Reporter THE ESSEX
February 23, 2017 • The Essex Reporter •1
February 23, 2017
Vol. 37, No. 8
Prsrt Std ECRWSS U.S. Postage Paid Permit No. 266 Burlington, VT 05401 Postal Patron-Residential
Just keep swimming Weischedel returns to the pool
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By COLIN FLANDERS or the second time in their lives, Annie Cooper is teaching Keenan Weischedel how to swim. Their first encounter seems to have paid off; Weischedel went on to swim competitively for the Town of Essex Swim Team for 13 years before working with Cooper to become one of Maple Street Pool’s top instructors. He specialized in helping some of the more challenging swimmers, Cooper said, those requiring a bit more attention than most. It’s fitting, really, as Weischedel was a bit of a “challenge” himself — a busy 5-year-old full of his own ideas, leading to their share of arguments. Weischedel, now 22, is a bit more candid. “I was a pain in her ass,” he said, sparking laughter from his mother and Cooper at the Essex Spa and Resort last week. Weischedel blossomed before Cooper’s eyes, however, recognizing he needed to push himself to help those around him. “Every time there’s a curveball, he catches it and moves forward,” Cooper said. That resolve was pushed to its brink
Photo by COLIN FLANDERS Annie Cooper helps Keenan Weischedel lower into the pool at the Essex Spa and Resort on February 15. Cooper has been working with Weischedel, who's recovering from a skiing accident that left him paralyzed from the chest down.
It's your
funeral Ready Funeral Service embraces pre-arrangements
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By ABBY LEDOUX
was the youngest person in the room to plan my funeral. To be fair, there were only three other people. Fat snowflakes and thick gashes of ice made the Essex roads less than desirable to traverse last Thursday evening. So there I sat in the warm glow of Ready Funeral Service, a casket stand and crucifix before me, plush couches and chairs in muted
tones all waiting for tired mourners, empty urns displayed behind a glass case down the hall. Beside me, Art and Darlene Thomas had made the trek from Burlington, taking refuge in the Pinecrest Dr. facility that is the final stop for many Essex residents. We sat in heavy silence before I introduced myself, and I could only imagine the middle-aged couple wondering what business I – a girl of 24, no obvious illness or elderly companion – had here.
Paw prints outpaced footsteps in the snowy approach to the Vermont Dog Club earlier this month. Kelly Clarkson’s “Since U Been Gone” was softly playing as Scout, a 9-month old chocolate Lab, raced with resident pooch Cassie in hot pursuit. Whitney Doremus, an Essex Jct. native who’s been teaching canines and their humans for over 20 years now, said since opening last November, the club has grown to about 65 members. “Our dogs are our members,” she clarified. Thus, for a monthly membership fee of $75, they receive perks like unlimited human compan-
ions and free reign of the facility, which includes an indoor retrieve room, a fenced-in outdoor area and a slew of training toys. Some dog owners even use the facility as their personal gym, Doremus said: 15 minutes on the doggie treadmill, some balance ball routines and a quick fetch session help work off those holiday pounds. Afterward, pups can kick back in an entertainment nook with a television, couch and books. Though canines have been a lifelong passion for Doremus, she started on the business side during a gig at PetSmart. After learning her register skills weren’t up to par, the store suggested she teach classes. See DOGS, page 2
See SWIMMING, page 2
But funeral director Rich O’Donnell was pleased to see me. He’ll be the first to tell you: It’s never too early to start planning your final show. “We never know when this life is over for us,” O’Donnell said, kicking off the evening. “Hopefully none of us in this room too soon, but we never know.” O’Donnell spent the next hour guiding his small but captive audience, outlining basic service options and detailing the types of decisions families are asked to make for us post-mortem. That’s a weighty task for survivors of loved ones who didn’t make their final wishes known – a burden O’Donnell and funeral planners everywhere hope to alleviate through pre-arrangement. See PLANNING, page 4
Photo by ABBY LEDOUX Right: Funeral director Rich O'Donnell is pictured last week at Ready Funeral Service's Mountain View Chapel in Essex Jct. where he led a funeral planning workshop.
Dog club hits stride By COLIN FLANDERS
after an outing at Mad River Valley last November, two days before Thanksgiving. Ejecting from both skis after a bad landing, Weischedel landed on his head. The crash left him paralyzed from the chest down. At first, he was fine. He remembers joking with friends during the two hours before he was transported off the mountain. “I knew I couldn’t feel anything. I just didn't think it was permanent,” he said. Reality set in on the helicopter ride to Dartmouth Medical Center. He asked the paramedics if he’d ever walk again. They pushed it aside. “I started to go into shock,” he said. “That was the part where I start to not remember what happened. I got to the hospital; it was really blurry. My pulse was super low.” He’d wake up in the ICU with a tube in his throat, his blood pressure so low he nearly passed out after sitting up in bed the first time. Weischedel soon learned he broke his neck and shattered his C7 vertebrae. He’s considered an incomplete quadriplegic, as some feeling remains in his arms. “My hands feel weird,” he said. “Below my chest feels a lot different … when
EHS grad named to Forbes’ 30 under 30 list By TOM MARBLE
B Photo by COLIN FLANDERS Essex Jct. resident Jamie Thabault and her dog Scout try out the Vermont Dog Club for the first time February 10.
y the time he was named to the Forbes: 30 under 30 list in midJanuary, the accolade was a faint blip on Dan Szafir’s radar. After the 2006 Essex High School graduate was nominated under the science designation, Szafir got an email from Forbes asking for some background information. He completed the form and heard nothing more about the recognition the publication gave this year
Daniel Szafir to 600 innovators under 30 years old across a broad spectrum of fields – until See FORBES, page 3