tree Services, Inc Door County’s Full Service Tree Care Company is expanding! We are looking for a few hardworking, dependable individuals to join our team. Positions consist of tree work and light landscaping. Experience with a chain saw, a plus! If you love the outdoors, this may be the job for you! Experience in these areas is preferred, but we will train the right individual. Call 920.823.2259 or email your resume to treecare@ davestreeserviceinc.com

OFFICE Event Coordinator The Baileys Harbor Community Association is looking for a motivated person to join their team as an event coordinator. A fun work environment with a great staff. Duties include organizing and executing the BHCA run events and running the Baileys Harbor Visitor Center in season. $15/ hour with approximately 40hrs/week May – October and 18hrs/week November – April. Must be available for festival dates, have the ability to lift 40lbs, and able to use Microsoft Office. A bartender’s license is preferred but not required. To apply or

Emmaual 6/100

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get more information, send resume to info@baileysharbor. com by September 1. CLEANING PERSON NEEDED The Door County Maritime Museum in Sturgeon Bay is looking for a reliable cleaning person to work 10-20 hrs per week. Flexible scheduling but some evening and weekend hrs required. Call 920.743.5958 or email apaul@dcmm.org for more information. Full Time Accountant The Rushes Resort in Baileys Harbor is now hiring for a full-time accountant with benefits. We are a timeshare resort, so we are busy all year. Our accounting software is AccPac and very user friendly. Please apply by sending your resume via email to dphillips493@outlook.com

Protecting Door County’s Best Interest Since 1958

You have the Toys, We have the Markets. 209 Green Bay Rd. PO BOX 470 Sturgeon Bay, WI 920.743.6565 or 800.371.6565

CELEBRATING 20 YEARS • 1996–2016

CLASSIFIEDS

Back to Basics Market Farm Farm Fresh Eggs Organic-Free Range Omega 6/3 8307 High Plateau Rd. Baileys Harbor

920.421.1647 •

Tangled l.l.c.

10610 Meadow Lane, Sister Bay • 854-1011 Northern Door’s Full Service Salon & Spa Hair * Nails * Tanning * Massages * Chemical Peels, Microdermabrasion * Dermaplaning * Waxing

PROFESSIONAL DC Partnership for Children & Families Coordinator The Door County Partnership for Children and Families is seeking a Coordinator to assist in leading and implementing the goals of the partnership whose focus is to collaborate with current service providers. This position will start as part time in 2016 and will grow to full time in 2017. Ability

Call to Schedule Your Summer • Lawn Care • Irrigation • Landscaping

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• Property Maintenance/Mowing • Spring & Fall Cleanups • Mulch • Tree Trimming & Removal

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ls ntale e R b air ila Ch Ava

Katie Voight owner/stylist Unit 31 • Garden Level Country Walk Shops Sister Bay • (920) 854-9866

920 • 854 • 9107 Sister Bay, WI 54234 Country Walk Shops - Upper Level

Full Service Salon 245 Kentucky St., Sturgeon Bay (920) 818-0352 • invidiasalon245.com

Door County Window Cleaning Walker Wuollett, Owner Fast • Professional • Residential • Commercial wuollett@gmail.com * 614-743-4621

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Steve Chomeau Owner/Agent

920.421.1366 • noordoorfloor@yahoo.com

HelpingTo To Build Build Your Your Future Helping Helping YourFuture Future Helping To To Build Build Your Future

Elders Making Transitions Including End-of-Life

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Insuranceand andannuities annuitiesissued issuedbybyThe ThePrudential PrudentialInsurance InsuranceCompany CompanyofofAmerica, America,Newark, Newark,NJNJand anditsits Insurance affiliates. Offering investment advisory servicesthrough through Prudential Financial Planning Services (PFPS), InsuranceOffering and annuities issued by The services Prudential Insurance Company of America, Newark, NJ and its aa affiliates. investment advisory Prudential Financial Planning Services (PFPS), division ofPruco PrucoSecurities, Securities, LLCadvisory (Pruco),services pursuant toseparate separate clientFinancial agreement. Offering insurance anda affiliates. Offering investment through Prudential Planning Services division of LLC (Pruco), pursuant to client agreement. Offering insurance and Insurance andofannuities issued by The Prudential Insurance Company ofandAmerica, Newark, NJ(PFPS), and securities products and services as a registered representative of Pruco an agent of issuing insurance division Pruco Securities, LLC (Pruco), pursuant to separate client agreement. Offering insurance andits securities products and services as a registered representative of Pruco and an agent of issuing insurance affiliates. Offering investment advisory through Prudential Financial Planning Services (PFPS), a companies. 1-800-201-6690. Each company issolely solely responsible for itsown ownfinancial financial condition and securities products and services ascompany aservices registered representative offor Pruco and an agentcondition of issuing insurance companies. 1-800-201-6690. Each is responsible its and division of Pruco Securities, LLC (Pruco), pursuant to separate client agreement. Offering insurance and contractual obligations. *Availability varies by carrier and state. companies. 1-800-201-6690. Each company is solely responsible for its own financial condition and contractual obligations. *Availability varies by carrier and state. D5080 0238574-00003-00 securities products and services as a registered representative insurance contractual obligations. *Availability varies by carrier and state.of Pruco and an agent of issuingD5080 0238574-00003-00 D5080 0238574-00003-00 companies. 1-800-201-6690. Each company is solely responsible for its own financial condition and

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DAVID R. CLOWERS Attorney & Counselor At Law

Over 40 years experience helping others with Social Security benefits, family, juvenile, criminal, simple wills, estates, and bankruptcy matters. 1/2 hour Free consultation available. 207 South Fourth Ave. • Sturgeon Bay, WI 54234 Tel: (920) 743-1716 • Fax: (920) 743-6914 Email: clowers@doorpi.net

Rocky Ridge Storage 1/4 mile west of the intersection of County A & County E (Peninsula Center) Ephraim

Boat/RV/Vehicle Storage Units For info call 920-421-1032

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3487 County E, Baileys Harbor

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www.theactionrealty.com 619 N. 8th Ave. • Sturgeon Bay 920-743-6906 • stbay@theactionrealty.com

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DOORCOUNTYPULSE.COM  AUGUST 5–12/2016 • v22i32  PENINSULA PULSE

LIFE •• FINANCIAL FINANCIAL SERVICES SERVICES •• ANNUITIES ANNUITIES •• LONG LONG TERM TERM CARE CARE INSURANCE* INSURANCE* LIFE LIFE LIFE • FINANCIAL SERVICES • ANNUITIES • LONGTERM TERMCARE CARE INSURANCE* • FINANCIAL INSURANCE* Jurgita Downham SERVICES • ANNUITIES • LONGFor insurance andfinancial financial Jurgita Downham For insurance and Financial Advisor Jurgita Downham Jurgita Downham ® Financial Advisor For insurance andand financial services, The Rock the For insurance The Prudential Insurance services, The Rock®®isisfinancial the Financial Advisor Financial Advisor The Prudential Insurance services, The Rock is®the place tobe. be. services, The Rock is the Company ofAmerica America The Prudential Insurance place to The Company Prudential Insurance of place to be. 2109 EastofCapitol Capitol Drive Company America place to be. 2109 East Drive Company of America Appleton, WI 54911 2109 East Capitol Drive Appleton, WI 54911 2109 East Phone Capitol Drive Office 920-636-2339 Appleton, WI920-636-2339 54911 Office Phone Appleton, WI 54911 Cell Phone 920-216-2551 Office Phone 920-636-2339 Cell Phone 920-216-2551 Office Phone 920-636-2339 Jurgita.Downham@Prudential.com Cell Phone 920-216-2551 Cell Jurgita.Downham@Prudential.com Phone 920-216-2551 Jurgita.Downham@Prudential.com

Is your insurance competitively priced? Let’s find out! Call for a free review and quote. A second opinion is never a bad idea.


CELEBRATING 20 YEARS • 1996–201

Life is full of change. Has your insurance kept up?

CLASSIFIEDS

An outdated policy could mean costly policy gaps or overlaps. To know for sure, call me for a free, no-obligation Personal Insurance Review. Jennifer Schmatz Agency 2525 So. Bay Shore Dr. Sister Bay, WI 54234 (920) 854-4609 jboeckma@amfam.com “

American Family Mutual Insurance Company and it Subsidiaries Home Office - Madison, WI 53783 (c) 2006 002138 - 3/06

FOR SALE • Located in Egg Harbor (7616 Brooks Lane) on Alpine Golf Course Hole #6 (Black Course) • 5 Bed, 3 Bath, Walkout Ranch • 2 Decks, 2 Fireplaces • Sunroom, Lower Family Room • Stone, Cedar Exterior $534,900 920.217.9076 | Steven Kassner eggharborcottage.com

2005 Dutch Classic 39 Park Model Reduced: $17,500 Description: Seasonal. 40’. Cathedral Roof, Beige Vinyl Siding with white trim. Large Master Bedroom. Includes: 16cft. Refrid/Freezer combo. 30” Range, Range Microwave, Upgraded Air-Conditioning unit, Standard Furnace, 2 Pullout Couches, 1 queen bed/frame, Dinette and 4 Chairs; CD Player/Radio Combo with Wired Audio System. Outside Deck included. Single-paned windows. Amish Crafted Cabinets, Window Treatments. Price is firm. Great for seasonal campers! Currently located at Jellystone in Sturgeon Bay. Please call: 920-825-7372 for more information.

to work with a wide range of individuals and groups with a minimum amount of supervision. Possess excellent oral, written, and electronic communication, leadership and organizational skills. Knowledge of the community and experience working with a coalition preferred. Grant writing and marketing experience desired. Send cover letter and resume to: Amy Kohnle at United Way of Door County, amy@unitedwaydc.com Full time Executive Director HELP of Door County, Inc, Door County’s only Domestic Abuse Agency, is currently in search for a full time Executive Director. Qualified candidates must possess excellent communication skills and understand that they are the “face” of HELP in Door County. They must be a proven leader with strengths in the area of staff supervision, fundraising, and grant writing. They should also possess strong financial knowledge. Preference may be given to candidates with a Bachelor’s Degree in Business and/or a minimum of 5 years of experience in non-profit management. Candidates are also expected to attend all HELP of Door County events and other various community events, including some nights and weekends. Interested candidates can apply by emailing a cover letter, resume and three references to fiscal@ helpofdoorcounty.org or mailing to the below address

by August 20, 2016: HELP of Door County, Inc Attn: Brenda Curtis 219 Green Bay Road Sturgeon Bay, WI 54235

package including 401k, paid vacation, bonus structure, life insurance and great pay! Call Bruce 920.868.3532

RESTAURANT

Roadhouse of Carlsville Part time day cook. Servers. Dishwasher. Apply in person.

Kitchen & Dining Room Staff The Clearing Folk School, in Ellison Bay, has a full-time opening on its kitchen/dining room staff. Season ends in late October. For information, call Mike at 920.854.4088 or email mike@theclearing.org Full-time, Year-Round Positions Available! Looking to fill deli and cashier positions in a year-round capacity. Deli position entails managing inventory, baking, slicing, and ensuring excellent service. Benefits include daily lunch, a discount on everything offered for sale. Definitely open to negotiation on pay. Call Bryan at 920.868.3351, email him at FCMarket1895@ gmail.com, or stop in and fill out an application. Cornerstone in Baileys Harbor The Cornerstone in Baileys Harbor is now hiring kitchen help, dishwashers, prep cooks. Part or full-time. Stop in for an application. Alexander’s Hiring cook, part time bartender & dishwashers. Call Bruce 920.868.3532 or stop in for an application. Broiler Chef Alexander’s is seeking a fulltime year ’round broiler chef. This position includes a benefit

Established 1948

www.kellstromray.com Visit our website for printable, detailed brochures, and pictures on ALL OF OUR LISTINGS.

HELP WANTED Part-Time Cook Stop in for an application

P.O. Box 108 • Sister Bay, WI 54234-0108 • Directly across from the Sister Bay Marina Phone (920) 854-2353 • Email: realestate@kellstromray.com • Website: www.kellstromray.com

Serving All of Northern Door County Fully Insured • Free Quotes

Lawn Mowing • Power Washing Firewood Delivery • Window Washing

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PENINSULA PULSE  AUGUST 5–12/2016 • v22i32  DOORCOUNTYPULSE.COM

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- Call Today -

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Entry Level and Experienced Carpenters Full-time, year round positions with potential growth opportunities. Full benefits package. Mail or drop off resume at: PortSide Builders, Inc. 810 S. Lansing Ave. Sturgeon Bay, WI or pick up application

Dave’s Mowing and More, LLC

Commercial • Residential • Condos

920-421-1090

Servicing Northern Door

Lawn Care • Landscaping Mulch Landscaping • Rototilling • Power Washing • Tree Trimming & Removal • Fire Wood • Gutter Cleaning • Snow Plowing • Seasonal House Checks FREE Estimates • Fully Insured

Lawn Mowing • Fertilizing/Weed Control Bed Maintenance • Mulch/Stone Installation Stone/Brick Patio & Walkways

“The Property Care Professionals”. ahlswedegreen.com • 920-824-5735

Floor Mart

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PERMANENT RESIDENTIAL DOCKS All of our work is custom Custom Engineered designed and

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• RIP RAP • LAUNCH RAMPS & DAVITS • TUG & BARGE WORK • DREDGING

• RIP RAP MIKE KAHR P.E. 854-2492 • LAUNCH RAMPS & DAVITS • TUG & BARGE WORK • DREDGING

MIKE KAHR P.E. (920) 421-1001

Cook’s Assistant, Server The Mill Supper Club is looking to hire a cook’s assistant and a server. Both to work evenings and weekends. Stop for an application. Don or Shelly, 920.743.5044 Top Deck is hiring for the 2016 Season! Enjoy a beautiful, friendly work environment, competitive hourly wages and a 50% discount on meals at Top Deck. Experience is a plus, but not required. Housing is available. Host/ Hostess, Waitstaff, Bussers, Dishwashers, Bartenders, Line and prep cooks & Part

Help Wanted – Shoreline Resort We have openings for 1 or more days a week. Looking for housekeepers and help with the grounds. Great work environment. Call us at 920.854.2900 and join our team. Stonehedge Bar & Grill Wait staff, bartender, part time cook, & full time cook with potential for year round. Stonehedge Bar & Grill, Egg Harbor. Apply in person or call 920.495.0779 Coyote Roadhouse Now hiring bartenders and line cooks. Both positions are year round. Stop by to fill out an application. 3026 County E, Baileys Harbor. Wild Tomato Wild Tomato is looking for new faces to join our team! Now hiring for full & part time front of house positions in Sister Bay & Fish Creek. Stop in or email jobs@ wildtomatopizza.com

RETAIL Greens N Grains Natural Food Market Has a couple of openings

HELP WANTED Dock Staff

Real Estate

Harbor Property Services

Come Join us at Rowleys Bay Resort! We are looking for good people to join our fastgrowing business! Openings available for a buffet cook, server, baker, bakery retail and dishwasher. Experience is appreciated but we can train anyone with a great attitude. We need full and part-time help from early May to late October. Housing and meals available with competitive wages. Please call Jewel to discuss and/ or make an appointment at 920.854.2385 x 894. www. rowleysbayresort.com

time breakfast cook. Visit us at http://gordonlodge.com/ to fill out an application or pick one up. Please send application to glodge@ gordonlodge.com or drop off. Please call Dawn 920.495.4363 or Gordon Lodge 920.839.2331 with any questions.

Showroom & Warehouse 960 Green Bay Rd., Sturgeon Bay Carpet • Hardwood • Vinyl • Tile

Plank Flooring Starting at $1.50/sq. ft. Carpet Starting at $0.99/sq. ft. www.FloorMartDoorCounty.com

Free Estimates • 920-743-6222

Fish Creek Town Dock Full- & Part-time, June-October Phone (920) 868-1714 for application

Town of Gibraltar P.O. Box 850 Fish Creek, WI 54212

Help Wanted

College Kids Back At School & We Need Help Thru October

Part-Time Housekeeping Good Wages, Nice Working Conditions Ask for Sarah 920.868.3115 Or Mark at 920.493.1187

HELP WANTED Long-established Retail Business Illness forced us to seek additional retail assistance. Seasonal hours up to 40 hours/week. Call (920) 421-1211 for details. (Please leave a message.)

Find those thingamajigs and doohickeys in the Pulse classifieds!


for check out people and a stocking/cleaning person. Energetic, health-minded, positive people can apply by requesting an application via email or better yet by stopping in to pick one up. info@Greens-N-Grains. com //920.868.9999// 7821 Hwy 42, Egg Harbor Sales Associates Full-time & part-time positions available at both Hide Side Stores in downtown Fish Creek. If you are personable and a team player, email jim@hideside. com, call 920.868.2333 and ask for Jim, or stop in to apply. Housing available. Door County Rock & Gem Seeking retail assistant. Flexible hours, responsible, good with people. Apply in person. 10421 Hwy

42, North Ephraim (next to Summertime). Retail sales associate Looking for a sales associate to work part-time in our women’s and men’s boutique downtown Fish Creek. Trails End Clothing Co has been established since 2013 and has a great following and laid back atmosphere. Must have retail experience and able to work through October. If interested please stop by for an application and ask for Marcella or Paul.

* Direct the financial operations of the Club. * Experience overseeing information technology operation preferred. * Five to seven years of professional accounting experience. * Competitive wage and benefit package offered

Full time Wastewater Plant Operator position available with the Village of Ephraim. Valid driver’s license required with ability to obtain CDL. Compensation range upon hire ($15-$19 per hour) dependent upon experience. Excellent benefit package including a no-deductible health insurance plan and Wisconsin retirement system enrollment. Contact the village office or the village website for a job description and application. Applications must be received by 4:00P.M., Friday, August 19, 2016. The village reserves its option to extend the deadline or to re-advertise at its discretion. Ephraim Administrative Office, P.O. Box 138, 10005 Norway, Ephraim, WI 54211. (920) 854-5501. www.ephraim-wisconsin.com

CELEBRATING 20 YEARS • 1996–2016

CLASSIFIEDS

Seeking Full-time Golf Club Accountant

SKILLED TRADES Painter Wanted Looking for experienced painter. 920.493.0345

NOTICE OF OPPORTUNITY TO APPLY FOR COMMERCIAL WATERCRAFT The Fish Creek Harbor Commission is seeking applications from commercial marine operators to lease dock space on our west town dock (formerly the Holy Name Retreat House/Quo Vadis dock). The space available will be 53 linear feet on the east side and three 25 foot slips (75 feet) on the west side. One vendor per side. A ticket office on site is available. Due to uncertainties regarding our future intentions for this area of our harbor, these will be one year leases. All applicants must be fully insured and in the case of crewed boats, must show proof of all USCG requirements. Please submit proposals including type of operation, years in business and proposed dock rent to the Fish Creek Harbor Commission 4097 Main Street PO Box 850, Fish Creek, WI 54212 or email clerk@townofgibraltar.us. For specific questions please contact Dave Harris at 868-1714. The Fish Creek Harbor Commission and Gibraltar Town board may decline any or all proposals. All proposals must be received no later than Noon, August 12, 2016.

OPERATIONS IN FISH CREEK HARBOR

We are looking for a …

COOK

No phone calls please

RENARD’S CHEESE IS GROWING!

Clarity Care is expanding to Fish Creek! Now hiring Personal Caregivers to provide companionship, assist with basic household chores & other daily living needs in client’s homes. Must be 18 years or older, have a valid driver’s license & personal vehicle with insurance coverage, able to pass a DOJ Caregiver background screening, & successfully complete required training in Green Bay. Full & Part-Time positions available for 1st, 2nd & 3rd shifts. Apply today at www.claritycare.org/apply. For more details call (920) 236-6560.

Want to join our awesome team?

Spot has two full-time positions available thru December and back again in March. Possible year around hours. Retail experience not necessary but must be a responsible, organized, multitasking people-person with an interest in fashion. Some night and weekendsʼ. Please send resume to Jennie at Spot54234@gmail.com

Renard’s Cheese is a Third Generation Family Owned and Operated local business. We are on track to expand our operations with a new factory in the next two years. Currently, we are adding staff and are interested in people that want to grow with our company. Competitive Wage & Benefits.

YEAR ROUND, FULL TIME:

Production Associates – Monday – Friday 7:00 – 3:30 Retail Associate - 4 set days a week & every other weekend Route Driver - Part-time Weekdays – Hours vary for shift Retail Associate – Part-time - Weekends Applications available at both Algoma & Sturgeon Bay locations or send resume to Debbie@renardscheese.com. No phone calls please.

HELP WANTED Full-time housekeepers and front desk clerk to work through October. Call Lana at Ephraim Shores Motel (920) 854-2371

to join our fast-growing restaurant!

October. Housing and meals available

NOW HIRING! Cellcom has positions Built for You!

with competitive wages. Please call Jewel to discuss and/or make an appointment at 920-854-2385 x 894. www.rowleysbayresort.com

Cellcom, a leading wireless telecommunications company in Wisconsin, is looking to hire high-energy Retail Sales Consultants for our Sturgeon Bay store. If you love technology and have great sales and service skills, we want to hear from you! We offer a full benefit package including:

BREWERY PRODUCTION WORKER Part Time/Full Time

Join our team, today!

Visit us at the Door County Job Center on Wednesday, August 17th from 10:00 AM – 2:00 PM!

Apply at: www.cellcom.com/careers Cellcom is part of the Nsight family of companies

If you are enthusiastic, love coffee, enjoy customer service, and a high-energy individual, we want to hear from you! • • • • •

We Offer Many Bene�its Including: Free beverages while working Great barista training Discounted Cellcom cellphone services Health club membership reimbursements Immediate paid vacation with option to purchase more

Join our team, today! Visit us at the Door County Job Center on Wednesday, August 17th from 10:00 AM – 2:00 PM!

Apply at: www.glascoffee.com GLAS is part of the Nsight family of companies

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Tapuat, LLC is looking to expand our production/bottling team! Candidates must be able to lift up to 50lbs, have a strong work ethic, pride themselves on cleanliness and be a team player. Experience in a production/factory setting helpful but will train the right candidate. M-F year round, occasional Saturdays. Pay based on experience. Qualified candidates can email their resume to tapuatkombucha@gmail.com

 Competitive wages and commissions - $40,000 to $45,000 annually  Great retail training and career growth opportunities  Free employee phone, along with discounted employee and family wireless service  Immediate paid vacation with option to purchase more

Glas, the green coffeehouse, is a venture for Cellcom, and is currently looking to hire high-energy Baristas for our Sturgeon Bay location.

DOORCOUNTYPULSE.COM  AUGUST 5–12/2016 • v22i32  PENINSULA PULSE

We need a full or part-time cook until late

NOW HIRING!


Grab ‘N Go Pizza Fresh from te Deli

BREAKFAST LUNCH DINNER 6:29 am9:01 pm Located at the Fish Creek entrance to the Peninsula State Park (920) 868-2999 www.juliesmotel.com relax@juliesmotel.com

WHERE HOME BEGINS!

FREE CHEESE TASTINGS DAILY • OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK Mon-Fri: 8am-5pm • Sat: 8am-4pm • Sun: 10am-4pm

Two Great Door County Locations Featuring: DELI Dine In or Take Out STURGEON BAY • 2189 Cty. Rd. DK 920.825.7272

FACTORY TOURS By Appointment Only ALGOMA • 248 Cty. Rd. S 920.487.2825

www.RenardsCheese.com

“Half the Fun is Getting There!”

All tours depart from the Door County Trolley Station (one mile north of Egg Harbor on Highway 42).

Scenic 75-Minute Narrated Tours

Overlooking scenic bluffs with great island vistas. Adults $14.95 / Kids $9.95 2-12 yrs. 4 tours daily.

Lighthouse Trolley Tours

Tour 3 majestic lighthouses. Waterfront scenic lunch. $64.95. Departs Monday through Friday at 10 am.

5249 Cobblestone Circle, Egg Harbor

Ghost Tours: Nightly

This 3 bedroom, 2 ½ bath Cobblestone Cottage at Horseshoe Bay Farms radiates quality andBay charm!. This Ridge Crest Road, Sturgeon Everybody space, in this 3 bedformer model has has their been own upgraded throughout. Relax on room, 2.5built bathstone home withand theenjoy deckthe and patioof the the custom patio views (MLS: 123456) golf course and the$291,900 pond. (MLS# 129095) $399,000

• “Ghost Tours of Door County” Step aboard the “trolley of the doomed” as we share tales of the darker side of this spirited peninsula. Adults $25.95 / Kids $18.95. Departs nightly at 7 pm.

• “Haunted Trolley Pub Crawl” Enjoy the “intoxicating” tales of four of the peninsula’s haunted pubs and taverns. Must be 21 years old. Adults $39. Departs Tuesdays, Fridays and Saturdays at 7 pm.

Premier Wine Tour of Door County Get the VIP tour of the

7908 South Lane, Baileys Harbor

Perfect custom built 4 bedroom, 3 bath 2 ½ story within walking distance of downtown Baileys Ridge Crest Road, Sturgeon BayHarbor. Approximately 400their feet own of lowspace, bluff shorefront and Everybody has in this 3 bed bedpanoramic the Lake in-town room, 2.5views bathofhome withMichigan. the deck Great and patio location privacy yet close to everything. (MLS: with 123456) $291,900 (MLS# 128159) $475,000

peninsula’s 4 “boutique” wineries. Includes fabulous lunch. Adults $64.95. Departs daily at 10 am.

Bloody Mary & Brunch Tour

Enjoy 3 unique stops for Bloody Marys [or Mimosas] & Sunday Brunch at the Log Den. Bring your spouse or gather a group together for a great end to your week. $57.95. Departs Sundays at 10 am.

THE REAL ESTATE GROUP, INC. Egg Harbor Fish Creek 7734 Highway 42 4086 Highway 42 920-868-2002 920-868-2373

Sturgeon Bay 19 N. 3rd Ave. 920-743-8881

800-236-1550 www.ColdwellHomes.com

Beer & Burger Tour un D oo r C o 5901 N. Country View Road, Egg Harbor

This year-round 3 bedroom, 1 bath ranch is in a peaceful and serene setting in the woods. The living room has a Ridge Crest Road, Sturgeon Bay vaulted ceiling,has nicetheir kitchen spacious dining area. It Everybody ownand space, in this 3 bedalso features a large workshop in the garage. Enjoy the room, 2.5 bath home with the deck and patio spacious deck overlooking the perennial flowers that (MLS: 123456) $291,900 surround the property. (MLS# 129104) $198,000

ty’s Souvenir Destination

!

920-868-1100

www.doorcountytrolley.com

Beer sampling at 3 unique beer destinations with a burger & fries. $55. Departs Tuesdays and Fridays at 1 pm.

Foodie Tour

Behind-the-scenes tour and eating at 5 unique food destinations. A mobile feast on wheels! $57.95. Departs Mondays, Wednesdays & Fridays at 11 am.


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