PATRIOT BREMERTON
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FRIDAY, JULY 3, 2015 | Vol. 18, No. 17 | WWW.BREMERTONPATRIOT.COM | 50¢
IN THIS EDITION
Walking for a cure
DISPLAY IT PROUDLY!
Councilman has his game face on Mike Sullivan diagnosed with Stage 4 pancreatic cancer BY LESLIE KELLY LKELLY@SOUNDPUBLISHING.COM
NEWS A great day on the water for everyone
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OPINION Kitsap Transit: Listen up; plan better
Cancer survivors clad in purple shirts make the first lap of the Relay For Life in Bremerton.
EDUCATION Local students graduate from academy
BREMERTON—The y started walking about noon Saturday, June 27. As the heat crested 90 degrees, they kept kept walking. When the moon peaked, they were walking. And as the sun crept over Sinclair Inlet, they were still out there, wearing out the soles of their shoes. For almost 24 hours, about 200 people from 30 teams
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Peter O’Cain / staff photo
BY PETER O’CAIN POCAIN@SOUNDPUBLISHING.COM
walked the track at Bremerton High School during the 2015 Relay For Life at Bremerton High School to benefit cancer research. This is the 30th anniversary of the relay and the 20th time it’s been done in Bremerton-Central Kitsap. Originally, over 350 people from over 40 teams signed up. “It was extremely hot, which I think deterred a lot of people,” said Robert Hanlon, community manager for the Bremerton-Central Kitsap
relay. The relay is personal to Hanlon. He’s had melanoma twice–first in 2004 and again in 2012. He also lost his mother, brother-in-law and best friend to cancer. Cancer survivors in purple shirts led the first of hundreds of laps. The survivors ranged from Vietnam veteran to a boy who’d never lived in a world without Facebook. SEE RELAY FOR LIFE, A13
Facing a diagnosis of Stage 4 pancreatic cancer, Bremerton City Councilman Mike Sullivan is far from giving up. “There’s a clock running,” he said. “We just don’t know how big that clock is.” Sullivan, 65, who spoke by phone from his home on Tuesday, said he’s undergoing chemotherapy and plans to be back at work “as soon I begin to react favorably to the chemo.” “I’m not much good at this sitting around stuff,” he said. “I’ve got to be working.” Sullivan said during the past few months, he had been having pain in his chest and difficulty breathing. He sought medical attention and underwent a series of medical examinations. “Tests, tests, tests and more tests,” he said. “But nothing was apparent.” He ended up at Urgent Care recently and was sent to a thorastic surgeon who said he needed surgery for what they thought to be a Pulmonary
Mike Sullivan infarction. “My doctor said if you were my son I’d tell you to have surgery right away,” Sullivan said. “I told him, ‘OK Dad, when’s surgery?’” It was set for the following Monday and that is when he learned he had Stage 4 cancer in his pancreas, at the base of his spine and in his lungs. He then underwent a PET scan to determine the primary location of the cancer. He is having chemotherapy every other week. “The prognosis is not good,” Sullivan said. “This has taught SEE SULLIVAN, A13
Gay community celebrates SCOTUS decision BY PETER O’CAIN POCAIN@SOUNDPUBLISHING.COM
SPORTS Kickin’ it on the golf course
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BREMERTON—The U.S. Supreme Court legalized same-sex marriage nationwide June 26 in a landmark 5-4 decision. The Kitsap Pride Network released a statement saying it’s “thrilled” with the decision. “Many in our organization and community have worked tirelessly for equality,” the release said. “We still have work to do to live up to the
promise that all of us are created equal.” Kitsap Pride celebrated at Honor Bar near Evergreen Park. The first glass of Pride Punch was on the house. “Today it is no longer a same-sex marriage but simple marriage,” said Michael Goodnow, president of Kitsap Pride Network. Ashleigh Barraza was ecstatic when she learned of the Supreme Court’s decision. “We’re finally equal and that’s freaking awesome,” Bar-
raza said About two and a half years ago, her wife Liz, a corpsman in the Navy, had the choice of being stationed in Japan or Bremerton. If Liz chose Japan, Barraza wouldn’t be able to come with, so they came to Bremerton. It worked out well for them. Not only was same-sex marriage legal in Washington, but adoption equality was too. About a year ago they started SEE LEGALIZATION, A13
Peter O’Cain / staff photo
Honor Bar in Bremerton hosted a celebration June 26.
The Bremerton Patriot: Top local stories, every Friday in print. Breaking news daily on BremertonPatriot.com and on Facebook
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Kitsap Peninsula Water Trails Festival June 27 & 28
Friday, July 3, 2015
Silverdale Waterfront Park, Keyport and Brownsville Marinas. Paddle/dive demos, booths, entertainment and food. Get all the details at:
A great day to be on the water WaterTrailsFestival.com
BY CHRIS TUCKER CTUCKER@SOUNDPUBLISHING.COM
Beautiful blue, sunny skies and temperatures in the 80s greeted kayakers who traveled from Evergreen Park in Bremerton to Silverdale Waterfront Park during the Kitsap Water Trails Festival June 27. In Silverdale, the paddlers were treated to snacks, hula dancers and a special dedication ceremony for the 371-mile-long water trail. The nationally recognized trail is one of only 18 in the country. An alliance of Mason, Kitsap and Pierce counties as well as 20 cities/communities, five tribes and 13 port districts helped the trail become a reality. Suquamish Tribe Chairman Leonard Forsman said he was excited about the trail. Forsman spoke while standing next to dozens of colorful kay-
aks that were parked on the nearby beach. “On behalf of the Suquamish Tribe I’d like to thank everybody for celebrating our waters, our ancestral water trails,” Forsman told the assembled crowd. “It’s a great recognition that we’ll be able to introduce more people to the importance of our ancestral land and water. Not only here in Dyes Inlet, but throughout the Sound. “I just ask that everybody not only celebrate, but protect our water. We have lots of challenges out there on water quality … we really look forward on working together to not only to enjoy the water but keep it clean. We feel like that’s an important part of our ancestral duty,” he said. U.S. Rep. Derek Kilmer said the water is a part of Kitsap’s core identity. “It’s important to celebrate what’s over my shoulder and
that is our water. It is part of who we are in this region,” Kilmer said. “Not only is this part of our identity but it’s a huge contributor to our local economy. With this designation we’re not just saying that we’re open for visitors. We’re saying we’re open for business.” Kitsap County Commissioner Ed Wolfe, who kayaked to Silverdale on the day of the festival, said he saw two eagles during the trip. Wolfe said the water trails would bring a balance of economic development and improved environment to the area. Commissioner Charlotte Garrido said the Puget Sound region was a fabulous, special place and a “gift.” Traveling by kayak gave her the chance to see and feel that environment, she said. SEE TRAIL, A3
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Top to bottom: With temperatures in the 90s, kayaking proved an ideal way to stay cool. Ride the Tide paddlers began at the Silverdale Waterfront and Bremerton’s Evergreen Park. Kate Ahvakana, Amie Adams and Katelyn Pratt of the Suquamish Tribe sing a traditional song; Bremerton and Silverdale are within the historical territory of the Suquamish Tribe.
Friday, July 3, 2015
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When your kid is afraid to go near the water Two of my sons have suffered from a fear of the water, both for good reasons. When Owen was 4, he fell in a neighbor’s pool during a birthday party. He lay face down in the deep end until an attentive grandmother jumped in to get him. It would be nearly five more years before Owen would go more than kneedeep into any kind of water, but I never stopped confronting him with the opportunity. Yes, “confronting” him. When your child is afraid of water, suggesting that he kayak, go fishing, or Heaven forbid, get in an inner tube at a water park, becomes an all-out confrontation. Then, when Owen was almost 10, he decided he had had enough of being afraid. Or, more likely, he was tired of being left behind by his older brother. So he jumped in the lake and basically never wanted to get back
Navy Wise
Sarah Smiley out of it. Today, he is the first one in the water and the last one to get out. Which is good, because his younger brother, Lindell, keeps me busy with his own fear. Lindell fell face down in a swimming hole when he was trying to reach a toy. He was still in diapers — and I ran like an ungraceful, overweight cheetah to save him — but the memory is fresh six years later. For both of us. You don’t quickly get over the sight of your child floating face down. (Nor do
you easily forget running across a crowded beach in your mommy-style bathing suit, by the way.) The difference between Owen’s fear and Lindell’s, however, is that Lindell doesn’t try to hide his. Owen would conveniently need to watch his baby brother when the opportunity to swim arose. Lindell flatly, and without apologies, tells everyone, “No, thanks, I’m afraid I’ll drown and die.” He wasn’t even embarrassed the first time he came out of the house wearing a life jacket, arm swimmies, and an inner tube around his waist. You just can’t be too careful. Lindell’s attempts at swimming never got much further than standing on the shore, lathered in sunblock, and covered in so many inflatables, he couldn’t walk, but might rise up like a balloon. We were lucky if Lindell would agree to
get his feet wet. And if he should ever overhear or see a near-disaster involving water — someone tipping over in a kayak, a boat running out of gas, a skier slamming into the wake — any progress he had made fell to the wayside like his deflated personal safety devices. Every summer we have tried to get him out to the swim dock or into a kayak. Every summer he tells us he’s just fine watching from the safety of the porch, thank you very much. Until this weekend. The whole family, plus Lindell’s best friend, were planning a trip on kayaks across the lake to a wooded island. Lindell had the option to go with us or stay behind and play cards with his grandmother. I would have bet you $1,000 what he would choose. Luckily I didn’t, because Lindell stood there with his life vest on and meticulously tightened
and said, “I think I’ll go.” At this point you need to know that, during the years, we have tried to coax Lindell with promises that “the orange kayaks don’t tip,” “the wind isn’t bad on the lake,” and “beaching the kayaks and getting out on the island is a piece of cake.” Now we were about to make or break those promises. So here’s what you do when you take your son who’s afraid of water out on the kayak for the first time: You sit with your legs hanging over either side of the kayak and smash your lower back into the seat so that your son and his maximum security life vest will have enough room and feel comfortable. You paddle with the most careful movements so that even a drop of water doesn’t accidentally get into the boat. A trip that usually takes you five minutes takes 30,
and despite your bathing suit bottom being bunched up in the most uncomfortable way, you hold your position. When the dog tries to jump into the kayak, you tell him he will never have another cheeseburger again if he does. You point out the bald eagle overhead and the rock that looks like Pearl from Sponge Bob Squarepants and try to forget that your son is digging his nails into your forearm. When you beach the kayak, you straddle the sides and hold that position, to keep the boat stable while your son gets out, until your calves feel like they will be stuck in a permanent flex. And then, when you get back to shore, your son says that maybe next time he will go alone — because you seemed really nervous and whatnot.
State legislators still talking budget; session continues B JERRY CORNFIELD HERALD COLUMNIST
The session that would never end is still not over. For six months – officially 168 days and counting on Thursday – the state’s 147 citizen legislators and chief executive have been passing policies and playing politics. They’re not done yet. The current special session, their third, extends through the end of July and they may need every day to achieve détente in outstanding conflicts on education and transportation bills. A lasting impression of the 2015 Legislature will be the dominance of Senate Republicans. At times they seemed to impose their will on
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“That method of travel is one where you slow down. Things are much, much quieter and you see things that you would never see standing on the bank or driving along the road or even flying above it,” Garrido said.
the legislating process and impede the desired path of the majority Democrats in the House and Democratic Gov. Jay Inslee. Credit Senate Majority Leader Mark Schoesler, R-Ritzville. Under his leadership; the 26-member caucus displayed a rigid discipline and it paid off as its factions of conservatives and moderates can claim an important political victory or three this session. They beat down a capital gains tax and beat back a low-carbon fuel standard. They warded off cap-andtrade and minimum wage. They approved a gas tax hike — more than once — and many of their members are smiling about it. And the nation knows
Senate Republicans drafted the unprecedented cut in tuition for students at public colleges and universities. It’s hard to see how it could have turned out much better for them. And it’s not so hard to see why it’s been a rough year for House Speaker Frank Chopp, D-Seattle. Yes, the state is putting billions of new dollars into education, child care, early learning, mental health, human services and parks. Teachers and state workers are getting raises. Tuition is going down at two- and four-year colleges. And the state is poised to put a wad of dough into public transportation. That’s a heck of a
Sue Abbott with the National Park Service also spoke. “I feel like it’s a picture postcard today of what this national water trail is,” Abbott said. Abbott noted the trail is part of the larger Cascadia Marine Trail that runs from Olympia to Canada. “Water trails really represent the new blue economy,” Abbott said.
Water trails aren’t just about recreation, but also restoration, purification, improved water quality and improved wildlife habitats, she said. “And so what they’re now saying is blue really is the new green,” she said.
Democratic agenda but for some Democrats it still feels a bit like defeat. And it’s for all the reasons Senate Republicans are smiling. House Democrats couldn’t push across a minimum-wage increase, paid leave or capital gains tax. In one of the bluest and greenest states, they failed to pass any significant climate change bill. In the end, they couldn’t boost the cigarette tax to fund cancer research. One could say House Democrats may have done better had they not overreached to start. By launching big-time policy
initiatives then not voting on many of them, they didn’t force the hand of Senate Republicans. What might negotiations have gone like had House Democrats ever passed a capital gains tax or any tax increase at all? They said it wouldn’t have mattered. GOP leaders contended Chopp never had the votes in the caucus and the speaker never proved them wrong. The silver lining may be the 2016 elections. Democrats can focus on the additional services for Washington’s children and seniors, disabled and poor, uninsured and men-
tally ill. They can talk about rising teacher pay, lower tuition and maybe the timing for new highways, expanded bus service and more bike paths. Most voters will be pleased to hear all that. They will have forgotten this epic session ever occurred. Unless it’s not over. Political reporter Jerry Cornfield’s blog, The Petri Dish, is at www.heraldnet. com. Contact him at 360352-8623; jcornfield@heraldnet.com and on Twitter @dospueblos
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Question of the week
This week’s question: Are you buying fireworks this year to set off at home? Vote and see results online at www.bremertonpatriot.com or www.centralkitsapreporter.com
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Friday, July 3, 2015 | Bremerton Patriot
Kitsap Transit: Do a better job with outreach on meetings Kitsap Transit scheduled a series of public meetings to let residents give input on the proposed Wheaton Way Transit Center in Silverdale and on the North Viking Park & Ride in Poulsbo. There were public meetings in Poulsbo City Hall, two hours later in the Silverdale Beach Hotel, and two hours after that in Port Orchard City Hall. The series of meetings was an important one. So, why schedule them on June 27, the day of the Kitsap Peninsula Water Trails Festival, a celebration of the federal designation of our waters as part of the national water trails system; and the Port Orchard Fathoms O’ Fun Festival, an annual festival with a scholarship pageant, concert, craft and vendor show, street fair, children’s events, and parade? Bad timing, Kitsap Transit. Thousands of people depend on, and pay fares to support, public transit in our communities. Kitsap Transit is supported by our sales tax dollars. It’s a $40 million a year operation that is owned by the public. Kitsap Transit officials must make sure their meetings are as accessible as possible. Surely, an agency that can work out the complexities of a bus route schedule can find a good date for a meeting. This isn’t the first time this has happened. In November, only 20 residents attended a meeting in Bremerton — the largest city in Kitsap County — regarding foot-passenger ferry service. One resident blamed the poor public turnout on poor outreach. “People didn’t know about this meeting,” the resident said. Here’s what we recommend, Kitsap Transit: Send out a mass-mailed postcard and put cards and drop boxes on your buses, inviting residents and system users to provide email addresses and cell phone numbers so they can be notified of upcoming meetings by email or text; Make sure meetings in each community are near a bus stop, so your biggest stakeholders — those who rely on public transit — can get there (example: in Poulsbo, have the meeting at Olympic College Poulsbo, which is on the Poulsbo Loop route); Make sure the date is free of community events that could limit public participation; Post meeting notices in print and online in the Bainbridge Island Review, Bremerton Patriot, Central Kitsap Reporter, North Kitsap Herald and Port Orchard Independent — total of 65,000 circulation. For those who didn’t make the past meetings, plan to attend the next series of community meetings on Sept. 19 and 26 in Bainbridge, Kingston, Silverdale, Poulsbo and Port Orchard. Go to www.kitsaptransit.com for times and locations.
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BY LOUISE CHERNIN, PRESIDENT & CEO
Greater Seattle Business Association
After so many decades of meetings, organizing, strategizing and hoping, it’s hard to wrap our arms around the full impact of last Friday’s historic decision. It’s joyous and emotionally overwhelming to hear that SCOTUS, the Supreme Court of the United States, has affirmed, unequivocally that we are equal under the law and that our relationships and marriages will be recognized in every one of the 50 states. For many of us, it’s a day that we could never have imagined. June 26 will be known as the day that changed the future for the LGBT community. With this recognition of our families, there is hope that future generations of parents will no longer have to worry about the safety of their children; children of LGBT parents can un-ambivalently invite both
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SCOTUS rules that love wins out
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their parents to school events and just perhaps our gay children will no longer feel so much shame and anguish that they commit suicide. Even with the success of Washington’s Referendum 74 in 2012 and then the Supreme Court’s Windsor decision in 2013; even after watching state after state refuse to uphold bans on same sex marriage, it was not a given that the US Supreme Court would once and for all recognize same sex marriage as a constitutional right. Perhaps no one could have said it better than Justice Kennedy’s closing paragraph: “No union is more profound than marriage, for it embodies the highest ideals of love, fidelity, devotion, sacrifice, and family. In forming a marital union, two people become something greater than once they were. As some of the petitioners in these cases demonstrate, marriage embodies a love that may endure even past death. It would misunderstand these men and women to say
they disrespect the idea of marriage. Their plea is that they do respect it, respect it so deeply that they seek to find its fulfillment for themselves. Their hope is not to be condemned to live in loneliness, excluded from one of civilization’s oldest institutions. They ask for equal dignity in the eyes of the law. The Constitution grants them that right.” Although we have achieved this significant victory, we also recognize that there are still many struggles for the LGBT community in our country, including youth homelessness, care of our seniors, equal access and respect for our trans community, and employment nondiscrimination and religious exemptions laws. GSBA will continue to work until equality is achieved for all, which has been our focus since our founding in 1981. But, for now, this is a day to celebrate! Equality is good business. It was in 1981, and it still is in 2015.
LETTER TO THE EDITOR No fan of Clinton/Obama Let’s examine Hillary Clinton’s outrage in regards to the South Carolina shooting tragedy. Nine people were murdered by a maniac in a church. Clinton and President Obama injected racism and gun control while the nation came together everywhere. In all, churches across the U.S. healing and standing together as one was the message of the day. Clinton and Obama spewed their
hateful rhetoric trying once again to divide a country already embroiled in hate speech and racism along with the constant banter of the mainstream media. As always, they follow like sheep. Did you notice what was not reported or spoke of by mainstream media? A black man murdered a black police officer barely got an honorable mention. Clinton and Obama totally ignored this incident, as racism and scoring political points could not be injected into the
conversation. Not only is this pathetic, but it tells even more about their lack of character and resolve. Only when it fits their narrative of doom and gloom do they speak out. Thank God all the people of our great nation saw through their hateful rhetoric and stood and prayed together as one nation under God.
Vern LaPrath Bremerton
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A walk for those who are no longer here with us
BY LESLIE KELLY LKELLY@SOUNDPUBLISHING.COM
Walking doesn’t sound like anything difficult. And in most cases, it isn’t. But once you’ve walked for someone else, walking becomes a spiritual experience. On June 27-28, I took part in the American Cancer Society’s Relay For Life at Bremerton High School. I’d participated in three Relays before — in Everett and on Whidbey Island. This was my first Relay in Kitsap County. What motivated me to do this relay was four friends and relatives I lost to cancer this past year. Within seven months — from September to March — I lost a cousin, a good friend, a professional colleague and the daughter of my best friend, all to various forms of cancer.
helped care for her. The daughter of my best friend back in Kansas, Lindsay, was only 35 when she died last September. She had a cancerous tumor in her sinuses. For four years she did everything to live — surgery, radiation, chemotherapy and even a cell transplant at M.D. Anderson Cancer Center in Houston. She left behind a loving family, including two young children. So, in preparation for the Relay, I made luminarias — white paper bags with their photos and names on them. I knew at the appropriate time, candles would be placed inside them and lighted to honor their fights against cancer. When I got to the Relay at noon on Saturday, my husband, Brian, helped me set up our tent and canopy. It was already nearing 80 degrees. I
Leslie Kelly /staff photo
A tribute to Lindsay who died of cancer in 2014. My friend Chris, whom I’d known since third grade in Topeka, Kansas, died in December of a horrid cancer that attacked his jaw, mouth and tongue. By the time he passed, he couldn’t speak. He was 58. In that same week in December, my cousin John died of colon cancer. He never had been able to get medical insurance because he was a freelance actor in Los Angeles. When he was finally able to get care under the Affordable Care Act in 2014, they found Stage 4 cancer. He was 52. My professional colleague, Linda Joyce, died here in Kitsap County in March at age 62. She fought ovarian cancer for five years. She was much more than a newspaper source to me. She was a friend and I was lucky enough to really get to know her toward the end, when I
decided that my plan would be to walk five laps and then rest a bit, and then walk again and rest again. But first came the opening ceremony. The announcer asked that all cancer survivors come to the starting line to take the initial lap around the track. Everyone cheered them on. Among them were a 9-year-old boy named Ethan and an 89-year-old woman, both whom had beaten cancer. All the survivors wore purple Relay T-shirts to note that they had conquered the disease. And then, we all joined in, to take our first lap. In all, there were 41 teams in the relay and more than 350 walkers. The idea is for each team to raise donations and have someone on the track for 24 hours straight. So I began my trek. During the Relay I was joined by my husband, Brian; Mayor Patty
Lent, Harriette Bryant and Steve Rice, all of Bremerton; and Valerie Rotmark and her husband, Ron, of Kingston. They were all friends of Linda’s, too. Walking during the heat of the day was tough. The sun was bearing down and there was only a mild breeze. There were times when I wanted to just stop and sit. But I knew I had to keep walking because I had a goal. And, whenever I wanted to stop, I thought about what my cousin John had told me, about how difficult it became for him to try to eat. The month before he died, he wasn’t able to digest anything and had to be fed intravenously. He so badly wanted to live. He kept saying he’d beat this disease. And I thought about my friend and when her daughter had to have the cell transplant in Houston. Because of all the drugs she was on and the procedure itself, she didn’t even know her mother; she yelled at her mother and told her to go away. How that must have hurt my friend, who had pretty much given up her own life for four years to help her daughter through all the treatments. “If she could live through all that, I can continue to walk,” I told myself. I lost track of how many bottles of water I drank. Because of the heat, I didn’t want to eat. But once the sun began to go down, I was able to have a few tacos from a great food vendor who was on site. The Doctors Clinic also had a barbecue booth, with all proceeds going to the Relay. As it got dark, the luminarias were lined up around the track. The candles were lit and volunteers began reading the names of all those lost to cancer who were being remembered. Each walker was given a glow stick to carry and the stadium lights were turned off. It was a very moving time. I thought about my upcoming 40th high school reunion and how Chris wouldn’t be there this time. I saw my cousin John’s face,
Peter O’Cain /staff photo
Leslie and Brian Kelly pose in front of their camp site at the Bremerton Relay for Life. smiling in the last photo I had of him as he stood on the beach in California. I remembered Lindsay, just 10 years before her cancer, when she was married on the beach in Cabo and her wedding was photographed and published in a bridal magazine. And I heard Linda’s laugh – that laugh she was so well-known for. And I cried. As I walked the track, I looked at the other luminarias. Some had names and drawings of butterflies, hearts, and flowers. Some had photos of loved ones lost. With each lap, I’d find another name, another face that I had noticed before. It seemed unimaginable that so many people had been lost to cancer. Somewhere along the way, I decided that I had to make 100 laps — 25 miles — before the Relay ended the following day at noon. So I upped my game to 10 laps and then a rest. It was after midnight and I tried to sleep a bit, but couldn’t. So I got up and walked. I walked for three hours straight. And during that time I met a stranger, Jennifer, and walked with her. She told me her story as a cancer survivor. Her cancerous tumor in her GI tract was discovered after she had her first baby. Being pregnant masked that she had the tumor. Surgery, chemotherapy, radiation and four years later, she is cancer Presenting
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free. Her story gave me hope that cancer is not always a death sentence. At sunrise, Harrison Medical Center staff arrived with free breakfast for all walkers. They served up eggs, sausage, pancakes and juice. And that wonderful coffee truck, which had been there through the entire Relay, had every imaginable coffee drink anyone could ask for. I reached 80 laps sometime in the middle of the night. I knew I needed 20 more. So, about 8 a.m., I put in another five laps and then rested. My feet hurt. I had too many blisters to count. The sun had been out, but the clouds were coming and the sky looked dark. I knew I needed to finish before a cloudburst of rain came. I did
another 10 laps. It was nearing the end of the Relay and I still had five more laps to go. It was beginning to sprinkle and my husband said he’d pack everything up and take it to the car. He told me to keep walking. There were several strikes of lighting, and thunder was heard. The organizers announced that everyone should be aware of the weather. I kept walking with my eyes to the sky. And just as I began my last lap, my husband joined me and we walked it together. I looked at the faces of the other walkers who had been there through the entire event. Some were young kids who at times ran the laps. Some were middle-aged and older. There was a lady who had done her laps pushing her wheeled walker to stabilize her. Others had walked with canes. And, at times, some walkers had pushed others in wheelchairs or pulled their young kids in wagons. We were all different. But we all had the same reason for being there. My $800 in pledges might not end cancer. Neither might my 100 laps. But like the other walkers, I had made my statement. “Cancer, we’re going to beat you. Someday no one will have to fear you. Someday no one will be lost to you. And someday, we’ll no longer need to Relay For Life.”
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Washington Youth Academy graduates class of 2015 The Washington Youth Academy in Bremerton celebrated its second largest graduation class on June 20 with 140 students. The largest class was the previous one at 144. Students volunteered 7,809 hours of community service to the Kitsap County community, valued at $67,000, according to Washington Youth Academy Director Larry Pierce. Service projects ranged from restoring a Sept. 11 Memorial in Kitsap County to landscaping and event support. Each cadet was also trained to be part of a Community Emergency Response Team, the first time all of the cadets in a class received the disaster management training. “We had 140 cadets of diverse backgrounds and situations come together to become one cohesive unit,” Pierce said. “They overcame obstacles and shared both dreams and setbacks, as well. They shared laughter and tears, but they changed together and they prevailed together.” Fifty cadets also participated in the Academy’s first job shadow program, utilizing the help of South Kitsap Fire & Rescue, the Kitsap County Sheriff ’s Office, Kitsap
Contribute Photo
Brian Martinez hugs his mother Ruth Rodarte after the ceremony.
Contributed Photo
Cadet Alexia Beach of Poulsbo shakes hands with Washington Youth Academy Director Larry Pierce during commencement ceremonies on June 20. Emergency Management, the CENCOM 911 call center, Kitsap Regional Library, South Kitsap Family Dentistry, Hazelwood Auto Group, West Sound Technical Skills Center, Cascade Eye & Skin Center and the South Kitsap School District. Besides academics, the Academy also teaches life-coping skills. A survey of cadets when they entered the Academy in January showed that 28 percent of the cadets had an understanding of personal finance
and managing a budget. By June, that number jumped to 84 percent. Students from Kitsap County who completed the program include Marshall Lesnick, Annalisa Willette of Port Orchard, Alexia Beach, Lauren Esposito, Alexandria Courtney of Seabeck, and Seth Parsons and Jacob Ualika of Bremerton. The students will now return to high school to earn their diploma, some enrolling in summer school, or seek an alternative path
to finish their high school education, such as a GED or by joining Running Start. The mission of the Washington Youth Academy is to provide a highly disciplined, safe and professional learning environment that empowers at-risk youth to improve their educational levels and employment potential and become responsible and productive citizens. The Washington Youth Academy is a division of the National Guard Youth ChalleNGe Program. Established under
Industry leaders representing more than 600 businesses, corporations, trade associations and unions recognized the students for demonstrating excellence in hands-on occupational and leadership competitions, such as robotics, criminal justice, aviation maintenance and public speaking. All competitions are designed, run and judged by industry using industry standards. Top student winners received gold, silver and bronze medallions. Many also received prizes such as tools of their trade or scholarships to further their careers and education. The SkillsUSA Championships is for high school and college students who are members of the SkillsUSA organization. In addition, Skill Point Certificates were awarded in 86 occupational and leadership areas to students who achieved a high score
defined by industry. The SkillsUSA Championships have been a premier event since 1967. The Skill Point Certificates were introduced in 2009 as a component of the SkillsUSA Work Force Ready System. “More than 6,000 students from every state in the nation came to compete in the SkillsUSA Championships this week,” said SkillsUSA Executive Director Tim Lawrence. “This is the SkillsUSA partnership at its best. Students, instructors and industry representatives are working together to insure America has a skilled workforce and every student excels.” SkillsUSA (www. SkillsUSA.org) is a notfor-profit association that serves more than 312,000 high school, college and postsecondary student members, and their instructors in trade, technical and skilled service instructional programs. An additional
48,000 alumni members are actively involved. SkillsUSA partners educators and students with business and industry to help ensure the United States has a well-prepared rising skilled workforce.
authority of both federal and state law, the Academy is a state-run residential and post-residential intervention program for youth who have dropped out of high school or are at risk of dropping out. The free program places cadets in a 22-week intensive residential phase. For the following year, the youth receives intense mentoring and placement follow-up. The school is in Bremerton, but any youth in the state can apply. Students can earn up to eight credits. The average number of credits eared by cadets who completed the program this cycle was 7.9 – achieving a 98.5 percent credit retrieval rate. Comparatively, a full year at a high school is six credits.
That means students earned more than a year’s worth of credits in just 22 weeks. Graduating cadets had an average GPA of 3.6, which is a high B+. As a comparison, 52 of the graduating cadets had a grade point average less than a D before coming to the Academy. Only 14 of the cadets who entered the program had enough credits to be classified as seniors. After commencement, 92 graduates of the program have the credits needed to be classified as seniors. More than 1,500 students have gone through the program since its inception. For more information, go to www.mil.wa.gov/ youth-academy.
Students from our area achieve success, dean’s list CK students Honored at SkillsUSA Championships Students from technical education programs at Central Kitsap High School won the nation’s highest awards at the SkillsUSA National Leadership and Skills Conference. Joy Clark, Becca Dotson, and Madison Largey, from Central Kitsap High School, were awarded silver medals in Engineering Technology/ Design. Greg VanOrt and Ryan Regynski, also from Central Kitsap High School, were awarded Skill Point Certificates in Additive Manufacturing. And Caleb Wyllie, a student at Central Kitsap High School, was awarded the high school silver medal in Computer Programming.
Students from Kitsap area make dean’s list Bremerton and Silverdale students have been named to Eastern Washington University Dean’s list. Bremerton: Leah Straub, Erin Daniels, Leandra Cooper, Isaiah Irish, Josephine Holloway, Felice Zeitler and Lydecia Evans. Silverdale: Bernadette Dunlap, Shelby Blad, Taylor Phillips, Nicole Judge, China Kesterson, Jessica David, Mia Veronica Fonseca and Jessica Enebo.
Eric Gustafson graduates from Valdosta University Eric Gustafson, Bremerton, graduated with a associate of arts degree from Valdosta State University during the 219th commencement ceremonies May 8. Gustafson is one of nearly 1,200 students who completed the requirements of their respective academic programs during the spring semester. Valdosta State University is a comprehensive university characterized by outstanding instruction, a wide range of student life opportunities, and a close connection to the community. Established in 1906, the institution’s mission is to prepare students to meet global opportunities and
challenges through excellence in teaching and learning; to expand the boundaries of current knowledge and explore the practical applications of that knowledge through excellence in scholarship and creative endeavors; and to promote the economic, cultural, and educational progress of the community and region through excellence in service outreach.
Do you have a success to share? Send us your news. We’d love to share it with our readers. Email information to Chris Tucker at ctucker@ soundpublishing.com.
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It’s AHappy Grand Old Flag! Fourth Safety Tips! • Remember the importance of fireworks safety: Always read all instructions properly and do not use near wooded or dry areas. • Always have water available to put out any sparks or flame that may occur when using fireworks. • Never point fireworks at people. • Do not allow children to play with fireworks or firecrackers. • Don’t drink and drive. Always have a designated driver and don’t let your friends drive drunk.
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• Be careful during barbecues that you do not start a fire. Be sure all coals are completely out before leaving the barbecue unattended. Be cautious of children playing around the barbecue area. • Store food properly to avoid food poisoning. Be careful of leaving food out- especially in the heat. • Also, if you have pets, remember pet safety too. Don’t let your beloved pet become a casualty this 4th of July.
HAVE A HAPPY AND SAFE 4TH OF JULY Wishing all a Happy 4th of July ALL STAR LANES & CASINO is a multi-attraction family entertainment center located in Silverdale, Washington. The center includes an expansive arcade, 40 bowling lanes, a casino with poker room and other Vegas-style table games, a full service diner, Ozzie’s Place bar & bistro, and a drive-thru espresso stand. Founded in 1985 by Tom and Pat Myers, All Star remains family owned and operated. Now led by Tom Myers, Jr. and his wife Laurie. All Star is a major employer in Kitsap County with over 180 employees. All Star thrives on bringing people together for fun, relaxation and recreation.
10710 Silverdale Way NW Silverdale, WA 98383 (360) 692-5760 ∙ www.playallstar.com
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Friday, July 3,2015
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Legal Notices IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON FOR KITSAP COUNTY IN THE MATTER OF THE ESTATE OF: RENE MAURICE DERRUAU, Deceased. NO. 15-4-00493-9 PROBATE NOTICE TO CREDITORS RCW 11.40.030 The Personal Representative(s) named below has been appointed as Personal Representative(s) of this estate. Any person having a claim against the decedent must, before the time the claim would be barred by any otherwise applicable statute of limitations, present the claim in the manner as provided in RCW 11.40.070 by serving on or mailing to the Personal Representative(s) or Personal Representative’s attorney at the address stated below a copy of the claim and filing the original of the claim with the Court in which the probate proceedings were commenced. The claim must be presented within the later of : (1) Thirty days after the Personal Representative(s) served or mailed the notice to the creditor as provided under RCW 11.40.020 (1)(c); or (2) four months after the date of first publication of the notice. If the claim is not presented with this time frame, the claim is forever barred, except as otherwise provided in RCW 11.40.051 and 11.40.060. This bar is effective as to claims against both the decedent’s probate and nonprobate assets. DATE OF FIRST PUBLICATION: June 26, 2015. Personal Representative(s): Annette J. Derruau Attorney for the Personal Representative(s)/Estate: KEVIN P. MORAN WSBA#8516 BENNETT MORAN & GIANNESCHI, INC. P.S. Address for Mailing or Service: 9057 WASHINGTON AVE., N.W., SILVERDALE, WA. 98383 Telephone: (360) 6983000 Presented by: BENNETT MORAN & GIANNESCHI, INC., P.S. By: KEVIN P. MORAN WSBA #8516 Attorneys for Estate Date of first publication: 06/26/15 Date of last publication: 07/10/15 (CKR640559) IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON IN AND FOR THE COUNTY OF KITSAP In Re the Estate of: ESTHER RINGLER-HINDS, Deceased. No. 15-4-00505-6
NONPROBATE NOTICE TO CREDITORS 11.42.030 The notice agent named below has elected to give notice to creditors of the above-named decedent. As of the date of the filing of a copy of this notice with the court, the notice agent has no knowledge of any other person acting as notice agent or of the appointment of a personal representative of the decedent’s estate in the State of Washington. According to the records of the court as are available on the date of the filing of this notice with the court, a cause nlumber regarding the decedent has not been issued to any other notice agent and a personal representative of the decedent’s estate has not been appointed. Any person having a claim against the decedent must, before the time the claim would be barred by any otherwise applicable statute of limitations, present the claim in the manner as provided in RCW 11.42.070 by serving or mailing to the notice agent or the notice agent’s attorney at the address stated below, a copy of the claim and filing the original of the claim with the court in which the notice agent’s declaration and oath were filed. The claim must be presented within the later of: (1) Thirty (30) days after the notice agent served or mailed the notice to the creditor as provided under RCW 11.42.020 (2)(c); or (2) four months after the date of the first publication of notice. If the claim is not presented within this time frame, the claim is forever barred, except as otherwise provided in RCW 11.42.050 and 11.42.060. This bar is effective as to claims against both the deceased’s probate and nonprobate assets. DATE OF FIRST PUBLICATION: June 22, 2015 The notice agent declares under penalty of perjury under the laws of the State of Washington on the 16th day of June, 2015, at, Washington, that the foregoing is true and correct. /s/Roger Ringler Roger Ringler SHERRARD McGONAGLE TIZZANO, P.S. /s/Roger D. Sherrard By: Roger D. Sherrard, WSBA#6282 Attorneys for Notice Agent Address for Mailing or Service: 19717 Front Street NE PO Box 400 Poulsbo, WA 98370 Date of first publication: 06/26/15 Date of last publication: 07/10/15 (CKR641088)
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For Kitsap Countywide Legal listings, please turn to Real Estate Now/Kitsap Classifieds IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF WASHINGTON, COUNTY OF KITSAP In the Matter of the Estate of: JAMES T SEBASTIAN, Deceased. NO. 15 4 00442 4 PROBATE NOTICE TO CREDITORS RCW 11.40.030 The personal representative named below has been appointed as personal representative of the above estate. Any person having a claim against the decedent must, before the time the claim would be barred by any otherwise applicable statute of limitations, present the claim in the manner as provided in RCW 11.40.070 by serving on or mailing to the personal representative or the personal representative’s attorney at the address stated below a copy of the claim and filing the original of the claim with the court in which the probate proceedings were commenced. The claim must be presented within the later of: (1) Thirty days after the personal representative served or mailed the notice to the creditor as provided under RCW 11.40.020(1)(c); or (2) Four months after the date of first publication of the notice. If the claim is not presented within this time frame, the claim is forever barred, except as otherwise provided in RCW 11.40.051 and 11.40.060. This bar is effective as to claims against both the decedent’s probate and non-probate assets. DATE OF FIRST PUBLICATION: June 19, 2015. /s/Raymond F Sebastian RAYMOND F SEBASTIAN Personal Representative Attorney for Estate: John Kenney Address: John Kenney & Associates, PLLC 17791 Fjord Dr NE Ste 154 Poulsbo, WA 98370 Phone: (360) 850-1049 Date of first publication: 06/19/15 Date of last publication: 07/03/15 (CKR639855) NOTICE OF TRUSTEE’S SALE PURSUANT TO THE REVISED CODE OF WASHINGTON CHAPTER 61.24, ET SEQ. TO: Jimmie D. Haskins 4463 W. Jarstad Drive Bremerton, WA 98312 Resident of Property Subject to Foreclosure Sale 4463 W. Jarstad Drive Bremerton, WA 98312 Midge Haskins 4463 W. Jarstad Drive Bremerton, WA 98312 Resident of Property Subject to Foreclosure Sale
4261 Division Ave. W. Bremerton, WA. 98312 Re: Mattson 2009 Deed of Trust I. NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the undersigned Trustee will on the 31ST DAY OF JULY, 2015 at the hour of 10:00 o’clock A.M. at (street address and location if inside a building) OUTSIDE THE MAIN ENTRANCE OF THE KITSAP COUNTY ADMINISTRATION BUILDING, 619 DIVISION STREET, in the City of PORT ORCHARD, State of Washington, sell at public auction, to the highest and best bidder, payable at the time of sale, the following described real property situated in the County of KITSAP, State of Washington, to-wit: LEGAL DESCRIPTION ATTACHED HERETO AS EXHIBIT A EXHIBIT A Legal Description PARCEL A 4505-000-015-0401: THAT PORTION OF TRACT 15, BREMERTON WATERWORKS TRACTS NO. 2, ACCORDING TO PLAT THEREOF RECORDED IN VOLUME 6 OF PLATS, PAGES 13 AND 14, RECORDS OF KITSAP COUNTY, WASHINGTON DESCRIBED AS FOLLOWS: BEGINNING AT THE SOUTHEAST CORNER OF SAID TRACT 15; THENCE WEST ALONG THE SOUTH LINE THEREOF 100 FEET; THENCE NORTH, PARALLEL TO THE EAST LINE OF SAID TRACT 15, 50 FEET; THENCE EAST, PARALLEL TO THE SOUTH LINE OF SAID TRACT 15, 100 FEET TO THE EAST LINE OF SAID TRACT 15; THENCE SOUTH ALONG THE EAST LINE THEREOF, 50 FEET TO THE POINT OF BEGINNING. PARCEL B 3224-013-014-2007: THAT PORTION OF THE NORTHWEST QUARTER OF THE SOUTHWEST QUARTER OF SECTION 32, TOWNSHIP 24 NORTH, RANGE 1 EAST, W.M., IN KITSAP COUNTY, WASHINGTON, DESCRIBED AS FOLLOWS: BEGINNING AT A POINT WHICH IS SOUTH 1°43’44” WEST 30 FEET AND NORTH 88°16’45” WEST 138 FEET FROM THE NORTHEAST CORNER OF SAID SUBDIVISION; THENCE NORTH 88°16’45” WEST 72.16 FEET; THENCE SOUTH 1°43’44” WEST 100 FEET; THENCE SOUTH 88°16’45” EAST 72.16 FEET; THENCE NORTH 1°43’44” EAST 100 FEET TO THE POINT OF BEGINNING. (commonly known as Parcel A: 4261 Division
Ave. W., Bremerton WA 98312; Parcel B: 4463 West Jarstad Drive, Bremerton, WA 98312 ) which is subject to that certain Deed of Trust dated September 17, 2009, recorded September 21, 2009, under Auditor’s File No. 200909210187, records of Kitsap County, Washington,, as modified by instrument recorded September 26, 2012, under Auditor’s File No. 201209260118, from Jimmie D. Haskins and Midge Haskins, husband and wife, as Grantor, to Land Title Company of Kitsap County, as Trustee, to secure an obligation in favor of Kenneth Mattson and Bianca Mattson, as Beneficiary. II. No action commenced by the Beneficiary of the Deed of Trust is now pending to seek satisfaction of the obligation in any Court by reason of the Borrower’s or Grantor’s default on the obligation secured by the Deed of Trust. III. The default(s) for which this foreclosure is made is/are as follows: Defaults other than payment of money: 1. N/A Failure to pay when due the following amounts which are now in arrears: Principal Balance Due in Full: $245,000.00 Interest at 18% from September 21, 2013 through April 29, 2015 ($120.83/day): $70,791.64 Credit: Partial Payments through October, 2014: ($31,850.00) TOTAL PRINCIPAL AND INTEREST DUE AS OF APRIL 29, 2015: $283,941.64 IV. The sum owing on the obligation secured by the Deed of Trust is: Principal $245,000.00, together with interest as provided in the note or other instrument secured from the 21ST DAY OF SEPTEMBER, 2013, and such other costs and fees as are due under the note or other instrument secured, and as are provided by statute. V. The above-described real property will be sold to satisfy the expense of sale and the obligation secured by the Deed of Trust as provided by statute. The sale will be made without warranty, express or implied, regarding title, possession, or encumbrances on the 31ST DAY OF JULY, 2015. The default(s) referred to in paragraph III, together with any subsequent payments, late charges, advances, costs and fees thereafter due, must be cured by before the sale to cause a discontinuance of the sale. The sale will be discon-
tinued and terminated if at any time before the sale, the default(s) as set forth in paragraph III, together with accruing interest, advances, costs and fees thereafter due, is/are cured and the Trustee’s fees and costs are paid. The sale may be terminated any time before the sale by the Borrower, Grantor, any Guarantor or the holder of any recorded junior lien or encumbrance paying the entire balance of principal and interest secured by the Deed of Trust, plus costs, fees and advances, if any made pursuant to the terms of the obligation and/or Deed of Trust. NOTICE: THE OBLIGATION SECURED BY THE DEED OF TRUST DESCRIBED ABOVE IS ALSO SECURED BY A DEED OF TRUST IN THE PRINCIPAL AMOUNT OF $95,000.00 ON OTHER PROPERTY, SAID INSTRUMENT RECORDED UNDER KITSAP COUNTY RECORDER’S NO. 201209260119. BOTH DEEDS OF TRUST AND THE PROPERTIES SECURED THEREBY ARE SUBJECT TO FORECLOSURE. VI. A written notice of default was transmitted by the Beneficiary or Trustee to the Borrower and Grantor at the following addresses: Jimmie D. Haskins 4463 W. Jarstad Drive Bremerton, WA 98312 Midge Haskins 4463 W. Jarstad Drive Bremerton, WA 98312 Blue Collar Investments, LLC c/o Jimmie D. Haskins 4463 W. Jarstad Drive Bremerton, WA 98312 Occupants 4261 Division Ave. W. Bremerton, WA 98312 by both first class and certified mail on the 4th day of December, 2014, proof of which is in the possession of the Trustee; and the Borrower and Grantor were personally served on the 5th day of December, 2014, with said written notice of default or the written notice of default was posted in a conspicuous place on the real property described in paragraph I above, and the Trustee has possession of proof of such service or posting. VII. The Trustee whose name and address are set forth below will provide in writing to anyone requesting it, a statement of all costs and fees due at any time prior to the sale. VIII. The effect of the sale will be to deprive the Grantor and all those who hold by, through or under the Grantor of all their interest in the above-described property. IX. Anyone having any ob-
jection to the sale on any grounds whatsoever will be afforded an opportunity to be heard as to those objections if they bring a lawsuit to restrain the sale pursuant to RCW 61.24.130. Failure to bring such a lawsuit may result in a waiver of any proper ground for invalidating the Trustee’s sale. X. NOTICE TO OCCUPANTS OR TENANTS The purchaser at the trustee’s sale is entitled to possession of the property on the 20th day following the sale, as against the grantor under the deed of trust (the owner) and anyone having an interest junior to the deed of trust, including occupants who are not tenants. After the 20th day following the sale the purchaser has the right to evict occupants who are not tenants by summary proceedings under chapter 59.12 RCW. For tenant-occupied property, the purchaser shall provide a tenant with written notice in accordance with RCW 61.24.060. THIS NOTICE IS AN ATTEMPT TO COLLECT A DEBT, AND ANY INFORMATION OBTAINED WILL BE USED FOR THAT PURPOSE. DATED: April 29, 2015 REED LONGYEAR MALNATI & AHRENS PLLC, Trustee By: MICHAEL C. MALNATI, Member 801 Second Avenue, Suite 1415, Seattle, WA 98104, (206) 624-6271 Date of first publication: 07/03/15 Date of last publication: 07/24/15 (CKR635613) NOTICE OF TRUSTEE’S SALE PURSUANT TO THE REVISED CODE OF WASHINGTON CHAPTER 61.24, ET SEQ. TO: Jimmie D. Haskins 4463 W. Jarstad Drive Bremerton, WA 98312 Resident of Property Subject to Foreclosure Sale 4463 W. Jarstad Drive Bremerton, WA 98312 Midge Haskins 4463 W. Jarstad Drive Bremerton, WA 98312 Occupants 4017 State Highway 3 West Bremerton, WA 98312 Blue Collar Investments, LLC c/o Jimmie D. Haskins 4463 W. Jarstad Drive Bremerton, WA 98312 Occupants 4055 State Highway 3 West Bremerton, WA 98312 Re: Mattson 2012 Deed of Trust I. NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that the undersigned Trustee will on the 31ST DAY OF JULY, 2015 at the hour of
10:00 o’clock A.M. at (street address and location if inside a building) OUTSIDE THE MAIN ENTRANCE OF THE KITSAP COUNTY A D M I N I S T R AT I O N BUILDING, 619 DIVISION STREET, in the City of PORT ORCHARD, State of Washington, sell at public auction, to the highest and best bidder, payable at the time of sale, the following described real property situated in the County of KITSAP, State of Washington, to-wit: LEGAL DESCRIPTION ATTACHED HERETO AS EXHIBIT A EXHIBIT A Legal Description PARCEL A: THAT PORTION OF TRACT 15, BREMERTON WATERWORKS TRACTS NO. 2, ACCORDING TO PLAT RECORDED IN VOLUME 6 OF PLATS, PAGES 13 AND 14, IN KITSAP COUNTY, WASHINGTON, DESCRIBED AS FOLLOWS: BEGINNING 50 FEET NORTH OF THE SOUTHEAST CORNER OF SAID TRACT 15; THENCE WEST 100 FEET; THENCE NORTH 50.73 FEET; THENCE EAST 100 FEET; THENCE SOUTH 50.73 FEET TO THE POINT OF BEGINNING. PARCEL B: THE WEST 76 FEET OF THE FOLLOWING DESCRIBED TRACT: ALL THAT PORTION OF TRACTS 1 AND 9 OF GLADISHORE GARDEN TRACTS, ACCORDING TO PLAT RECORDED IN VOLUME 5 OF PLATS AT PAGE(S) 36, IN KITSAP COUNTY, WASHINGTON, LYING NORTH AND WEST OF STATE HIGHWAY #14. PARCEL C: THAT PORTION OF TRACT 1 OF GLADISHORE GARDEN TRACTS, ACCORDING TO PLAT RECORDED IN VOLUME 5 OF PLATS AT PAGE(S) 36, IN KITSAP COUNTY, WASHINGTON, LYING NORTHWESTERLY OF STATE HIGHWAY NO. 21; EXCEPT THE WEST 76 FEET THEREOF; ALSO EXCEPT PORTION OF THE NORTHWEST QUARTER OF THE SOUTHEAST QUARTER OF SECTION 32, TOWNSHIP 24 NORTH, RANGE 1 EAST, W.M., DESCRIBED AS FOLLOWS: COMMENCING AT A POINT ON THE NORTH BOUNDARY OF THE SOUTHEAST QUARTER OF SAID SECTION 32, SAID POINT BEING SOUTH 88°25’22” EAST 956.61 FEET FROM THE NORTHWEST CORNER OF SAID SOUTHEAST QUARTER; THENCE CONTINUING
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Friday, July 3, 2015
PSE customers urged to be energy efficient during heat Puget Sound Energy is encouraging its customers to be more energy conscious as temperatures climb during the next few days. PSE’s electric infrastructure is performing well, and its generating facilities have the capacity to meet the needs of its customers, PSE officials said. While excessive heat puts extra demands on the power grid, the region
uses more energy on cold winter days than during heat waves. PSE has seen increasing use of power during the summertime in past years as customers add some form of air conditioning in their homes. PSE estimated about 11 percent of residential electric customers have air conditioning. PSE’s one-hour summer record for power usage
Legal Notices Continued from previous page..... SOUTH 88°25’22” EAST 50 FEET; THENCE SOUTH 1°43’00” WEST 19.18 FEET, MORE OR LESS, TO A POINT ON THE NORTH MARGIN OF STATE HIGHWAY NO. 21, SAID POINT BEING ON A 3°00’ CURVE AND HAVING A CENTERLINE RADIUS OF 1,910.00 FEET; THENCE SOUTHWESTERLY ALONG THE ARC ON THE NORTH MARGIN OF SAID CURVE 59.00 FEET TO A POINT WHICH BEARS SOUTH 1°43’00” WEST FROM THE POINT OF BEGINNING; THENCE NORTH 1°43’00” EAST TO THE POINT OF BEGINNING; ALSO EXCEPT THAT PORTION THEREOF LYING WITHIN THE EAST 300 FEET OF SAID TRACT 1. PARCEL D: A PORTION OF THE SOUTHWEST QUARTER OF THE NORTHEAST QUARTER, SECTION 32, TOWNSHIP 24 NORTH, RANGE 1 EAST, W.M., IN KITSAP COUNTY, WASHINGTON, AND A PORTION OF TRACT 1 OF GLADISHORE GARDEN TRACTS, ACCORDING TO PLAT RECORDED IN VOLUME 5 OF PLATS AT PAGE(S) 36, IN KITSAP COUNTY, WASHINGTON, DESCRIBED AS FOLLOWS: COMMENCING AT A POINT WHICH IS THE CENTER OF SAID SECTION 32; THENCE SOUTH 88°25’22” EAST 811.14 FEET TO THE POINT OF BEGINNING; THENCE CONTINUING SOUTH 88°25’22” EAST 145.47 FEET; THENCE SOUTH 1°40’36” WEST TO THE NORTH MARGIN OF STATE HIGHWAY SR 3; THENCE NORTHEASTERLY ALONG SAID NORTH MARGIN 59 FEET; THENCE NORTH 1°40’36” EAST 69 FEET; THENCE NORTH 88°25’22” WEST 195.51 FEET; THENCE SOUTH 1°40’36” WEST 50 FEET TO THE POINT OF BEGINNING;
EXCEPT ANY PORTION THEREOF WHICH LIES EASTERLY OF THE NORTHERLY EXTENSION OF THE WEST LINE OF TRACT 2, GLADISHORE GARDEN TRACTS. SITUATE IN KITSAP COUNTY, WASHINGTON. (commonly known as Parcel A: Vacant land at 4259 Division Ave. W., Bremerton WA 98312; Parcel B, C & D: 4017 and 4055 State Highway 3 West, Bremerton, WA 98312) which is subject to that certain Deed of Trust dated September 21, 2012, recorded September 26, 2012, under Auditor’s File No. 201209260119, records of Kitsap County, Washington, from Blue Collar Investments, LLC, a Washington Limited Liability Company, and Jimmie D. Haskins and Midge Haskins, husband and wife, as Grantor, to First American Title Insurance Company of Kitsap County, as Trustee, to secure an obligation in favor of Kenneth Mattson and Bianca Mattson, husband and wife, as Beneficiary. II. No action commenced by the Beneficiary of the Deed of Trust is now pending to seek satisfaction of the obligation in any Court by reason of the Borrower’s or Grantor’s default on the obligation secured by the Deed of Trust. III. The default(s) for which this foreclosure is made is/are as follows: Defaults other than payment of money: 1. N/A Failure to pay when due the following amounts which are now in arrears: Principal Balance Due in Full: $95,000.00 Interest at 18% from September 21, 2013 through April 29, 2015 ($46.85/day): $27,449.80 Credit: Partial Payments through October, 2014: ($12,350.00) TOTAL PRINCIPAL AND INTEREST DUE AS OF APRIL 29, 2015: $110,099.80 IV. The sum owing on the
was set on July 27, 2009. As temperatures reached into the 100s, 3,430 megawatt-hours of electricity was used between 7-8 p.m. By comparison, PSE customers’ all-time, one-hour high for power usage was 4,906 MWh set on Dec. 15, 2008 during a major cold weather event. Customers can take steps to save energy in the heat: • Set the thermostat as
high as comfortably possible. For those with central air or air conditioning, PSE recommends no lower than 75 degrees. • Invest in a programmable thermostat that will automatically adjust the indoor temperature while occupants are away. • Use fans to help circulate the air. Remember that ceiling fans cool people, not
the room, so be sure to turn off the fan when not in the room. • Make sure to close window blinds and curtains to block direct sunlight. In the evening, open windows for cross ventilation. • Switch out any conventional light bulbs with LED or compact fluorescent light bulbs, which produce 70 percent less heat.
• Run appliances such as dishwashers, clothes washers and dryers at night. A hot dishwasher sends heat throughout the house. Run only on full loads and use the ‘no heat’ option for the drying cycle. • Consider cooking a later dinner or grilling outside to prevent any additional heat buildup.
For Kitsap Countywide Legal listings, please turn to Real Estate Now/Kitsap Classifieds obligation secured by the Deed of Trust is: Principal $95,000.00, together with interest as provided in the note or other instrument secured from the 21ST DAY OF SEPTEMBER, 2013, and such other costs and fees as are due under the note or other instrument secured, and as are provided by statute. V. The above-described real property will be sold to satisfy the expense of sale and the obligation secured by the Deed of Trust as provided by statute. The sale will be made without warranty, express or implied, regarding title, possession, or encumbrances on the 31ST_DAY OF JULY, 2015. The default(s) referred to in paragraph III, together with any subsequent payments, late charges, advances, costs and fees thereafter due, must be cured by before the sale to cause a discontinuance of the sale. The sale will be discontinued and terminated if at any time before the sale, the default(s) as set forth in paragraph III, together with accruing interest, advances, costs and fees thereafter due, is/are cured and the Trustee’s fees and costs are paid. The sale may be terminated any time before the sale by the Borrower, Grantor, any Guarantor or the holder of any recorded junior lien or encumbrance paying the entire balance of principal and interest secured by the Deed of Trust, plus costs, fees and advances, if any made pursuant to the terms of the obligation and/or Deed of Trust. NOTICE: THE OBLIGATION SECURED BY THE DEED OF TRUST DESCRIBED ABOVE IS ALSO SECURED BY A DEED OF TRUST AND AN AMENDMENT THERETO IN THE PRINCIPAL AMOUNT OF $245,000.00 ON OTHER PROPERTY, SAID INSTRUMENTS RECORDED UNDER KITSAP COUNTY RECORDER’S NOS. 200909210187
AND 201209260118. BOTH DEEDS OF TRUST AND THE PROPERTIES SECURED THEREBY ARE SUBJECT TO FORECLOSURE. VI. A written notice of default was transmitted by the Beneficiary or Trustee to the Borrower and Grantor at the following addresses: Jimmie D. Haskins 4463 W. Jarstad Drive Bremerton, WA 98312 Midge Haskins 4463 W. Jarstad Drive Bremerton, WA 98312 Blue Collar Investments, LLC c/o Jimmie D. Haskins 4463 W. Jarstad Drive Bremerton, WA 98312 Occupants 4017 State Highway 3 West Bremerton, WA 98312 Occupants 4055 State Highway 3 West Bremerton, WA 98312 by both first class and certified mail on the 4th and 5th day of December, 2014, proof of which is in the possession of the Trustee; and the Borrower and Grantor were personally served on the 5th day of December, 2014, with said written notice of default or the written notice of default was posted in a conspicuous place on the real property described in paragraph I above, and the Trustee has possession of proof of such service or posting. VII. The Trustee whose name and address are set forth below will provide in writing to anyone requesting it, a statement of all costs and fees due at any time prior to the sale. VIII. The effect of the sale will be to deprive the Grantor and all those who hold by, through or under the Grantor of all their interest in the above-described property. IX. Anyone having any objection to the sale on any grounds whatsoever will be afforded an opportunity to be heard as to those objections if they bring a lawsuit to restrain the sale pursu-
ant to RCW 61.24.130. Failure to bring such a lawsuit may result in a waiver of any proper ground for invalidating the Trustee’s sale. X. NOTICE TO OCCUPANTS OR TENANTS The purchaser at the trustee’s sale is entitled to possession of the property on the 20th day following the sale, as against the grantor under the deed of trust (the owner) and anyone having an interest junior to the deed of trust, including occupants who are not tenants. After the 20th day following the sale the purchaser has the right to evict occupants who are not tenants by summary proceedings under chapter 59.12 RCW. For tenant-occupied property, the purchaser shall provide a tenant with written notice in accordance with RCW 61.24.060. THIS NOTICE IS AN ATTEMPT TO COLLECT A DEBT, AND ANY INFORMATION OBTAINED WILL BE USED FOR THAT PURPOSE. DATED: April 29, 2015 REED LONGYEAR MALNATI & AHRENS PLLC, Trustee By: MICHAEL C. MALNATI, Member 801 Second Avenue, Suite 1415, Seattle, WA 98104, (206) 624-6271 Date of first publication: 07/03/15 Date of last publication: 07/24/15 (CKR635625) Probate Notice to Creditors in the Superior Court of the State of Washington in and for Kitsap County in the matter of the Estate of Donna Reddin, Deceased. No. 15-4-00487-4. Traci Mangan has been appointed as personal representative of this estate. Any person having a claim against the decedent must, before the time the claim would be barred by any applicable statute of limitations, present the claim in the manner provided in RCW 11.40.070 by serving on or mailing to me at the address below
a copy of the claim and filing the original of the claim with the court in which the probate proceedings were commenced. The claim must be presented by the later of: (1) thirty days after I served or mailed this notice as provided in RCW 11.40.020 (1)(c); or (2) four months after the date of first publication of this notice. If the claim is not presented within this time frame, the claim is forever barred, except as provided in RCW 11.40.051 and 11.40.060. This bar is effective for claims against both the Decedent’s probate and nonprobate assets. Date of first publication: June 26, 2015. Personal Representative: Traci Mangan. Address for Mailing of Service: MWM, 2200 Sixth Ave., Suite 1250, Seattle, WA 98121. Date of first publication: 06/26/15 Date of last publication: 07/10/15 (CKR641370) SUPERIOR COURT OF WASHINGTON IN AND FOR THE COUNTY OF KITSAP JPMORGAN CHASE BANK, NATIONAL ASSOCIATION, its successors in interest and/or assigns, Plaintiff, v. UNKNOWN HEIRS AND DEVISEES OF MARGEAUX T. BRUCE; PATRICIA THURSTON; WALLACE T. BRUCE; JANE BRUCE; OCCUPANTS OF THE PREMISES, Defendants. No. 15-2-00326-9 SUMMONS BY PUBLICATION TO THE DEFENDANTS Unknown Heirs and Devisees of Margeaux T. Bruce, Jane Bruce and Occupants of the Premises: You are hereby summoned to appear within sixty (60) days after the date of the first publication of this summons, to wit, within sixty (60) days after June 26, 2015, and defend the real property foreclosure action in Kitsap County Superior Court, and answer the com-
plaint of JPMorgan Chase Bank, National Association, (“Plaintiff”). You are asked to serve a copy of your answer or responsive pleading upon the undersigned attorneys for Plaintiff at its office stated below. In case of your failure to do so, judgment will be rendered against you according to the demand of the complaint, which has been filed with the Clerk of said Court. The purpose of this lawsuit is to obtain a judgment, and if not immediately paid, to be satisfied through the foreclosure of real property located in Kitsap County, Washington, and legally described as follows: RESULTANT PARCEL 2 OF BOUNDARY LINE ADJUSTMENT RECORDED UNDER RECORDING NO. 200604280101, DESCRIBED AS FOLLOWS: THAT PORTION OF SECTION 12, TOWNSHIP 24 NORTH, RANGE 1 EAST, W.M., DESCRIBED AS FOLLOWS: BEGINNING SOUTH 88 DEGREES 47’ EAST 711.7 FEET AND SOUTH 2 DEGREES 02’ WEST 180 FEET FROM THE NORTH QUARTER CORNER OF SAID SECTION 12; THENCE SOUTH 2 DEGREES 02’ WEST 152.04 FEET; THENCE SOUTH 88 DEGREES 48’ EAST 58.3 FEET; THENCE NORTH 2 DEGREES 02’ WEST 152.04 FEET; THENCE NORTH 88 DEGREES 47’ WEST 58.3 FEET TO THE POINT OF BEGINNING; (LOT #15, PARK HOMES ADDITION); EXCEPT THE SOUTH 15 FEET THEREOF; AND EXCEPT THE EAST 50.00 FEET; TOGETHER WITH THE EAST 41.7 FEET OF THE FOLLOWING DESCRIBED PARCEL: THAT PORTION OF SECTION 12, TOWNSHIP 24 NORTH, RANGE 1 EAST, W.M., DESCRIBED AS FOLLOWS: BEGINNING SOUTH 88 DEGREES 47’ EAST 653.4 FEET AND SOUTH 2 degrees 02’ WEST 180 FEET FROM THE
NORTH QUARTER CORNER OF SAID SECTION 12; THENCE SOUTH 2 DEGREES 02’ WEST 152.07 FEET; THENCE SOUTH 88 DEGREES 48’ EAST 58.3 FEET; THENCE NORTH 2 DEGREES 02’ EAST 152.04 FEET; THENCE NORTH 88 DEGREES 47’ WEST 58.3 FEET TO THE POINT OF BEGINNING; (LOT #14, PARK HOMES ADDITION) EXCEPT THE SOUTH 15 FEET; SITUATE IN THE COUNTY OF KITSAP, STATE OF WASHINGTON. Commonly known as: 2001 Northeast Wyoming Street, Bremerton, WA 98310 DATED this 19th day of June, 2015. RCO LEGAL, P.S. By/s/Laura Coughlin Laura Coughlin, WSBA #46124 Attorney for Plaintiff 13555 SE 36th Street, Ste 300 Bellevue, WA 98006 Date of first publication: 06/26/15 Date of last publication: 07/31/15 (CKR641112) 1.25 million readers make us a member of the largest suburban newspapers in Western Washington. Call us today to advertise. 800-388-2527
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Bremerton can’t limit firework use until 2017 BY PETER O’CAIN POCAIN@SOUNDPUBLISHING.COM
BREMERTON—Despite extremely dry temperatures for the area, fireworks will still be legal July 4 from 11 a.m. 11 p.m. Bremerton City Council members and the fire department support changing city code to allow banning the discharge of fireworks during times of extreme danger. However, any new city laws restricting the use of fireworks must be in place for 365 days before it takes effect. Meaning, 2017 is the earliest any new regulation would be imposed. The council’s next meeting is July 1, which sounds like enough time to pass a new
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Many took turns walking with their teammates. As one looped the reddish brown track, the others took refuge from the sun under tents or the stadium roof. Participants raised more than $25,000. The largest donations came from the Lockheed Martin team, which raised about $4,700 and the largest individual donation
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me to embrace life.” He was released from the hospital earlier this week and is being cared for at home by his wife. “I’m not at the point where I can’t care for myself,” he said. “I’m not all that dependent yet.” Sullivan said he’s had several visitors, including a neighbor who is assigned to the USS
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fostering kids and have since had 9 come through their doors. On July 7 they’re adopting two boys, ages 7 and 3. She’s thankful that her boys will grow up in a world where same-sex marriage is protected by law — a far cry from the one she and Liz grew up in. “This is their normal and they’re protected in their normal,” Barraza said. “We’re going to be able to tell our kids there was a time when gay people couldn’t be married to each other.”
“I’d be open to a letter that puts some of the responsibility of the folks selling the fireworks under these conditions” – Greg Wheeler, city council president
ordinance for 2016, but there’s a 10 day period after a new law is passed before it becomes effective. Code is being drafted that would allow fire marshals to shut down fireworks use in the future, according to City Attorney Roger Lubovich. Douglas and San Juan County have similar laws in place. The city is considering sending fireworks vendors a
letter asking them to sell with caution. “I’d be open to a letter that puts some of the responsibility on the folks selling fireworks under these conditions,” said Greg Wheeler, council president. Some fireworks vendors haven’t seen much of a dip in sales so far, although the bulk of their sales are made July 2-4, which is after press time.
“Nothing out of the ordinary this year,” said Nate Gillam of the Bremerton Football Booster Club, which has a stand on the 4200 block of Wheaton Way. “We’re right on target.” Councilman Jerry McDonald suggested the city strictly enforce current regulations. “The other side is that maybe we can be very, very strict on the enforcement of what’s out there and certainly be there to discourage people from doing stupid stuff,” McDonald said. Duke said the fire department will have extra staff working July 4 starting about 4 p.m. Statewide, there’s been over 300 wildfires this year.
Kitsap County entered a burn ban June 22. In the last month, there have been at least four brush fires and three structure fires in Bremerton alone. “We’ve had a number of brush fires already,” Duke said. “Usually you’re just hoping the sun will come out by the fourth of July.”
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came from Barry Loonham, who gave $2,400. Unsurprisingly, Loonham was a member of the Lockheed Martin team. The relay is looking for new members. “We are always looking for committee members,” Hanlon said. “We’re looking at more fundraising opp with teams.” To learn more about Relay For Life, contact Hanlon at (253) 207-5147 or robert.hanlon@cancer.org or visit them on Facebook.
A Vietnam veteran salutes the presentation of the flag by a group of Girl Scouts at the Relay For Life on June 27.
Stennis. “It’s funny,” he said. “We were just talking about how for 65 I was in pretty good shape and didn’t need any medication. Now I have a list of medications two pages long.” No decision has been made on filling his seat on the council, pending his health. Mayor Patty Lent said the seat will remain Sullivan’s for as long as he wants. “That decision hasn’t really been made yet,” said Sullivan.
“There are enough people around who respect me and know how much I care about this city…I think they want to wait and see what happens.” In the meantime, Sullivan had only one request of his friends in Bremerton. “Pray for me,” he said. “That’s what I really need right now.” Sullivan is in his first term as a councilman. He was elected in 2013. A retired chief petty officer and submariner, Sul-
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livan served 23 years in the Navy. He’s called Bremerton home for more than three decades. His district encompasses an area north of the Port Washington Narrows and west of the Wheaton Way, in East Bremerton. His council goals for 2015 were to improve the city’s road network and ensure the city maintains its rapid emergency response.
Do you live in the Tracyton area? Would you like a chance to serve your community? Ted Hillard, Tracyton Port Commissioner for District 3, has resigned and moved away. The Port of Tracyton is looking for candidates to fill the District 3 vacancy by appointment until December 31, 2017. The Port of Tracyton board of commissioners meets on the second Thursday of each month at 6:00 PM at the Tracyton Community Library at 351 NW Tracy Avenue, Bremerton, WA. If you would be able to attend monthly board meetings and reside within District 3 of the Port of Tracyton (see http://www.kitsapgov.com/aud/elections/ maps/Port%20of%20Tracyton.pdf ), please come to the next Tracyton Port meeting on July 9 to meet with Port commissioners William L. Mooney (Dist 1) and Brian Davison (Dist 2).
For more information call (360) 698-4918.
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End Domestic Violence: Awareness to Action
A
t the YWCA of Kitsap County, we strive to empower victims of domestic violence to find safety, healing, independence, and hope. But the YWCA is more than just a social service agency. Our local YWCA is a part of a network of over 200 YWCAs across the country that advocates for social change to empower women and eliminate racism. Our national YWCA USA is located in Washington, D.C. in order to ensure our voices are heard on Capitol Hill, on issues ranging from domestic violence and child care to comprehensive immigration reform. There has been much progress made in the work to end domestic violence but there is still work to be done. Victims are still dying. Last year, Washington had 32 domestic violence related homicides statewide. 3 of those homicides were here in Kitsap County. What are we missing? We think it’s not what, but who. You. To truly end domestic violence, we need your help. The YWCA is rarely the first call for help a victim makes. It is typically a friend, mother, pastor, or grocery store clerk. It is her child’s teacher who pulls her privately aside to say: “How he treats you makes me concerned for your safety. Did you know that the YWCA is there to help?” We are not asking you to do our job. We are asking you to be aware and to move from awareness to action. The YWCA of Kitsap County envisions a world where every person feels safe in their relationship and our services are no longer a necessity. Until that day comes, our advocates will be here, ready to listen. What will you do to help us bring a world without violence one day closer? To learn more about the services the YWCA of Kitsap County offers and how you can help end domestic violence in Kitsap County, visit www.ywcakitsap.org or call us at (360) 479-0522. To raise money and awareness for domestic violence prevention, register today for the Goodwill Refuse To Abuse® 5K at Safeco Field at refusetoabuse5k.org. Denise Frey, Executive Director, YWCA of Kitsap County Jessica Guidry, President - Board of Directors, YWCA of Kitsap County 360.479.0522 | dfrey@ywcakitsap.org
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Take in these fireworks shows • Dusk after the game, Kitsap Bluejackets 4th of July Game & Fireworks Display, Kitsap County Fairgrounds. in Bremerton, www.bluejacketbaseball.com. • 10:30 p.m., July 4, Fathoms O’ Fun annual Grand Fireworks Show, Sinclair Inlet, Port Orchard. www.fathomsofun.org. Can be seen from Bremerton waterfront.
Kenneth D. Lindgren June 26, 2015 Kenneth D. Lindgren died peacefully on Friday night, June 26, 2015 surrounded by people who lovingly cared for him. He lived a beautiful and full life as Pastor, Chaplain, and a Head Custodian for the North Kitsap School District. He thought it important to daily extend kindness and encouragement to those around him at the local coffee shops, spending his mornings with his community. Kenn was a skilled musician playing guitar, banjo, ukelele, piano and trumpet, and able to sing every melody and harmony line given to him, often singing with his wife Grace. While attending Northwest College in his early 20s, he was part of “The Harvesters Quartet” that traveled throughout the northwest representing the college, giving him the opportunity to share the music he loved. He married his bride Grace (Hooley), and together they began pastoring in Idaho, Oregon and Washington over the next 40 years. Kenn had a servant’s heart and loved the people he served, often reminiscing with joy about dear friends he made throughout his life. Kenn was born in Yakima, Washington on March 8, 1937 into a Swedish family with two older brothers, Myron and Eldo, and one older sister, Phyllis (Hicks). He lived in Selah, Washington with his family attending Stone Church in Yakima. Kenn went to Northwest College located at that time in Seattle, Washington. While traveling with “The Harvesters” he met his ‘lovely bride’ Grace L. (Hooley) and they enjoyed almost 56 years together before his death. Kenn was a fun, energetic, and compassionate father of two, Jeff and Jana Tuttila (Ralph). Jeff was always involved in different sports which brought Kenn a great deal of joy. He loved attending games, cheering for his team, meeting other parents, and interacting with the referees. Jeff’s wife, Debbie, is a Physical Education Teacher and Girls High School Basketball Coach which brought Kenn an endless supply of games to attend, and children to root for. Kenn has three grandchildren: Bryan (Kayla Young) Lindgren, Christen Lindgren, and Ben Early. He loved his family, and cherished his time with them. Kenn is survived by his immediate family, and also by multiple nieces and nephews who have their own memories of an uncle who cared deeply for them and was always ready to talk on the phone and give a “word of encouragement”, as he would say. Kenn was a selfless servant with a joyful spirit. He loved God and served Him well, and loved his family, cherished his wife, and cared deeply for people around him. Well done, Kenn. You have taught us about compassion, the value of encouragement, and how to care for those around us. It all starts with coffee. . . . Love you, Dad. Memorial Service Pending. TRIBUTE Paid Notice
Friday, July 3, 2015
FootGolf: new way to play for par BY SARA N. MILLER SMILLER@SOUNDPUBLISHING.COM
BREMERTON — Soccer is known as the world’s sport. Combine that with the most popular sport played on vacation and you get the latest in sports craze. FootGolf is exactly as it sounds. The game is played the same way as golf except, like soccer, the ball is kicked rather than struck with a club. In place of the golf-sized holes on the green (4.25 inches), the “cups” are proportionally sized at 21 inches. The game is played on actual golf courses, one in particular being Gold Mountain Golf Course in Bremerton. “It’s a really cool thing that we have recently started doing; a lot of people really love it,” said Daryl Matheny, general manager of Gold Mountain. “It is set up so that you can play at the same time people are golfing.” Golf, although popular amongst the Tommy Bahama-wearing population, has started diminishing in the number of players and golf courses around the world. Although the United States is responsible for 50 percent of golf courses worldwide, 623 golf courses closed in the United States between 2006 and 2014. According to the National Golf Foundation, the number of people who play golf 25 times or more per year decreased from 6.9 million to 4.6 million in five years. Now, thanks to FootGolf, that number is beginning to rise again. More than 257 golf courses across the nation have adopted this sport, 23 of which are in Washington State. “It’s a great way to get out and do something with friends or family that’s active,” said Danielle Scott, a former college player. “I played soccer in college and my dad is really into golf now that he’s stopped coaching, so it’s something we love to do together.” Scott normally plays with her dad, or her fiancé and his friends, whom she loves to beat. “She tries to beat me, but there’s really no contest,” said Scott’s fiancé, Scott Goodman. Goodman also played soccer in college and he and Scott are avid MLS fans. “I play golf too, with my buddies,” said Goodman. “This is just a little more active and sparks some more competition, which is something I always loved about playing soccer.” At Gold Mountain, the cost for adults to play the course is $12, and $10 for kids. The
Sara Miller /staff photo
FootGolf can be a real kick on the golf course. It’s become popular at Gold Mountain Golf Course in Bremerton. Soccer balls are kicked toward the “cups.”
Sara Miller /staff photo
In a competitive game, a FootGolfer eyes the “cups” before kicking his ball toward it. course also offers the option to rent a ball for $5 if a player doesn’t have one of their own. The Professional Golfers’ Association of America (PGA) and the World Golf Foundation have both acknowledged FootGolf ’s contribution to helping golf courses generate more income and noted that it may contribute to the growth of
golf itself. “I think it would be ludicrous to think there won’t be a percentage of those people [playing FootGolf] that might say, ‘Hey, you know what? I think I’d like to try and play golf,’ ” said PGA President Ted Bishop. Gold Mountain Golf Club’s FootGolf Course has 18 holes built within the front nine
of the Cascade Course. It is designed so that both sports can be played simultaneously. “I’m not really much of a golfer, except when he forces me along,” said Scott. “But this is something we both love and can do together and with our friends. And it’s just fun, especially when I win.”
Friday, July 3, 2015
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Ferry fare meeting set for July 22 in Bremerton Comments needed on ferry fare increase proposal OLYMPIA – Ferry customers and anyone with interest in Washington State Ferry fares are being asked to weigh in on a new fare proposal that would take effect starting this October. T he Wash i ng ton State Transportation Commission has released
its proposal to increase ferry fares during the next two years. The proposed increase must generate $357 million between July 1, 2015, and June 30, 2017, as required in the recently passed two-year state transportation budget for Washington State Ferry’s operations. The commission is proposing a two-year increase in ferry fares. Details and effective dates are below: Oct. 1, 2015: a 2.5 percent fare increase for
a AUTOMOTIVE REPAIR The most frequently asked question this time of year is how much to recharge my A/C? While it’s
true some can be just recharged at least 60% need other work. Bad Schrader valves, O-rings, hoses, hose fittings, and compressors are very common. Evaporators and condensers are less common but do, on occasion, need replacement. Any time that a major component like a compressor, evaporator or condenser need replacement the price will jump quickly. Sometimes the system doesn’t work and still has a Freon charge. If you are a DIY, don’t overcharge your system and do damage that wasn’t there before.
299 National Ave. S. • Bremerton (360) 377-0682 www.bnbautorepair.com
INSURANCE AGENT What about Earthquake Insurance? If your house burns down from an Earthquake, it will NOT be covered from that cause of fire unless you have purchased Earthquake insurance. Your house is at a higher risk of damage from an earthquake if your have multiple stories, live on a slope or have gas hookups. Ask us or your agent about Earthquake Insurance.
Barry Doll
10715 Silverdale Way, Ste 203 Silverdale, WA 98383 | 360-692-7232 BDoll@AmFam.com | www.BarryDoll.com
vehicles and a 1 percent fare increase for passengers. Oct. 1, 2015: the current over-height surcharge for vehicles less than 22 feet in length is eliminated. Oct. 1, 2015: the overheight waiver currently in place for qualifying disability vehicles 22-30 feet long will be expanded to include any feature necessary to accommodate a disability on the vehicle, that may add height, rather than limiting it to a lift or other
mechanism. May 1, 2016: a 2.5 percent fare increase for vehicles and a 1 percent fare increase for passengers. May 1, 2016: the overheight fare threshold for vehicles 22-30 feet long will be reduced from the current 7 feet 6 inches, to 7 feet 2 inches. The commission will be holding three in-person public comment meetings and one online, virtual public meeting. No action will be taken at these meetings.
The online virtual meeting will be from noon to 1:30 p.m. July 13. Details on how to participate are posted at www. wstc.wa.gov/. An in-person meeting is set for 6 – 8 p.m. July 22, at the Kitsap Conference Center at Bremerton Harborside, Oyster Bay Conference Room, 100 Washington Ave., Bremerton. The commission will hold its final hearing from 10 a.m. to noon on Aug. 4, at the Puget Sound Regional Council’s
Board Room, 1011 Western Ave., Suite 500, in Seattle. The commission is expected to then take action and vote on the final fare and policy changes. If you want to submit comments in writing email transc@wstc. wa.gov. Please indicate “Ferry Fares” in the subject line, or mail comments to Washington State Transportation Commission, PO Box 47308, Olympia, WA 98504-7308.
Your questions answered by local professionals MORTGAGE OFFICER I’m purchasing a new construction home. I’m concerned that rates will increase by the time my home is ready in 5 months. Is there a program that will allow me to lock in a low rate now? Yes, we offer extended rate-lock programs for up to 9 months for VA, FHA and conventional financing.
360-908-1112 10049 Kitsap Mall Blvd, # 201 Silverdale, WA 98383 | NMLS#506719 www.newamericanagent.com/RyanChristian NMLS #6606. All products are not available in all states. All options are not available on all programs. All programs are subject to borrower and property qualifications. Rates, terms and conditions are subject to change without notice. © New American Funding. New American and New American Funding are registered trademarks of Broker Solutions, DBA New American Funding. All Rights Reserved. Corporate Office (800) 450-2010.
INTERIOR DECORATOR I’d like to decorate for the holiday, but my décor does not look well with red, white and blue! Keep it temporary and outdoors. Luckily our weather is co-operating with this plan! If you’re serving food inside a table center using your colors, with a flag in the flowers will suffice. Nowadays Christmas decorations can be found in every color, so go for a basic silver or gold and add accents from your room. Hope all your holidays are happy and colorful!
Cate Adams 360.377.5582 3520 Kitsap Way, Bremerton www.arnoldshomefurnishings.com
MASSAGE THERAPIST I don’t like the way I look undressed...
Let me start by saying you are completely covered during the massage except for the area being worked on and the last thing I am doing is judging. I have seen it ALL… every tattoo, stretch mark, mole, birthmark, hair, etc. I try to see with more “with my hands” what your body is telling me it needs to make it feel better. My goal is the same as yours, to make you feel great and improve your health, and that has nothing to do with looks. I care about your health and hope you care enough about yourself to make massage a regular part of your health regiment.
Centering Massage
Tiffany Daluria 3100 Bucklin Hill Rd Ste 122 Silverdale, WA 98383 360-692-7800 ‘There is a Difference…’
REAL ESTATE BROKER Is it a good time to sell my home? Yes! Now is a great time to sell. From the lengthy buyers market we had after the real estate bubble burst, I can finally say it has turned into a sellers’ market! There is a lack of inventory with an increasing amount of buyers. If your home is priced according to the market you will likely have an offer within the first few days if not a couple offers!
Brittney Bell Real Estate Broker 360-731-7177 | Bell@SOLDbyBell.net C.N.E - Certified Negotiation Expert 5 STAR Real Estate Broker by Seattle Magazine
www.SoldByBell.net
If you are interested in participating in your field, or have a question, please contact: Your Local Sales Representative 360-308-9161
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Friday, July 3, 2015
R E L AT I O N S H I P S . ONE-LEVEL VIEW HOME | Kingston Home on .59 acre boasts 1584 SF, all appliances & Mtn. & Sound views. Insulated shed, RV/boat parking & cmty bch. MLS #765520 $169,000. Dave Muller · 360.620.4299
CON N ECTIONS . E XPERTISE. Windermere is a proud
SPACIOUS HOME | Hansville Generous 3632 SF, 3 BR/3.5 BA home on 3 wooded acres. Main flr master, den, family rm, 2nd kit, heat pump & more. MLS #807978 $459,900. Lorna Muller · 360.620.3842
member of Leading Real Estate Companies of the World®, a global network of premier firms that collectively sells more real estate than any national brand. MOVE-IN READY | Poulsbo
IMMACULATE DAYLIGHT RAMBLER | Bremerton
Pride of ownership. One level 3 BD/2 BA home. Newer roof, laminate flr, & propane stove. Updated kitchen. Front yard w/tall privacy hedges. MLS #796992 $212,500. Catherine Arlen · 360.340.8186
Gorgeous updates in this 4 bedroom/2.5 bath with water and mountain views. Gorgeous kitchen; main floor master. MLS #802844. $469,000. Julie Bray Larsen · 206.300.7001
Windermere.com
NESIKA BAY HOME | Poulsbo
UNIQUE OPPORTUNITY | Poulsbo
WATERFRONT | Dockside
Open Sun, 1-3pm, 15905 Nesika Bay Road NE: Open floor plan, vaulted ceilings, hardwood floors, 3 bedrooms on main floor. Community beach. MLS #809234. $365,000. Joni Kimmel & Bridget Young · 360.509.6988
Almost 10 acres of level land with endless possibilities. Three tax parcels with clean single story home including a mother-in-law unit. MLS #802653. $535,000. Terry Burns · 360.649.3335
Well appointed custom home on a quiet cul-de-sac in Dockside community which features dock & lake access. MLS #810471. $449,950. Carol Sue Rogers · 360.710.0796
JUST LISTED | Chico
WATERFRONT | Marine Drive
CLOSE TO GIG HARBOR | Port Orchard
Fantastic location! Walking distance to Silverdale and easy access to freeways. Beautiful water Views of Dyes Inlet and Mount Rainier. Plenty of Sunshine! MLS #810126. $279,000. Donna Bosh · 360.265.0958
Classic Cape Code style waterfront home, private and secluded on 1.05 acre. Tranquil setting with 100 ft. of low bank waterfront! MLS #804699. $449,000. Molly Ells · 360.620.2690
Extraordinary, custom built on fenced 2.5 acres. 4 bedrooms in main house with 3,196 ft of living space. Separate 2 bed apartment too! MLS #765448 $500,000. Beth Sturdivan · 360.731.1419, beth@windermere.com
W I N D ER M ER E K I N G S TO N 3 6 0 . 2 97. 2 6 6 1 W I N D ER M ER E P O U L S B O 3 6 0 . 7 79 . 5 2 0 5 W I N D ER M ER E S I LV ER DA L E 3 6 0 . 6 92 . 6 1 02 NW LIFESTYLE HOME | Port Orchard 4 bdrm 2.5 bth 2,724 SqFt home defined by its thoughtful floor plan, luxurious finishes, features, & strong exterior presence. MLS #788178 $379,777 James Bergstrom · 360.286.5098, jamesber777@earthlink.net
WRE / WEST SOUND, INC .
WINDERMERE PORT ORCHARD 3 6 0 . 876 . 9 6 0 0 WRE /PORT ORCHARD
SPACIOUS RAMBLER | Poulsbo 3 Bedrooms, 1.75 bath - .76 ac. Updated kitchen – Big living room - Priced to sell. MLS #806613 $230,000 Johan Bester · 360.710.1890, johanbester.withwre.com
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Kitsap Calendar and Nightlife — 6-9 Lots of savings in Classifieds — 12-17 ■ Garden Life — 10 ■ Northwest Wines — 11 ■ BookEnds — 18-19
A weekend of wow LIFE AND CULTURE
Three days of events to remember — pages 2-3 Why I Relay: A Relay For Life journal BY LESLIE KELLY lkelly@soundpublishing.com
W
alking doesn’t sound like anything difficult. And in most cases, it isn’t. But once you’ve walked for someone else, walking becomes a spiritual experience. On June 27-28, I took part in the American Cancer Society’s Relay For Life at Bremerton High School.
I’ve participated in three Relays before — in Everett and on Whidbey Island. This was my first Relay in Kitsap County. What motivated me to do this Relay was four friends and relatives I lost to cancer this past year. Within seven months — from September to March — I lost a cousin, a good friend, a professional colleague and See RELAY, Page 4
Leslie and Brian Kelly of Bainbridge Island participated in Relay For Life in Bremerton, June 27-28; 41 teams and 320 participants raised $25,127.09, according to the Relay For Life website. Relay For Life North Kitsap is July 10-11 at North Kitsap Stadium. Contributed photo
65,000 circulation every Friday in the Bainbridge Island Review | Bremerton Patriot | Central Kitsap Reporter | North Kitsap Herald | Port Orchard Independent
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Friday, July 3, 2015
Let the pros light ’em up this Fourth of July Enjoy a parade, be dazzled by fireworks over a bay, and dance the night away
T
here are many good reasons to enjoy a professional fireworks show this Fourth of July (and, in some cases, 3rd of July), instead of buying and lighting off fireworks. One, as you know, it’s hot and dry and the fire risk is high in Kitsap County. Two, there’s just too much going on. Here’s a rundown of all the ways you can have a memorable Independence Day weekend. JULY 3 Kingston’s two-day celebration begins at 10 a.m. with the opening of Tiny Town, a carnival for little ones, near the waterfront. Check out the local talent in Kingston’s Got Talent, 3:30-5:30 p.m., at Mike Wallace Park next to Kingston Marina. Open
mic performances follow, then local rock group Idealism takes the stage from 7:45-9 p.m. The three-day Old Mill Days Americana in Port Gamble begins, with events scheduled from 10 a.m. to 11 p.m. The day features a carnival, lumberjack show, Chainsaw Pro Carve Champion Competition, speed carving, ice sculpture carvings, chainsaw carving auction, live bands and a beer garden. Poulsbo’s 3rd of July Celebration is from noon to 10 p.m. at Muriel Iverson Williams Waterfront Park. There will be food and vendor booths, contests, live entertainment, and a fireworks show over Liberty Bay. From noon to 3:30 p.m., patriotic music will be provided by Def Productions. The Missy G Band will
The three-day Independence Day weekend is replete with parades, contests, live entertainment, and, of course, professional fireworks displays. File photo perform from 3:30 -4:30 p.m., followed by a pie-eating contest sponsored by Sluys Bakery. Sweet T & Justice performs from 5-6:30 p.m., followed by Kate Hart until 7:30 p.m.
Meanwhile, watch— or compete in — the 1-mile stand-up paddleboard race at 6 p.m. and the 5-mile stand-up paddleboard race at 7. Then, the opening ceremony, with Color Guard,
the National Anthem sung by Ben Harris, and a welcome by Mayor Becky Erickson. The Navy Band Northwest group “Passage” will rock the pavilion stage from 8-10
p.m. The fireworks display caps the evening, beginning at 10:30. Bainbridge’s July 3rd Street Dance is from 6-11 p.m., on Winslow Way. The Hep Replacements, See FOURTH, Page 3
LIVE MUSIC
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SOUL SIREN Fri. July 3, 6-10 PM
XLB Sat. July 4, 6-10 PM
FIREWORKS ★ LUMBERJACK SHOW ★ TOUGHMAN COMPETITION★ CARNIVAL ★ CAR SHOW ★ LIVE MUSIC ★ BEER GARDEN
Friday, July 3rd 10 am - 11 pm
• Carnival • Lumberjack Show • Chainsaw Pro Carve Champion Competition • Speed Carving • Ice Sculpture Carvings • Live Bands • Beer Garden
Lumberjack Shows
Saturday 4th of July 10 am - 11 pm
• Carnival • Lumberjack Show • Chainsaw Pro Carve Champion Competition • Speed Carving • Ice Sculpture Carvings • Chainsaw Carving Auction • Live Bands • Beer Garden • Fireworks Extravaganza
Featuring a full spectrum of action packed lumberjack events including tree climbing, ax throwing, log rolling on water and more!
Come enjoy the fun in Port Gamble
Sunday, July 5th 10 am - 5 pm • Car Show Sponsored by
• Sunday’s Toughest Timberman Competition brings out grassroots local competitors. Compete for cash or come watch them compete. Sponsored by • Carnival • Ice Sculpture Carvings, • Competition Speed Carving, • Chainsaw Carving Auction • Chainsaw Champion Race Finals! * Subject to change
w w w. O L D M I L L D AY S . C O M
Friday, July 3, 2015
Fourth
kitsapweek
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Continued from page 2 The Tax Authorities and Psycho Sushi will perform. Enjoy local food, a beer and wine garden, and have fun with the family. JULY 4 Keyport and Brownsville team up to present “An Old-Fashioned Independence Day.” The events begin at 8 a.m. with a Community Pancake Breakfast at Keyport Bible Church, followed by the Fourth of July Parade at 1 p.m. A free barbecue and family games take place from 2-4 p.m. at the church. The celebration then moves over to the Port of Brownsville, where you can enjoy Brownsville Brownie’s Famous Brownies from 5-7:30 p.m. at the Light House Gazebo. The Farragut Brass Band performs from 8-9 p.m. at the gazebo. Then, join others on the breakwater from 9-11 p.m.; you’ll have a view of fireworks shows from Bainbridge, Port Madison, and Port Orchard. Old Mill Days Americana in Port Gamble continues from 10 a.m. to 11 p.m. Bremerton’s Rock the Dock Summer Concert Series begins at 5 p.m. with alternative pop band Boy Blue and the Moon, on the Bremerton Marina boardwalk. Northwest rock ’n’ rollers Left Hand Smoke will perform from 8-10 p.m. The Sinclair Inlet Fireworks Show begins at10:30. Kingston’s 4th of July Celebration continues with the Kingston Fun Run from 9-11 a.m., the Farmers Market from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m., Tiny Town from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m., and the Fourth of July Parade at 12:15 p.m. The area’s most ambitious coaster racers will race in downtown Kingston from 3-4 p.m. The winner of the Kingston’s Got Talent competition will perform from 4:15-4:45 p.m., followed by the Music Festival and then, at dusk, the Fireworks Show over Apple Tree Cove. Bainbridge Island’s Grand Old Fourth of July fireworks show begins at dusk. At the Kitsap County Fairgrounds, catch the Kitsap Bluejackets 4th of July Game & Fireworks Display; the fireworks show will begin at dusk,
The Hansville Coaster Games have moved to Kingston to become part of that community’s Fourth of July Celebration. Submitted photo miss local competitors in the Toughest Timberman Competition. The rest
of the day features the carnival, ice sculpture carvings, competition speed
carving, chainsaw carving auction and the Chainsaw Champion Race Finals.
20TH ANNIVERSARY
This year, help lower the local fire risk and enjopy a profesFile photo sional fireworks display. after the game. The Fathoms O’ Fun annual Grand Fireworks Show over Sinclair Inlet begins at 10:30 p.m.
JULY 5 Old Mill Days Americana in Port Gamble continues from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Don’t
Kitsap Week is published every Friday in the Bainbridge Island Review, Bremerton Patriot, Central Kitsap Reporter, North Kitsap Herald and Port Orchard Independent Publisher: Lori Maxim, publisher@soundpublishing.com Editor: Richard Walker, rwalker@soundpublishing.com Copy editors: Michelle Beahm and Sara Miller Advertising: Bainbridge Island, 206-842-6613; Central Kitsap, 360-308-9161; North Kitsap, 360-779-4464; South Kitsap, 360-876-4414 Sound Publishing. Copyright 2015
AUGUST 12, 2015
OTHER MAJOR SPONSORS
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Morgan Stanley – by Mark L. Hartman and Larry J. Tuke - Putting Green & Photography Sponsor H & K Insurance
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Relay
kitsapweek
Continued from page 1 the daughter of my best friend, all to various forms of cancer. My friend Chris, whom I’d known since third grade in Topeka, Kansas, died in December of a horrid cancer that attacked his jaw, mouth and tongue. By the time he passed, he couldn’t speak. He was 58. In that same week in December, my cousin John died of colon cancer. He had never been able to get medical insurance because he was a freelance actor in Los Angeles. When he was finally able to get care under the Affordable Care Act in 2014, they found Stage 4 cancer. He was 52. My professional colleague, Linda Joyce, died here in Kitsap County in March at age 62. She fought ovarian cancer for five years. She was much more than a newspaper source to me. She was a friend and I was lucky enough to really get to know her toward the end,
Friday, July 3, 2015 when I helped care for her. The daughter of my best friend back in Kansas, Lindsay, was only 35 when she died last September. She had a cancerous tumor in her sinuses. For four years, she did everything to live — surgery, radiation, chemotherapy and even a cell transplant at M.D. Anderson Cancer Center in Houston. She left behind a loving family, including two young children. So, in preparation for the Relay, I made luminarias — white paper bags with their photos and names on them. I knew at the appropriate time, candles would be placed inside them and lit to honor their fights against cancer. When I got to the Relay at noon on Saturday, my husband, Brian, helped me set up our tent and canopy. It was already nearing 80 degrees. I decided that my plan would be to walk five laps and then rest a bit, and then walk again and rest again. But first came the
“Somewhere along the way, I decided that I had to make 100 laps — 25 miles — before the Relay ended the following day at noon. So I upped my game ...”
There’s still time to join Relay For Life Event: Relay For Life North Kitsap. Date: Begins at 6 p.m. July 10. Location: North Kitsap High School, 1780 NE Hostmark St., Poulsbo. Fundraising: As of June 30, 20 teams and 121 participants have raised $19,766.67. Fundraising: As of June 30, 20 teams and 121 participants have raised $19,766.67. opening ceremony. The announcer asked that all cancer survivors come to the starting line to take the initial lap around the track. Everyone cheered them on. Among them
were a 7-year-old boy named Ethan and an 89-year-old woman, both of whom had beaten cancer. All the survivors wore purple Relay T-shirts to note that they had conquered the disease. And then, we all joined in to take our first lap. In all, there were 41 teams in the Relay and more than 350 walkers. The idea is for each team to raise donations and have someone on the track for 24 hours straight. So I began my trek. During the Relay, I was joined by my husband, Brian; Mayor Patty Lent, Harriette Bryant and Steve Rice, all of Bremerton; and Valerie Rotmark and her husband, of Kingston. They were all friends of Linda’s, too. Walking during the heat of the day was tough. The sun was bearing down and there was only a mild breeze. There were times when I wanted to just stop and sit. But I knew I had
Point of Grace has amassed 27 #1 songs, 13 Dove Awards, two GRAMMY nominations, career album sales in excess of 7 million with multiple Platinum and Gold certifications and is one of the top 10 best-selling artists in the history of Contemporary Christian Music.
to keep walking because I had a goal. And whenever I wanted to stop, I thought about what my cousin John had told me, about how difficult it became for him to try to eat. The month before he died, he wasn’t able to digest anything and had to be fed intravenously. He so badly wanted to live. He kept saying he’d beat this disease. And I thought about my friend and when her daughter had to have the cell transplant in Houston. Because of all the drugs she was on and the procedure itself, she didn’t even know her mother; she yelled at her mother and told her to go away. How that must have hurt my friend, who had pretty much given up her own life for four years to help her daughter through all the treatments. “If she could live through all that, I can continue to walk,” I told myself.
I lost track of how many bottles of water I drank. Because of the heat, I didn’t want to eat. But once the sun began to go down, I was able to have a few tacos from a great food vendor on site. The Doctors Clinic also had a barbecue booth, with all proceeds going to the Relay. As it got dark, the luminarias were lined up around the track. The candles were lit and volunteers began reading the names of all those lost to cancer who were being remembered. Each walker was given a glow stick to carry and the stadium lights were turned off. It was a very moving time. I thought about my upcoming 40th high school reunion and how Chris wouldn’t be there this time. I saw my cousin John’s face, smiling in the last photo I had of him as he stood on the beach in California. I remembered Lindsay, just 10 years before her cancer, when she was married on the beach in Cabo and her wedding was photographed and published in a bridal magazine. And See RELAY, Page 5
Friday, July 3, 2015
kitsapweek
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Why I Relay: ‘I can help others as a tribute to her’ BY KELLY DRENNAN Relay For Life North Kitsap
I
relay for my momma, Sandi Jackson, Nampa, Idaho. In May 2010, our mom was diagnosed with lung cancer. You never forget that call, her voice on the other end telling you that the doctors have found a mass. I remember thinking several things when I heard the news. One thought was me needing to get to her as fast as I could, and the second thought was more like a prayer: “Please let us just have five more years.” I am not sure why that was the number I thought of, but it was and in the end we had her with us for five months. My sister and I never let her be alone. We would each stay with her for six weeks at a time. Our mom was always a fighter, very strong. Cancer never changed that. I remember one day the pallative-care doctor came in, like he had many times before, and he was trying to get her to accept that she was going to die but, just like every day before, she refused. She held on to the belief that she was going to beat this very unfair hand she had been dealt. She said to the doctor, “When I get better — and I will get better — I am coming back here to help people like me because you obviously aren’t.” After she passed, a friend of mine told me about the Relay For Life in North Kitsap that she and
Relay
Continued from page 4 I heard Linda’s laugh — that laugh she was so wellknown for. And I cried. As I walked the track, I looked at the other luminarias. Some had names and drawings of butterflies, hearts, and flowers. Some had photos of loved ones lost. With each lap, I’d find another name, another face that I had noticed before. It seemed unimaginable that so many people had been lost to cancer. Somewhere along the way, I decided that I had to make 100 laps — 25 miles — before the Relay ended the following day at noon. So I upped my game to 10 laps and then a rest. It was after midnight and I tried to sleep a bit, but couldn’t. So I got up and walked. I walked for three hours straight. And during that
The writer’s mother, Sandi Jackson. “Our mom was always a fighter ... Cancer never changed that.” her family participated in and she encouraged me to get involved and be on their team. I started as a walker, then I started covering for my team at meetings. I became a team captain and now I am the co-lead for the 2015 North Kitsap Relay For Life. My mom’s words have stuck with me and, although she wasn’t able to beat cancer and help others like she wanted to, I can hope to help others as a tribute to her. The loss of her is what got me involved in Relay, but I Relay for so many others as well. I have watched so many fight; I have celebrated with some that have survived and I remember the ones that have been lost. I am so thankful for Relay For Life. It saved me from a very dark place. It has given me a purpose and a place to share my emotions with those who understand. I have formed a “Relay family” and I am so thankful for each and every one of them.
time I met a stranger, Jennifer, and walked with her. She told me her story as a cancer survivor. Her cancerous tumor in her GI tract was discovered after she had her first baby. Being pregnant masked that she had the tumor. Surgery, chemotherapy, radiation and four years later, she is cancer free. Her story gave me hope that cancer is not always a death sentence. At sunrise, Harrison Medical Center staff arrived with free breakfast for all walkers. They served up eggs, sausage, pancakes and juice. And that wonderful coffee truck, which had been there through the entire Relay, had every imaginable coffee drink anyone could ask for. I reached 80 laps sometime in the middle of the night. I knew I needed 20 more. So, about 8 a.m., I put in another five laps
and then rested. My feet hurt. I had too many blisters to count. The sun had been out, but the clouds were coming and the sky looked dark. I knew I needed to finish before a cloudburst of rain came. I did another 10 laps. It was nearing the end of the Relay and I still had five more laps to go. It was beginning to sprinkle and my husband said he’d pack everything up and take it to the car. He told me to keep walking.
There were several strikes of lighting, and thunder was heard. The organizers announced that everyone should be aware of the weather. I kept walking with my eyes to the sky. And just as I began my last lap, my husband joined me and we walked it together. I looked at the faces of the other walkers who had been there through the entire event. Some were young kids who at times ran the laps.
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Buzzed Driving... is Drunk Driving
Some were middle-aged and older. There was a lady who had done her laps pushing her wheeled walker to stabilize her. Others had walked with canes. And, at times, some walkers had pushed others in wheelchairs or pulled their young kids in wagons. We were all different. But we all had the same reason for being there. My $800 in pledges might not end cancer. Neither might my 100
laps. But like the other walkers, I had made my statement. “Cancer, we’re going to beat you. Someday no one will have to fear you. Someday no one will be lost to you. And someday, we’ll no longer need to Relay For Life.” — Leslie Kelly is specialty publications editor for Sound Publishing in Kitsap County. Contact her at lkelly@soundpublishing. com
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kitsapweek
Friday, July 3, 2015 30-minute walk under the clear night skies of the Pacific Northwest. Info: www.pacificplanetar ium.com. SUNDAY PLANETARIUM SHOWS: Noon, 1 p.m., 2 p.m. and 3 p.m. Sundays at the Pacific Planetarium, 817 Pacific Ave., Bremerton. $5 at the door, or at www. brownpapertickets.com. A family friendly, live planetarium show with exhibits. Every show is different, in a simulated universe. Info: www.pacificplanetarium. com. SQUARE DANCE LESSONS: Paws and Taws Square Dance Club hosts lessons 7-9 p.m. Mondays at Kitsap Square Dance Center, 6800 Belfair Valley Road, Bremerton. $3 adult, $1.50 youth, first night free. Singles, couples and families welcome. Info: 360-9305277 or 360-373-2567 or www. pawsandtaws.net.
kitsapcalendar Calendar submissions The Kitsap Week calendar is a free listing of events in Kitsap County. To submit an event, email the name of the involved organization, the event’s date, purpose, cost (if applicable) and contact information to mbeahm@northkitsapherald.com.
BENEFITS & EVENTS
and the 2016 Skagit County Tulip Festival. Karen Chaussabel’s encaustic and ink compositions reflect nature experiences. Info: www.theislandgallery.net.
RADIO PLAY WORKSHOP: 6:308:30 p.m. July 6-10; 2 p.m. and 7:30 p.m. July 11, Jewel Box Theatre. Learn how to write scripts for original radio plays. At least one new rough script will be written, rehearsed and completed by the end of the workshop. Performance 7:30 p.m. July 11 open to the public. $10. Registration or info: Ken Jones, tatkhj@centurytel.net.
SUMMER MOVIE MATINEE: 3:30-5 p.m. July 10, Bainbridge Public LIbrary. Sesame Street presents “Follow That Bird,” a big-hearted, cross-country adventure with Big Bird. Rated G. Info: 206-8424162 or www.krl.org.
GUIDE TO GRANTSPACE: 2-3 p.m. July 7, Bainbridge Public Library. Learn about the Foundation Center’s grant-seeker resources. Registration required. Contact: Peggy Branaman, pbranaman@ krl.org or 360-779-2915, ext. 9501, or the library. “FORGOTTEN HAWAIIANS” FILM AND CONCERT: 7 p.m. July 7, Bainbridge Island Museum of Arts. A film preview, show and concert featuring special guest musicians Charles Brotman and Charlie of the award-winning band “Kohala.” Info: www. alohaislandtreasures.net/cms/ node/62. ISLAND FILM GROUP: 7-9 p.m. July 8, Bainbridge Public Library. “The Set-Up” (1949) is a 72-minute movie with the action played out in “read time.” Info: 206-842-4162 or www.krl.org. FERRY TALES BOOK GROUP: July 9. 3:50 p.m. Bainbridge to Seattle ferry, 4:40 p.m. Seattle to Bainbridge ferry. This month: “In a Sunburned Country” by Bill Bryson. Share what you’re currently reading and join the discussion. Books will be available on the ferry during the meeting and at the library all month. Info: 206-842-4162 or www.krl.org. FLORALSCAPES: Daily July 10 to Aug. 2, Island Gallery, 400 Winslow Way E, No. 120, Bainbridge Island. Artist reception 6-8 p.m. July 10. Sandy Haight’s watercolors are the poster art for the 2015 Bloom Garden Tour
BAINBRIDGE ISLAND ART WALK: 5-7 p.m. July 10, Bainbridge Public Library. On exhibit this month: Christine Hella Thompson, “North by Northwest.” Info: www.bainbridgepubliclibrary. org.” JULIE DUKE BAND CONCERT: 6-8 p.m. July 10 at The Island Gallery, 400 Winslow Way E., No. 120, Bainbridge Island. “All Blues, All the Time!” concert on the plaza during the Bainbridge Island Artwalk. Info: www.theislandgallery.net. PETS WALK: 8:30 a.m. to 1 p.m. July 11, downtown Poulsbo. The Kitsap Humane Society’s 22nd annual Pets Walk will include a 5K Fun Run/Walk, a 1K walk, a kids’ dash, pet costume and talent contests and vendors. Register: www.kitsap-humane. org/petswalk-2015. POULSBO GARDEN CLUB GARDEN TOUR: 9 a.m. July 11 at Raab Park, Poulsbo. The club will meet for a tour of community and P-Patch gardens. Tours leave the park at 9:30, and go to Winslow and Battle Point parks on Bainbridge Island and end at Raab Park. A short business meeting will follow. POULSBO FLEA MARKET: 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. July 11, First Lutheran Church Christian Center, 18920 4th Ave. NE, Poulsbo. Kitsap Immigrant Assistance Center will host a flea market featuring arts and crafts, antiques, collectibles, garden delights, tools, linens and rummage of distinction. Vendors can reserve a table for $25 by calling 360-930-0046. Info: www.kitsapiac.org.
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You may qualify for Access Wireless if you participate in programs such as Food Stamps, SNAP or Medicaid. To Apply: Call 1-888-450-1838 or visit www.enrollaccesswireless.com * Promotional offer is limited to new, eligible customers who activate service between 5/1/15 and 7/31/15. Customers must be approved for Lifeline service with Access Wireless and reside in selected geographic areas. Promotion ends 4 months from activation date. Minutes do not carry forward. Offer is not available in all states/areas. Customers de-enrolled from the federal Lifeline program no longer qualify for the promotion. Unlimited does not mean unreasonable use. Free phone is provided by Access Wireless. Access Wireless is a service provider for the government-funded Lifeline Assistance Program. Lifeline service is provided by i-wireless, LLC, d/b/a Access Wireless, which is an eligible telecommunications carrier. Lifeline service is non-transferable. Only one Lifeline discount, including wireline or wireless, may be received per household. A household is defined, for the purposes of the Lifeline program, as any individual or group of individuals who live together at the same address and share income and expenses. A household is not permitted to receive Lifeline benefits from multiple providers. Violation of the one-per-household rule constitutes a violation of FCC rules, and will result in the customer’s de-enrollment from Lifeline. Only eligible customers may enroll in the program. Consumers who willfully make a false statement in order to obtain the Lifeline benefit can be punished by fine or imprisonment, or can be barred from the program. Customers must present proper documentation confirming eligibility for the Lifeline program. Your information will be validated against public records and any discrepancies could result in delays in your approval or rejection of service. For unresolved questions or complaints, customers may contact the Washington State Office of the Attorney General at 1-360-753-6200.
CELEBRATION OF ROSES: July 11, West Side Improvement Club, 4109 West E St., Bremerton. Novice and advanced rose gardeners will groom their best roses for a special July event that will be a cross section of what can be grown here in Kitsap. Rose photography, educational displays and short rose horticulture videos will be available for visitors. The Rose Show is free and open to the public. Entries for the competition or display begin at 7 a.m. and close at 9:45 a.m. Info: Ray, 360-830-0669. FREE CONCERT ON THE WINSLOW GREEN: 7-9 p.m. July 11, 12330 Arrow Point Drive, Bainbridge Island. Winslow Green will be filled with the sounds of swing and Gypsy jazz when Ranger and the Re-Arrangers host a concert featuring special guest Eric Vanderbilt-Mathews. Info: www.rangerswings.com or 206418-9614. NORWEGIAN-AMERICAN PICNIC: Noon to 4 p.m. July 12, Otto Jarstad Park, 4230 W Belfair Valley Road, Bremerton. Velkommen to friends and families interested in Norway and Norwegian culture. A potluck dish is the “entry fee.” Hosted by Bremerton Sons of Norway Oslo Lodge 2-35. BETHEL GRANGE 404: 7 p.m. July 13, 5998 Bethel Road SE, Port Orchard. Mitchell Glasser of Coffee Oasis in Port Orchard will give a presentation with video. Open to the public. Info: 360895-1918. REPTILE MAN: 10:30 a.m. July 14, Conger Hall, St. Cecilia’s Parish, 1310 Madison Ave. NE, Bainbridge Island. The Reptile Man Scott Petersen’s program creates interest in the natural sciences and teaches students about the importance of all animals in the balance of nature. Info: 206-8424162 or www.krl.org. EBOOKS AND AUDIO: 1-3 p.m. July 14 and 10 a.m. to noon July 18, Bainbridge Public Library. Learn to download library ebooks and audiobooks to your computer, cell phone, tablet or e-reader. Bring your device for personalized help. Register in advance. Info: 206-842-4162 or www.krl. org. SUMMER NIGHTS AT THE BAY: 6:30 p.m. July 14, Muriel Iverson Williams Waterfront Park. Free summer concert series hosted by Poulsbo Parks and Recreation, with Buz Whiteley. Fami-
MEETINGS, SUPPORT GROUPS Scott Petersen, the “Reptile Man,” is bringing some of his scaly pals to town. Meet him at 10:30 a.m. July 14, Conger Hall, St. Cecilia’s Parish, 1310 Madison Ave. NE, Bainbridge Island. Courtesy / Reptile Man lies are invited to bring a picnic dinner and head down to the waterfront for some fun, music and dancing. Other concerts will be on July 21 and 28, and Aug. 4 and 11. Info: 360-779-9898. KITSAP STORIES FROM 1889 EXHIBIT: At the Kitsap Historical Society & Museum, 280 Fourth St., Bremerton. An exhibit featuring stories of Kitsap’s people and places in 1889, commemorating the year Washington achieved statehood. BAINBRIDGE HISTORICAL MUSEUM’S FREE FIRST THURSDAY: Admission to the prize-winning Bainbridge Island Historical Museum is free on the first Thursday of each month. Open 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. at 215 Ericksen Ave. Featuring “Whales in Our Midst,” chronicling orca whales in Puget Sound; “The Overland Westerners,” an epic 20,000-mile trip by horseback 100 years ago; and “A Portrait of Manzanar,” by world-famous photographer Ansel Adams. Info: www.bain bridgehistory.org. BINGO: Sundays, early bird at 5 p.m., and Wednesdays, early bird at 6 p.m., at the Bremerton Elks Lodge on Pine Road. Open to the public. Concession stand and bar. Info: 360-479-1181. BPA JUGGLING: 7-8:30 p.m. first Sundays, Bainbridge Performing Arts, 200 Madison Ave. For experienced jugglers, beginning jugglers, and closet jugglers. Free. Info: 206-842-8569, www. bainbridgeperformingarts.org, email tchallinor@bainbridge performingarts.org. FREE MEAL: 3-4 p.m. Saturdays at the Christian Life Center cafeteria, 1780 Lincoln Ave., Port Orchard. KITSAP CARES: Everyday in 2015, Kitsap residents can go online to learn more about charities
and being charitable in Kitsap. Find out more online at www. facebook.com/kitsapcares aboutcharity365. Info: kitsap caresrealestate@gmail.com.
NAVAL UNDERSEA MUSEUM STORE SEEKS VOLUNTEERS:
The museum store at the Naval Undersea Museum in Keyport is recruiting weekday volunteers. Shifts are 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. and 1-4 p.m. Schedules are flexible each month. Base access not necessary. Store proceeds benefit the Naval Undersea Museum Foundation. Info: 360-697-1537. TOURS OF THE ISLAND SCHOOL: Tour The Island School on Bainbridge Island, 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. weekdays. For grades K-5. Call ahead, 206-842-0400. Info: www.TheIslandSchool.org.
CLASSES & LECTURES COMPUTER TRAINER: Book a computer trainer at Bainbridge Public Library. Sign up for an hour with a computer trainer and get your questions answered. Days, times and trainer expertise varies. Call for more information or to schedule an appointment, 206-842-4162. Info: www.krl.org. PHOTOGRAPHY CLASSES: 12:303:30 p.m. Mondays through July 6 at Bay Vista: Summit, 4650 Bay Vista Blvd., Bremerton. The class targets beginners and others who have not gotten out of auto in their shooting. Attendance at every class not required. Info: 360-473-0324 or bha.photo10@ gmail.com. SKYWALKS: First Fridays of each month at the Pacific Planetarium, 817 Pacific Ave., Bremerton. $3 at the door, or at www. brownpapertickets.com. A
LOW VISION SUPPORT GROUP: 1-3 p.m. July 8, Bainbridge Public Library. Free. Speaker and refreshments each month. Info: 206-842-4162 or www.krl.org. 12-STEP BIBLICAL-BASED RECOVERY GROUP: 7-8:30 p.m. Wednesdays, Cornerstone Christian Fellowship, 901 N. Wycoff, Bremerton. “Honu Life in Christ”: a support group for addictions/ compulsions, alcohol, drugs and general life issues recovery. Info: David, 360-509-4932. ALCOHOLICS ANONYMOUS: 5-6 p.m. daily at 1223 Finn Hill Road, Poulsbo. ABUSE RECOVERY MINISTRY & SERVICES: Free faith-based domestic abuse victim recovery classes for women. These weekly classes are designed to help women heal from domestic abuse. Participants may begin attending at any time. Info: 866-262-9284 for confidential time and place. AMERICAN LEGION VETERANS ASSISTANCE OFFICE: Open 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. every Thursday (except holidays), 19068 Jensen Way, Suite 3A, Poulsbo. Free services to assist veterans and widows with VA claims. 360-779-5456. AMERICAN LEGION JOHN D. “BUD” AT EASE TOASTMASTERS: 7-8 p.m. Wednesdays, Subway meeting room, 3850 Kitsap Way, Bremerton. Learn valuable public speaking, evaluation and leadership skills in a friendly, supportive atmosphere. Info: Dave Harris, 360-478-7089 or harriscd.wa@ comcast.net. BAINBRIDGE ISLAND REPUBLICAN WOMEN: 11 a.m. second Wednesdays, Wing Point Golf and Country Club, 811 Cherry Ave., Bainbridge Island. Lunch: $17. Guests welcome. RSVP: 206-337-5543. BAINBRIDGE ISLAND TOASTMASTERS: Meets twice monthly, 7:15-8:30 p.m. on the second and fourth Wednesdays, in the Winslow Arms Apartments Clubhouse, 220 Parfitt Way, Bainbridge Island. An afternoon club See CALENDAR, Page 7
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meets 11:50 a.m. to 1 p.m. on first and third Thursdays. Open to all interested in developing their speaking skills in a fun supportive environment. Info: bainbridgeisland.toastmastersclubs. org, www.uspeakeasy.com. BREMERTON NORTHERN MODEL RAILROAD CLUB: 7-8 p.m., first Mondays, United Way Building, 647 Fourth St., Bremerton. Guests welcome. Info: bremer ton-northern@comcast.net. BREMERTON LIONS CLUB: Meets 11:45 a.m. every Wednesday at Ambrosia Catering. Open to all. Learn about community service opportunities. Info: 360-6139953. BRIDGE GROUP: 8 a.m. Tuesdays, Stafford Suites, 1761 Pottery Ave., Port Orchard. Free to play, $4 for lunch. Info: Denise Hoyt, dhoyt@staffordcare.com, 360874-1212. CAREGIVERS SUPPORT GROUP: 2 p.m. Tuesdays, Rolling Bay Presbyterian Church, 11042 Sunrise Drive NE, Bainbridge Island. Sponsored by Interfaith Volunteer Caregivers. Info: Karen, karen.carson@comcast.net, 206842-3539. CENTRAL/SOUTH KITSAP WOMEN AND CANCER SUPPORT GROUP: 10:30 a.m. to noon, second and fourth Thursdays, Radiation Oncology Library, Harrison Medical Center, 2520 Cherry Ave., Bremerton. Facilitators: Sue-Marie Casagrande, oncology social worker; and Bonnie McVee, life coach and cancer survivor. Info: 360-744-4990, www.harrisonmedical.org. COMPUTER TRAINING: Noon to 4 p.m. Wednesdays, Bainbridge Library, 1270 Madison Ave. Sign up for an hour with a computer trainer and get your questions answered. Info: 206-842-4162. DEPRESSION & BIPOLAR SUPPORT GROUP: 6-7:30 p.m. Tuesdays, Saint Paul’s Episcopal Church, 700 Callahan Drive, Bremerton. Open to those living with depression and/or bipolar disorder, and loved ones and supporters of people living with mood disorders. Info: Richard, 360-3778509. FOOD ADDICTS IN RECOVERY ANONYMOUS: 7-8:30 p.m. Wednesdays, Manette Community Church, 1137 Hayward Ave., Bremerton. Membership is open to anyone who wants help with their eating habits. Info: www. foodaddicts.org, FAKitsap@ gmail.com. GRIEF SUPPORT GROUP: 5 p.m. second and fourth Thursdays, Rolling Bay Presbyterian Church, 11042 Sunrise Drive NE, Bainbridge Island. Sponsored by Interfaith Volunteer Caregivers. Info: Robin Gaphni, rgaphni@ seanet.com, 206-962-0257.JOB APPLICATION HELP: 2-4 p.m. Fridays, Bainbridge Public Library. Tune up your resume and get job application assistance. Schedule a half-hour meeting for help with your cover letter, interview techniques, job searches and career change. Info: 206842-4162 or www.krl.org.
779-1475, email hrmorgan314@ gmail.com. ORCA CLUB MEETING: 7 p.m. second Wednesdays of each month. Venue subject to change. Discuss club business, promote the flying of radio controlled aircraft. Public welcome. Info: Ken Maguire, kenmaguire36@hotmail. com, 360-779-5137. OVEREATERS ANONYMOUS: Meets 9:15 a.m. Saturdays at Eagle Harbor Community Church, Bainbridge Island and 5 p.m. Wednesdays at Winslow Arms Retirement Home community room, Bainbridge Island. Info: 206-780-0121. PORT ORCHARD TOASTMASTERS CLUB: 6:30 p.m. first and third Tuesdays, Park Vista, 2944 SE Lund Ave., Port Orchard. Members learn to improve their speaking and leadership skills. Visitors welcome. Info: Bill Slach, 360-895-8519. POSTPARTUM SUPPORT GROUP: 6:30 p.m. first and third Tuesdays of the month, at the Chiropractic Lifestyle Center, 991 NE Riddell Road, Bremerton. Kitsap HOPE Circle, open to pregnant and postpartum moms. Non-judgmental, advice-free support and encouragement for adjusting to baby. Info: www.kistaphopecir cle.org. POULSBO GARDEN CLUB: 9 a.m. June 13 at the Poulsbo Library. Social and business meeting starts at 9 a.m., and the featured speaker starts at 10 a.m. The featured speaker is the author of “Mama Knows Her Cocktails,” Beth Evans-Ramos, who will speak on how to use the bounty from your garden to create delicious cocktails, non-alcoholic beverages, infusions, syrups and more. Free and open to all. Info: 5
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KEYPORT COFFEE HOUR: 9-10 a.m. Wednesdays, Keyport Mercantile, 15499 Washington Ave. NE. Get to know your neighbors, with coffee and tea compliments of the Merc. Info: keyportschules @wavecable.com. KITSAP AL-ANON: Al-Anon meeting for anyone troubled by another person’s drinking. Sundays: 8 a.m. Manchester Library; 10 a.m. Winslow Arms Apartments, Bainbridge Island. Mondays: 10 a.m. Our Savior’s Lutheran Church, Bremerton, noon; Harper Church, Port Orchard; 7:30 p.m. Saint Barnabas Church, Bainbridge Island; 7:30 p.m. Belfair House Of Hope. Tuesdays: Noon, Silverdale Lutheran Church; 7:30 p.m. First Lutheran Church, Port Orchard; 5:30 p.m. Park Vista Apartments, Port Orchard; 7 p.m. First Lutheran Church, Poulsbo. Wednesdays: 10:30 a.m. Belfair Haven Of Hope; Noon, First Lutheran Church, Poulsbo; 5:30 p.m. West Sound Treatment Center, Port Orchard. Thursdays: Noon, Port Gamble S’Klallam Wellness Center, Kingston; Noon, Holy Trinity Church, Bremerton; 5:30 p.m. First Christian Church, Bremerton; 7 p.m. First Lutheran Church, Poulsbo; 7:30 p.m. First Lutheran Church, Port Orchard. Fridays: Noon, Bethany Lutheran Church, Bainbridge Island; 7:30 p.m. First Lutheran Church, Port Orchard. Info: www.kitsap-al-anon.org. KITSAP COUNTY AMATEUR RADIO CLUB BREAKFAST: 9-11 a.m. first Saturdays of the month at A&C Diner, 3561 Wheaton Way, Bremerton. $5-10 per person. Info: www. kcarc.org. KCS MACGROUP MEETING: 2:30-5 p.m. Wednesdays at 9729 Silverdale Way, Silverdale. In the Evergreen Room. Apple Macintosh help. Get questions answered. The last meeting until fall will be May 27. Info: kitsapcomput ingseniors.org. KNITTING GROUP: 3 p.m. Wednesdays, Liberty Bay Books, 18881 Front St. NE, Poulsbo. All skills welcome. Info: Suzanne Droppert, 360-779-5909, liberty baybooks@embarqmail.com.
poulsbogardenclub@gmail.com or visit the Poulsbo Garden Club Facebook page. POULSBO NOON LIONS MEETING: Noon Thursdays, First Lutheran Church, 18920 4th Ave., Poulsbo. PULSE RECOVERY GROUP: 6-7 p.m. Thursdays, at Cafe Noir, 3261 Mount Vintage Way, Silverdale. Men’s 12-step biblical-based group. Info: 360-697-3777, of fice@cornerstonealliance.org. PULSE FAITH DISCUSSIONS: 7-8 p.m. Thursdays at Cafe Noir, 3261 Mount Vintage Way, Silverdale. Weekly discussions about faith and culture. Info: 360-697-3777, office@cornerstonealliance.org. QUAKER SILENT WORSHIP: 1011 a.m., Sundays at Seabold Hall, 14450 Komedal Road, Bainbridge Island. Agate Passage Friends Meeting. 877-235-4712. ROTARY CLUB OF EAST BREMERTON: 7:15 a.m. Wednesdays, McCloud’s Grill House, 2901 Perry Ave., No. 13, Bremerton. Info: Patty Murphy, 360-479-6500. ROTARY CLUB OF SILVERDALE: 12:15 p.m., Thursdays, Kitsap Golf & Country Club. Info: Chuck Kraining, 360-471-5385. SILVERDALE SUNRISE LIONS CLUB: Meets 7 a.m. every Tuesday at All Star Lanes in Silverdale. TATTERS GROUP: The Tangled Threads Tatting Group meets 5-7 p.m. on the second Wednesday of each month at the Willows Retirement Apartments, 3201 Pine Road, Bremerton. Beginners welcome. Info: 360-698-6768. WEST SOUND FREE CLINIC: 5:30-8 p.m. first Fridays at Gateway Church in Poulsbo, 18901 8th Ave.; 4:30-7:30 p.m. second Mondays at St. Vincent de Paul, 1117 N. Callow Ave., Bremerton; 1-4 p.m. fourth Tuesdays at
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EEK
UDOKU
Sudoku is a number-placing puzzle based on a 9x9 grid with several given numbers. Sudoku isisatonumber-placing puzzle1 to based 9x9 gridsquares with several Puzzle 1 (Easy, difficulty rating 0.44) The object place the numbers 9 inon thea empty so thatgiven eachnumbers. row, each The object is todifficulty place the numbers 1 tosame 9 in the emptyonly squares Puzzle 1 (Hard, rating 0.75) column and each 3x3 box contains the number once.so that each row, each column and each 3x3 box contains the same number only once. 1
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Puzzle 10 (Easy, difficulty rating 0.36)
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Easy, diffi difficulty Easy, culty rating 0.622 0.44
Sponsored by
509-476-3602
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Generated by http://www.opensky.ca/~jdhildeb/software/sudokugen Generated by http://www.opensky.ca/~jdhildeb/software/sudokugen
FITNESS & SPORTS GIRLS BASKETBALL CAMP: 9-11 a.m. Saturdays through July 25, Kingston High School. For students grades 4-9. $10 a day. Info: Gail Wicklein, 360-620-3377. GYMNASTICS CAMP: 1-4 p.m. Wednesdays through July 29, Breidablik Elementary School. For students entering grades 6-12. $20 a day. Info: Sheila Moore, 360-779-2790. BOYS BASKETBALL CAMP: 5-6:30 p.m. July 6-8, Kingston High School. For students entering grades 3-6. $50, including camp T-shirt. Info: Ben Wisniewski, ben.wisniews ki3@gmail.com or 414-507-8766. BOYS ADVANCED BASKETBALL CAMP: 5:30-7:30 p.m. July 9-10, Kingston High School. For students entering grades 7-9. $50, including camp T-shirts. Ben Wisniewski, ben.wisniews ki3@ gmail.com or 414-507-8766. KINGSTON GIRLS BASKETBALL CAMP: 9-11 a.m. July 13-15, Kingston High School. For students entering grades 4-9. $60, including camp T-shirts. Info: Gail Wicklein, 360-620-3377. BUCS BASKETBALL SHOOTING CAMP: 9-10:30 a.m. July 16-17, Kingston High School. For students entering grades 6-9. $30, including camp T-shirts. Info: Gail Wicklein, 360-620-3377. BAINBRIDGE ARCHERY: The Bainbridge Island Sportsmen’s Club Archery Range is open to the public 4-6 p.m. Wednesdays, and 11 a.m. to 1 p.m. Sundays. Bring the family along to try this exciting sport in a safe environment. Rental equipment available, range fee applies. Experienced range officer on site to help. KITSAP ULTIMATE FRISBEE: Weekly pick-up game 10 a.m. to noon Saturdays. See the pick-up section on www.discnw.org.
QI GONG AT FISHLINE: 12:30-1 p.m. Tuesdays at North Kitsap Fishline, 787 NW Liberty Lane,
Generated by http://www.opensky.ca/~jdhildeb/software/sudokugen/ on Thu Jun 25 18:51:23 2009 GMT. Enjoy!
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ANSWERS ANSWERS
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Kitsap is seeking volunteers for its home delivery program and its community dining program. Volunteers work in downtown Bremerton, Silverdale and Bainbridge Island. Info: 360-3778511, 888-877-8511. NAVY WIVES CLUB OF AMERICA: Meets 10 a.m. the second Saturday each month in the Jackson Park Community Center on Olding Road, Bremerton. Open to all Navy, Marine Corps, Coast Guard spouses wishing to support military and community projects. Info: 360-779-6191, jjprice@ embarqmail.com. NORTH KITSAP PARENT SUPPORT GROUP: Do you want to be part of a support group for families of gifted children? Call 360-6382919 or email northkitsapgift ed@gmail.com. OLYMPIC KOI AND WATER GARDEN CLUB: Looking for new members. Meetings are once a month at various locations centered around Poulsbo and Port Orchard. Info: Helen Morgan, 360-
6
MEALS ON WHEELS SEEKS VOLUNTEERS: Meals on Wheels
ITSAP
Hillcrest Assembly Church, 6750 Highway 303, Bremerton; and 1-4 p.m. fourth Thursdays at St. Vincent de Paul, 1117 N. Callow Ave., Bremerton. Free primary medical care, labs, some medicine and some specialty referrals. The clinic provides medical care to those that have difficulty affording regular care. The clinic does not take medical insurance and is staffed by volunteer licensed medical workers. Info: symens@msn.com or drop by.
kitsapweek
Page 7
Poulsbo. Relax body and mind with Qi Gong. Often using silk-reeling exercises, five-element movements, and channel/ organ balancing. Info: www. nourishinglifeacupuncture.com, www.nkfishline.org.
KIDS & FAMILY WESTERN KIDS CAMP: 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. July 6-23, WWU Center at Olympic College, Poulsbo. Discover the fun of being on a college campus as you spend your mornings exploring ecology, geocaching, wildlife and the science of magic in university classrooms and labs. Info: 360394-2733, kathy.johnson@wwu. edu or bit.ly/PoulsboYouth. YOUNG SINGERS CHORAL CAMP: July 13-17, Rolling Bay Hall, 10598 NW Valley Road, Bainbridge Island. Spend a week singing and engaging in musical games and movement activities while developing vocal skills. First- through third-graders’ camp is 9-10:30 a.m.; fourththrough eighth-grade is 10:45 a.m. to 12:15 p.m. Info or to register: www.biparks.org. GIRLS CHOIR SUMMER CAMP: 1:15-3:15 p.m. July 13-17, Rolling Bay Hall, 10598 NE Valley Road, Bainbridge Island. The broadway for beginners camp for girls age 10-14 will focus on fun, but singers will also work on reading music notation, developing accurate intonation and expanding vocal range while performing as an ensemble. Info: 360-780-2467 or www. bainbridgechorale.org. LEGO CLUB: 4:30-5:30 p.m. at the Port Orchard Library. Dig into our massive Lego collection to make original Lego creations with a show and tell afterward. Members are also welcome to bring creations from home to show and tell. For children in grades K-6. SCIENCE SATURDAYS AT THE NAVAL UNDERSEA MUSEUM: 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. first Saturdays of the month at the Naval Undersea Museum, Keyport. Take a closer look at all things science with hands-on activities and demonstrations that change monthly. www. nvalunderseasmuseum.org. DISCOVERY FRIDAYS: 10:3011:30 a.m. at KiDiMu, 301 Ravine Lane NE, Bainbridge Island. Explorers of all ages are welcome for science-themed, hands-on activities. This STEM-based program takes on different subjects See CALENDAR, Page 8
We’ve Got You Covered
Reach Your Constituents
Reach 2.7 Million Readers Advertise in Community Newspapers, a Key Source of Local Political News One Call • One Payment
Call this Newspaper Bainbridge 206.842.6613 Port Orchard 360.876.4414 Central Kitsap 360.308.9161 for Details Poulsbo 360.779.4464 Bremerton 360.782.1581
A Division of Sound Publishing
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Page 8
kitsapweek
Calendar
Continued from page 7 each week. Free with admission or membership. Info: www. kidimu.org or 206-855-4650. BAINBRIDGE LIBRARY STORY TIMES: Toddlers, 10:30 a.m. Mondays. Babies, Tuesdays, preschool, Wednesdays. Free. 1270 Madison Ave., Bainbridge Island. 206-842-4162, www.krl.org. KIDIMU ACTIVITIES: 301 Ravine Lane NE, Bainbridge Island. Free First Thursdays, hands-on exhibits and monthly programs, visit the website for schedule. Info: 206-855-4650, www.kidimu.org. MATH WEDNESDAY: 10:3011:30 a.m. at KiDiMu, 301 Ravine Lane NE, Bainbridge Island. Young explorers are invited for math-themed experiments and activities. Free with admission or membership. Info: www.kidimu. org or 206-855-4650. MESSY MONDAY: Come to KiDiMu for special art projects on Mondays. Drop in from 10:30-11:30 a.m. Messy experimentation and sensory exploration are not only allowed but also encouraged. Free with admission or membership. Info: 206-855-4650 or www.kidimu.org. PRESCHOOL STORYTIME: 10:30 a.m. Wednesdays, Bainbridge Public Library. Join the children’s librarian for stories, rhymes and early literacy activities. Recommended for children ages 3-6. Info: www.krl.org. READING BUDDIES: 10:30-11:30 a.m. July 7 and 21, Bainbridge Public Library. Babies, toddlers, preschoolers and their families are invited to drop by and hear stories read by our Reading Buddy volunteers. Info: 206-8424162 or www.krl.org. STORYTIME FOR LITTLE ONES: 10:30 a.m. Tuesdays, Manchester Library, 8067 E. Main St., Port Orchard. Share stories, rhymes, songs and fun. Stay for music and crafts. Info: 360-871-3921, www.krl.org. STORYTIME THURSDAY: 10:30 a.m. at KiDiMu, 301 Ravine Lane NE, Bainbridge Island. Practice literacy skills and have fun. Info: www.kidimu.org or 206-855-4650. TODDLER STORYTIME: 10:30 a.m. Mondays, Bainbridge Public Library. Get a jump start on read-
Friday, July 3, 2015 ing at this early literacy storytime geared just for toddlers, age 18 months to 3 years. Info: 206-842-4162 or www.krl.org.
360-377-3955, www.krl.org. SILVERDALE WRITERS’ ROUNDTABLE: 9:30 a.m. every Saturday, Cafe Noir, 3261 NW Mount Vintage Way, No. 101, Silverdale. Looking for writers. Free. Info: Bob, 360-830-4968.
FARMERS MARKETS BAINBRIDGE FARMERS MARKET: 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. Saturdays through Nov. 14, at the Town Square at City Hall, 280 Madison Ave. Farmers, ready-to-eat food, crafters, local food processors and live music. Info: www.bain bridgefarmersmarket.com. BREMERTON FARMERS MARKET: 4-7 p.m. Thursdays at Evergreen Park, 1400 Park Ave.; 10:30 a.m. to 2:30 p.m. Sundays at the ferry terminal, Washington Avenue and First Street. Through Oct. 15. Info: www.bremertonmarket. wordpress.com. KINGSTON FARMERS MARKET: 9 a.m. to 2 p.m., through October at 25931 Central Ave. near the ferry terminal. Info: email info@ kingstonfarmersmarket.com, www.kingstonfarmersmarket. com, or Facebook. PORT ORCHARD FARMERS MARKET: 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. Saturdays through October on the waterfront at Marina Park. Info: www. pofarmersmarket.org. POULSBO FARMERS MARKET: 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. Saturdays to Dec. 10, on the corner of 7th Avenue and Iverson Street. Info: www. poulsbofarmersmarket.org. RAVENWOOD MARKET: 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. Fridays through Sept. 11, by the Gliding Eagle Market Place in Little Boston. SILVERDALE FARMERS MARKET: 10 a.m. to 4 p.m., Tuesdays, through September in the Old Navy/Best Buy parking lot. www. silver dalefarmersmarket.com SUQUAMISH FARMERS MARKET: Info: www.suquamishfarmers market.org or email info@suqua mishfarmersmarket.org.
MUSIC & DANCE
The Bourbon Street All Stars play 5-9 p.m. on the first Tuesday each month at McCloud’s Grill House, 2901 Perry Ave, Bremerton. Info: 360-373-3093. Chris Tucker OPENING ART RECEPTIONS: 6-8 p.m. July 3 and 10, Roby King Galleries, 176 Winslow Way E., Bainbridge Island. Patty Rogers’ show features collage, acrylic and Conte on Canvas art. Info: 206-842-2063 or robykinggalleries@gmail.com.
LITERARY ART BOOK DRIVE: Bainbridge Arts and Crafts seeks books to help build up the Bainbridge Library’s collection of art, architecture and design. Drop books off at Bainbridge Arts and Crafts, 151 Winslow Way, Bainbridge Island,
during business hours. BOOK SALE IN BREMERTON: Noon to 4 p.m. every Tuesday and Thursday at the Downtown Bremerton Library, 612 Fifth St., Bremerton. Money from sales helps support library community programs. Book donations are accepted at the library during regular hours of operation. Info:
KITSAP WEEK CROSSWORD
Crosswords
ARTS FIRST FRIDAY ART WALK: 5-7 p.m. July 3, Bainbridge Performing Arts. “Oil on Canvas” by Craig Spencer continues throughout July at BPA, open noon to 5 p.m. Tuesday through Friday. Info: www.bainbridge performingarts.org.
Radio Theatre Script Writing Workshop July 6 - 11
Gain practical experience in writing radio scripts for live performances under the direction of Ken Jones and playwright Jack O’Connor. No experience is necessary. The workshop will teach participants how to write scripts for original radio plays. At least one new rough script will be written, practiced, rehearsed, and completed by the end of the workshop. Performance day is open to the public. The cost is just $10.00 for the entire workshop. For more information and registration, visit www.jewelboxpoulsbo.org/schedule/play_readings.html.
225 Iverson St., Downtown Poulsbo
JewelBoxPoulsbo.org
BLUEWATER GALLERY LIVE MUSIC: Live music from 2-4 p.m. Saturdays., 5-8 p.m. during Poulsbo’s Second Saturday Art Walk. 18961 Front St., Poulsbo. Info: 360-598-2583. KITSAP KICKERS LINE DANCING CLUB: 6 p.m. Fridays, 5 p.m. Sundays at Jackson Memorial Hall, 1961 Washington St., Silverdale. For beginners. $2 donation per night. Non-smoking, non-drinking family club. Info: 360-2779159. KITSAP PINES CHORUS MEETING: 6:30-9 p.m. Thursdays at Christ the Rock Community Church, 4100 SW Old Clifton Road, Port Orchard. Part of Sweet Adelines International, a group of women singers, a capella, barbershop style. Info: 360-710-8538, www. kitsappines.org.
ANSWERS
30. Expression of disgust
7. In ___ of
31. Aroma
8. Twice
33. Artless one 35. Flip-flop
9. Country whose capital is Seoul (2 wds)
38. ___ gin fizz
10. Fish
39. Animal in a roundup 41. Length x width, for a rectangle
11. “___ quam videri” (North Carolina’s motto)
42. Third of the seven canonical hours
13. He took two tablets 15. Small talk (2 wds)
44. ___ Bowl played at Aloha Stadium
17. Hose
45. Makeup, e.g.
23. Disinclined
46. ___ Jackman, actor
25. Announce
48. After-dinner drink
26. Doing nothing
50. Absorbed, as a cost
27. Institutions for paupers
51. Fake
29. Entanglement (hyphenated)
52. Intelligence
32. Happened again
54. Single-handedly
34. Criminal
57. Clerks who arrange papers for storage
36. Home, informally
61. “... or ___!”
40. Make less dense
62. Burdened by cares (hyphenated)
43. Baker’s dozen?
64. Emulated Pinocchio
21. Drawn tight
37. Box office take
47. Donkey bray (hyphenated)
Across
65. Chill
49. Fabric with diagonal parallel ribs
66. Youngest Bennet sister in “Pride and Prejudice”
51. Thin leaf-like layers
1. Fancy-schmancy 5. Blend
67. ___ de deux 68. Custom
54. Canine cry
9. Ed.’s request (acronym) 12. Crosswise, on deck
69. Caroled
14. Assortment 15. Bamboozles
Down
16. Master chef (2 wds) 18. Holds close
1. Agreement
19. Itty-bitty
2. “O” in old radio lingo
20. Silent movie caption
3. Arid
22. Be a snitch
4. Lacked (contraction)
24. Carpenter’s machine25. Lulu28. Dirty coat
5. Kind of rule 6. Building additions
53. Kills, as a dragon 55. Toy building brick 56. Part man/part goat 58. Icelandic epic 59. Curb, with “in” 60. Catch 63. Check for accuracy
Friday, July 3, 2015
kitsapnightlife ACOUSTIC ROCK GARY WALKER AND FRIENDS: 5-7 p.m. every Saturday, at Suzanne Maurice Wine Bar at Pleasant Beach Marketplace, Bainbridge Island. Acoustic rock songs from the 1970s to the present. Free.
BLUES/BLUEGRASS GUITARIST/VOCALIST TERRY ENYEART: 7 p.m. first Wednesday of each month, at Whiskey Creek Steakhouse, 1783 Highway 308 NE, Keyport. ME AND THE BOYS: 8 p.m. the first Friday of the month, at Tizley’s Europub, 18928 Front St., Poulsbo. Performing two sets of new and used bluegrass. SLIPPERY PIG BLUES AND BEERS: 7-10 p.m. Thursdays at the Slippery Pig Brewery, 18801 Front St. NE, Poulsbo.
BLUES AND ROCK ROCK AND BLUES BANDS: 9 p.m. to 1 a.m., Fridays and Saturdays, at Sheila’s Portside Pub, 18779 Front St., Poulsbo. A different rock and blues band every week. Check Sheila’s Portside Pub Facebook page for more information.
BREWS & BOOKS BOOKS AND BEER: 6:30 p.m. every second Monday, at Valholl Brewing, Poulsbo. Pizza provided from That’s A Some Italian. Discuss the current book or learn about the next one.
DJ MUSIC DJ JOE FRANK AT OZZIE’S PLACE: At
All Star Lanes, 10710 Silverdale Way, Silverdale. No cover. DJ DUFF AT THE POINT CASINO: Late nights on Fridays, after live music, in the Boom Room at The Point Casino, 7989 NE Salish Lane, Kingston.
IRISH MUSIC SLIPPERY PIG WEEKLY IRISH MUSIC: 7-9 p.m. Wednesdays, at the Slippery Pig Brewery, 18801 Front St. NE, Poulsbo. A circle of musicians play Irish music.
JAM SESSIONS
Restaurant, 1918 NE Poulsbo Ave., Keyport. Jazz artist Mark Lewis performs with guest artists. SIMCO NEWTON TURNER TRIO: Second and fourth Fridays of the month at the Suzanne Maurice Wine Bar at Pleasant Beach Marketplace, Bainbridge Island. REDSHIFT: The last Sunday of the month at The Treehouse Cafe, 4569 Lynwood Center Road, Bainbridge Island. An evening of original music, jazz standards and unexpected arrangements. Guest performances each month.
KARAOKE
ACOUSTIC JAM AT SLIPPERY PIG: 6-9 p.m. Tuesdays at the Slippery Pig Brewery, 18801 Front St., Poulsbo. For all ages, instruments and experience. A digital keyboard is available. MUSIC TO OUR BEERS JAM: 7-9Â p.m. Wednesdays, Bainbridge Island Brewery, 9415 Coppertop Loop NE. Open jam night hosted by Ethan J. Perry & His Remedy Band. BISCUITS & GRAVY JAM: 6:30-10 p.m. Thursdays, Pegasus Coffee House, 131 Parfitt Way, Bainbridge Island. Ethan J. Perry hosts a session in the round. Free, open to all musicians.
SLIPPERY PIG: 7-10 p.m. Fridays, at the Slippery Pig Brewery, 18801 Front St. NE, Poulsbo. ISLA BONITA: 9 p.m. to 1 a.m. Fridays, 316 Winslow Way, Bainbridge Island. Hosted by Eon Smith. MANCHESTER PUB: 9 p.m. Fridays, at the Manchester Pub, 2350 Colchester Drive E, Port Orchard. Dance to a DJ and karaoke tunes. MANETTE SALOON: Thursdays at the Manette Saloon, 2113 E. 11th St., Bremerton. Hosted by Amy O.
CELTIC JAM AT TIZLEY’S EURO PUB: 2-5 p.m. the third Sunday
OPEN MIC
of the month, at Tizley’s Europub, 18928 Front St., Poulsbo.
JAZZ MARK LEWIS JAZZ AT CASA MEXICO (FORMERLY LOS CORALES) : 5-8 p.m. Fridays at Casa Mexico
DOWNPOUR BREWING: 5-8 p.m. Thursdays, at Downpour Brewing, 10991 Highway 104, Kingston. Patrons can bring any food or non-alcoholic drink they like. All ages welcome. THE GREEN MUSE: 8-10Â p.m. Tuesdays, Pegasus Coffee House, 131 Parfitt Way, Bainbridge Island.
Ethan J. Perry hosts a music, spoken word and poetry open mic night. All ages welcome. MANETTE SALOON: Wednesdays at Manette Saloon, 2113 E. 11th St., Bremerton. Hosted by Jack Parker.
BREMERTON’S FIRST FRIDAY
Ale House, Kingston, and 7 p.m. at The Alehouse on Winslow. Wednesdays: 7 p.m. Silverdale Beach Hotel, Silverdale, and at 8 p.m. at the Clearwater Casino, Suquamish. Thursdays: 7:30 p.m. Puerto Vallarta, Kingston; 7 p.m. Bainbridge Island Brewing, Bain-
kitsapweek
Page 9
bridge Island; and 7 p.m. MoonDogs Too, Port Orchard. Saturdays: 8 p.m. Island Grill, Bainbridge Island. Info: www.triviatimelive.com.
FIRST FRIDAY ART WALK: 5-8 p.m. each first Friday, along Fourth Street and Pacific Avenue in Downtown Bremerton. Shops and galleries open late to feature local art and music.
SECOND SATURDAYS POULSBO SECOND SATURDAY ART WALK: 5-8 p.m. each second Saturday, along Front Street. Shops and galleries stay open late, many with refreshments and snacks, to showcase local art. SEABOLD SECOND SATURDAY: 7:30 p.m. each second Saturday at Seabold Hall, 14451 Komedal Road, Bainbridge. Open-mic performances with a featured act. Sign-ups for the open mic from 6:45-7:15 p.m. Play or pay $5, children free. Coffee, tea, bottle water and cookies for sale. Info: David Hager, 206-855-9373.
TRIVIA ARENA SPORTS BAR: 6-8:30 p.m. Tuesdays, at Arena Sports Bar and Grille, 4111 Wheaton Way, Bremerton. Free to play. Hosted by trivia jockey JonBoy. Prizes from local businesses each week. TRIVIA TIME LIVE: Pub trivia at multiple venues across Kitsap. Sundays: 7 p.m. Hare & Hounds, Poulsbo, and 6 p.m. at Downpour Brewing, Kingston. Tuesdays: 7 p.m. Main Street
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Page 10
kitsapweek
Friday, July 3, 2015
Water, the giver of life G
oing outside after a long day of work and watering your garden by hand is such a relaxing, almost Zen-like activity. It’s a time to meditate, pray or just zone out as you provide life-sustaining water to the ground around your plants. Hand watering is good for the body and soul. Unfortunately, hand watering is detrimental to our plants. With weather forecasts of hot days this summer, we need to be smart about how we water our gardens. What’s best for the plants is letting a sprinkler, soaker hose or drip irrigation do the work, giving the garden a less frequent but regular deep soak that hand watering can’t do. Unless I stand like a statue, watering in one spot for an hour, I can’t give my plants enough moisture. After a hard day at work, it’s better to slip into something more comfort-
GARDEN LIFE By DEBBIE TEASHON able, push the sunglasses over the eyes and relax in a lounge chair. While the sprinklers water your garden, hold a glass of iced tea in one hand and a good book in another and you can utilize that watering time to decompress in your beautiful garden. Throw out all preconceived ideas about watering. During our drought season, our gardens need water. Whether you drag hoses around to water your garden, or have installed sprinkler systems or drip irrigation, we don’t want to waste precious water or money. Before we get into new irrigation practices, we need to have a look at the soil. Sandy soil is the easiest to water, with moisture penetrating quickly to the roots. However,
it also dries out much faster. Heavy clay soils are just the opposite. The water penetrates slowly and holds the moisture longer. Improving the soil with yearly applications of mulch will help both soil types retain moisture, and improve the tilth of the soil. Add a layer of compost or fine bark mulch every year and you will be amazed at how improved your soil becomes after a few years. In addition, a layer of mulch on top of the soil helps keep the water from wicking up from below and evaporating into the atmosphere. Mulching is a good habit with many benefits! Next, we want to choose the right plants for the right place. If you have sandy soils, it will be in your best interest to choose plants that want good drainage and are drought tolerant as a mainstay in your garden.
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What’s best for plants is letting a sprinkler, soaker hose or drip Submitted irrigation do the work. There are plenty of beautiful plants to choose from that thrive in sandy soil. Conversely, for clay soil, choose plants that thrive there and provide an area with raised beds for those plants that need good drainage. You still want an alwaysthirsty Gunnera or Astilbe for your garden? Select an area where your thirstier plants will grow together, where you can tend to their needs more efficiently. Move all your plants that need more water into this zone. Alternatively, move all your drought-tolerant plants into their own zone and, once established, you can keep their watering
needs to a minimum. Consider a natives-only zone in your garden, and grow indigenous plants of the Kitsap Peninsula or Western Washington. These plants are adapted to our Mediterranean-like climate of dry summers and wet winters, and provide habitats for our native wildlife species. Once established, you only need to weed and you can stop watering the area. Now that we have mulched the bare earth with an effective barrier, planted the right plants in the right place, how should we water? Frequent, shallow water leads to plants with shallow roots, which
means the plants are less drought tolerant. Weekly, deep soaks of water forces the plant to grow deeper roots, which is what we want. Sandy soil may need more frequent watering, so monitor your soil at first to determine how often you need to water. A good starting point is about an inch of water a week. Again, it depends on the type of soil you have. Once you have irrigated an area for 45 to 60 minutes, dig a hole and see how far down the water has penetrated. Trees and shrubs need the moisture 10 inches deep, while shallow-rooted perennials, annuals and edibles should be moist down to about six to eight inches. When the soil dries down to a couple of inches, it’s time to water again. For more detailed information on watering, go to ext100.wsu.edu/kitsap/ gardening. Do you still want a hand-watering activity every day? Container gardening is perfect for you! — Garden writer, book author and award-winning photographer Debbie Teashon’s work is also seen on the web site Rainy Side Gardeners at rainyside.com.
Friday, July 3, 2015
kitsapweek
Page 11
Profile: Chateau Ste. Michelle’s David Rosenthal N
ot too many years ago, David Rosenthal was reading a “Wine for Dummies” book while he and his father were driving from Colorado to California. It was 2001, and Rosenthal — a University of Puget Sound grad — was heading to Napa Valley, where he had picked up a harvest job at Robert Mondavi Winery. Rosenthal, a Colorado native, earned a degree in marine biology, so this gig was just to keep him busy while he figured out what was next for his life. Nearly 15 years later, Rosenthal is in charge of white winemaking at Chateau Ste. Michelle, Washington’s oldest and largest winery. “Going into it, I knew nothing about wine. Zero,” he said. “I was 95-percent sure wine came from grapes — but I wasn’t 100 percent sure.” After working for Mondavi during harvest, Rosenthal headed north to Seattle and ended up as a lab technician in Woodinville at Washington’s largest wine company. He was there for four years before leaving to work in the Australian and Oregon wine industries. In 2007, Rosenthal was back at Ste. Michelle as an enologist. In 2011, he was promoted to assistant white winemaker, focusing primarily on Chardonnay. When Wendy Stuckey left Ste. Michelle this spring to become a leader in the New Zealand wine industry, Rosenthal took
NW WINES By ANDY PERDUE and ERIC DEGERMAN
over her position as head white winemaker. Along with head winemaker Bob Bertheau, Rosenthal will oversee production of more than 1 million cases of Riesling and at least as much Chardonnay, along with Viognier, Sauvignon Blanc, Muscat, Semillon and other varieties. Here are three Chateau Ste. Michelle Chardonnays we’ve tasted in recent weeks. All should be available from Northwest wine merchants or directly from the winery. ■ Chateau Ste. Michelle 2013 Cold Creek Vineyard Chardonnay, Columbia Valley, $22: Each year, this historic site produces some of Washington state’s finest Chardonnay, and this vintage represents the 40th anniversary of the establishment of Cold Creek Vineyard, across the Columbia River from the Wahluke Slope. Ste. Michelle works only with French oak barrels on this program, and nearly half of those barrels are fresh out of the wrapper. There are plenty of fleshy stone-fruit aromas — white peach and dried apricot with dusty lemon — while vanilla cream and the toastiness of the oak slowly emerges as the wine warms in the glass. It’s a big, delicious, yet balanced Chardonnay on the palate, which offers flavors of
David Rosenthal is the head white winemaker for Chateau Ste. Michelle in Woodinville. Chateau Ste. Michelle / Courtesy Chateau Ste. Michelle is Washington’s oldest and largest winery. Gala apple, pear and butterscotch. (13.3 percent alcohol) ■ Chateau Ste. Michelle 2013 Mimi Chardonnay, Horse Heaven Hills, $20: There is no vineyard named for Mimi Nye, but she got in on the ground floor as the vineyard manager at Ste. Michelle’s Canoe Ridge Estate and has served as its steward since it was established in 1991. The program for this wine strikes an impeccable and complex balance of fruit, oak and acidity, which is formed with 76 percent of the lot undergoing six months of aging in French oak and the rest fermented in stainless steel. It leads to aromas of light butter and fresh-baked bread that’s backed with fruitiness of a mango lassi, Meyer lemon, pear, white pepper and coriander. The bold entry brings delicious loads of
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juicy tropical fruit along with pear. (14 percent alcohol) ■ Chateau Ste. Michelle 2013 Canoe Ridge Estate Chardonnay, Horse Heaven Hills, $30: Back in the early 1990s, Chateau Ste. Michelle established Canoe Ridge
Estate Vineyard on a sagebrush-covered hill overlooking the Columbia River in the southern Horse Heaven Hills. Here, Bertheau brings in some of his favorite grapes. This vineyard-designated Chardonnay opens with aromas of lemon zest, a hint of toast and dustiness
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Legal Description: Lot(s) 22, Stavis Creek, according to the plat thereof, recorded in Volume 16 of Plats, Page(s) 66, 67 and 68, records of Kitsap County, Washington. T a x P a r c e l #4701-000-022-0008. Post Office address: 1070 Stavis Drive West NW Seabeck WA 98380; Assessor’s Property Tax Parcel or Account Numb e r : 4701-000-022-0008. The sale of the above described property is to take place: Time: 9:15 am Date: Friday, July 31, 2015 Place: Main Entrance, Kitsap County Courthouse 614 Division Street, Port Orchard, WA The judgment debtor can avoid the sale by paying the judgment amount of $535,946.11, together with interest, costs, fees minus payments from prior garnishment and levies before the sale date. For the exact amount, contact the Kitsap County Sheriff’s Office at the address stated below: GARY SIMPSON, SHERIFF By: Mark Rufener Lieutenant of Investigations and Support Services Kitsap County Sheriff’s Office 614 Division Street Port Orchard, WA 98366-4688 Phone: 360-337-7104 Attorney for Assignee: Brian Wichmann 15201 Military Rd S SeaTac, WA 98188 206-244-7433 Date of first publication: 06/19/15 Date of last publication: 07/10/15 (KCD639644)
NO. 13-2-01050-1 SHERIFF’S PUBLIC NOTICE OF SALE OF REAL PROPERTY TO: Estate of David A. Bonn; Cub Lake Community Club, Inc.; State of Washington; and Occupants of the Premises; Judgment Debtor(s) The Superior Court of Kitsap County has directed the undersigned Sheriff of Kitsap County to sell the property described below to satisfy a judgment in the above-entitled action. Legal Description: LOT 2, CUB LAKE, ACCORDING TO THE PLAT THEREOF RECORDED IN VOLUME 19 OF PLATS, PAGES 138, 139 AND 140, RECORDS OF KITSAP COUNTY, WASHINGTON. Post Office address: 6768 Southwest Alpine Lake Road, Port Orchard WA 98367;
Assessor’s Property Tax Parcel or Account Number: 4749-000-002-0006. The sale of the above described property is to take place: Time: 09:00 am Date: Friday, July 31, 2015 Place: Main Entrance, Kitsap County Courthouse 614 Division Street, Port Orchard, WA The judgment debtor can avoid the sale by paying the judgment amount of $143,731.72, together with interest, costs and fees, before the sale date. For the exact amount, contact the Kitsap County Sheriff’s Office at the address stated below: GARY SIMPSON, SHERIFF By: David White Chief of Investigations and Support Services Kitsap County
Sheriff’s Office 614 Division Street Port Orchard, WA 98366-4688 Phone: 360-337-7104 Attorney for Plaintiff: RCO Legal, P.S. 13555 SE 36th St., Ste 300 Bellevue WA 98006 425-458-2121 Date of first publication: 06/12/15 Date of last publication: 07/03/15 (KCD638136)
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IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF WASHINGTON FOR SNOHOMISH COUNTY COREY MCCRAREY, a minor, by and through his mother, LORRIE CANADA; ASSIGNEE, WINSTON REED PARTNERS, Plaintiff, vs. CYNTHIA SAMS, an individual, and THE LAVENDER MOON SOCIETY, an unincorporated entity, Defendants NO. 03-2-09066-1 SHERIFF’S PUBLIC NOTICE OF SALE OF REAL PROPERTY TO: Lavender Moon Society Judgment Debtor(s) The Superior Court of Kitsap County has directed the undersigned Sheriff of Kitsap County to sell the property described below to satisfy a judgment in the above-entitled action.
IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF WASHINGTON FOR KITSAP COUNTY ONEWEST BANK, FSB, its successors in interest and/or assigns, Plaintiff, v. ESTATE OF DAVID A. BONN; CUB LAKE COMMUNITY CLUB, INC.; UNITED STATES OF AMERICA; STATE OF WASHINGTON; OCCUPANTS OF THE PREMISES, Defendants.
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Just not a cool home but a wonderful community! Home is 3 bdrm/2 bth, 1826 sf and sits on almost half acre of gardens filled w/ lovely flowers & Rhododendrons; backs up to wooded wonderland. Fresh paint & new carpet. All appliances stay, move in ready. The garage was converted to art studio with French doors leading out to deck and gardens. MLS #785862. Bonnie Chandler 360-509-4949.
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Single-level Cape Cod-style home on the White Horse Golf Course overlooking the 14th fairway. A perfect flow of space includes formal & casual living areas. Fine finishes, outstanding cook’s kitchen, sumptuous master suite. Expansive patio, landscaped grounds. MLS #755811. Terry Klein, 206/949-3360, TerryKlein.com. Windermere Real Estate/BI, Inc. Barb Huget, 360/620-6445, bhuget@windermere.com. Windermere Real Estate/West Sound, Inc.
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Well maintained home w/400’ of community beach to BBQ, kayak, or simply enjoy beautiful sunsets over the Olympic Mountains. The floor plan is very open and spacious w/vaulted ceilings, hardwood floors, a beautiful fireplace, 3 bedrooms on the main floor, large bonus or craft room upstairs w/covered balcony and new 30 yr roof. Great home for entertaining & peaceful backyard w/private deck. MLS# 809234. Joni Kimmel/Bridget Young 360.509.6988. Windermere Real Estate/West Sound, Inc.
Call one of your Sound Publishing newspapers to submit your Open House Listing: BAINBRIDGE REVIEW 206 842-6613 • NORTH KITSAP HERALD 360 779-4464 CENTRAL KITSAP REPORTER 360 308-9161 • BREMERTON PATRIOT 360 308-9161 PORT ORCHARD INDEPENDENT 360 876-4414 • KITSAP CLASSIFIEDS 1-800-388-2527
Friday, July 3, 2015 kitsapweek page 13
NORTH KITSAP NEW ON MARKET KINGSTON $139,900 Affordable home in a great community! This home offers fresh paint, vinyl & carpet, 2 big bdrms + bonus rm. Fully fenced large yard & a huge detached garage. Jeri Coleman 360-621-7131 View at www.johnlscott.com/17947 SUQUAMISH $199,000 Only 1 Left - New Construction. 1456 square feet. With three bedrooms, 1 3/4 baths upstairs. Master with walk in closet and ensuite. SS kitchen. Close-in. Great location. Upgrades available. Listed by Mike Ballou 206-715-9980. View at johnlscott.com/33933
NEW ON MARKET POULSBO $329,000 Great home on a private 2.5 acres! 1-story home with an open floor plan that features 1584 sqft, 3 bedrooms & 2 baths. Nice large yard & a huge deck w/hot tub. Sonny Woodward 360-731-5269 View at www.johnlscott.com/86690
BAINBRIDGE ISLAND $1,250,000 Heavenly Views - This unique property offers panoramic Southern views showcased by a breathtaking view of Mt. Rainier.Perched above sunny South Beach Dr,this amazing 1.72 acre lot features an expansive lawn that overlooks the water. Listed by Tim Wilkins. 206-380-7345. NEW RAMBLER PRESALE $340,000 View at johnlscott.com/35965 Alderwood 1710 SF Model. Nat gas furnace, gas FP w/tile surround, vaulted ceilings, Hardi siding, stone accent on porch posts. 19 lots Poseidon Ct CENTRAL KITSAP off Pugh Rd. Silverdale Office 360-692-9777 View at www.johnlscott.com/74459 CENTRAL KITSAP $219,900 Enjoy community living! 3 bd, 2.25 ba, Near NEW ON MARKET POULSBO $355,000 schools, military bases and business areas. This spacious home offers 3198 sqft. 4+bdrms, Seller keeps this home unbelievably clean and family rm & a beautiful eat-in kitchen w/granite offers AHS home warranty. Vivienne Vanichkul counters & huge pantry. Nice private backyard & 360-689-4521 a community park. Ken West 360-990-2444 View at www.johnlscott.com/76338 View at www.johnlscott.com/11554
NORTH KITSAP $277,500 New duplex. Plan by Capstone. 3 bdrms, 2.5 baths, 1-car+ gar, slab granite kitch countertops, engineered hardwood in entry, kitch & dining, natural gas fp. Tommy Jones 360-731-9685 View at www.johnlscott.com/60691 POULSBO $378,750 Meticulous home w/views of the Olympic POULSBO $309,000 Mountains & Hood Canal! Features: open floor Spacious home with views of Hood Canal & the plan w/1865 sqft, 3 bedrooms, 2.5 baths & family Olympic Mountains! Open 1880 sqft, 3+bdrms room. Great location! Jim Lake 360-337-9817 (2bdrm septic) & family rm. Nice, fenced View at www.johnlscott.com/93176 backyard & great neighborhood. Jane Woodward 360-779-8520 KINGSTON $499,000 View at www.johnlscott.com/59143 Beautiful home in White Horse Community that features 2966 sqft, 3+bedrooms, 2.5 baths, cherry wood floors & a gorgeous kitchen w/stainless appliances. Jane Woodward 360-779-8520 LAND & LOTS View at www.johnlscott.com/55170 POULSBO $34,900 Great Home Site/Nice Neighborhood. Centrally located between two ferries. Clubhouse, BREMERTON playground, swimming pool, waterfront park. $138,500 Water/power in street. Jan Zufelt 360-297-0325 BREMERTON Cash flow dream w/big ticket items completed, View at www.johnlscott.com/17908 such as, new exterior paint and new roof in June PORT ORCHARD $59,950 2015. Unit B has remod bthrm Low vacancy rate, Rolling 2.55 acres at the end of King Road! Many & easy to rent Shawn Hartley 360-710-7238 building sites, property will support a rambler, View at www.johnlscott.com/87867 daylight or 2 story. Lightly treed. A must see!! BREMERTON $178,500 Linda Esposito-Depee 360-876-7600 This gem is in Central Bremerton, complete View at www.johnlscott.com/86358 remodel and new 30 yr roof. Near ferry, PSNS, PORT ORCHARD $59,950 and schools. 1 year home warranty included. Rolling 2.55 acres at the end of King Road! Many Louis Mejia 360-731-2015 building sites, property will support a rambler, View at www.johnlscott.com/58724 daylight or 2 story. Lightly treed. A must see!! BREMERTON $229,000 Linda Esposito-Depee 360-876-7600 Move in ready! 4 bd/2 ba, 1800 sq ft w/newly View at www.johnlscott.com/86358 landscaped backyard. All gas appliances, two LAKEBAY $75,000 decks & centrally located for shopping. Louis Five acres of peace & quiet to call your own! Mejia 360-731-2015 Located on a gated road, power is at the site, View at www.johnlscott.com/38898 boundary lines are flagged & 8 hours of bulldozer BREMERTON $249,000 time included!! Dianne Dibley 360-876-7600 Newer Custom home, minutes from the shipyard View at www.johnlscott.com/53202 and Seattle ferries. Large 1.18 acre lot fully fenced POULSBO $75,000 in the back with complete privacy and tons of 1.11 acre lot with well (PUD hookup available). room to play. Bob Harkness 360-516-9217 Property surveyed. Located on a dead end street View at www.johnlscott.com/34637 & just minutes to Silverdale. Pat Osler 360-271NEW ON THE MARKET $249,500 0579 Unbelievable unobstructed views of Ostrich Bay View at www.johnlscott.com/89341 from this 1913 home in the Shorewood/Madrona POULSBO $199,500 Point neighborhood. 3 bedrooms, new flooring, Beautiful Miller Bay waterfront property! Fully updates throughout. Melissa Duryea 206-595-6968 fenced, lightly treed, .82 acre lot w/101ft of no- View at www.johnlscott.com/89283 bank waterfront. Ready to build w/water & electric meter. Jim Lake 360-337-9817 View at www.johnlscott.com/90911 MASON COUNTY
ING D N PE
BAINBRIDGE $239,000 Beautiful 1.65 acre parcel that has installed Water, Septic System, Power & a New BSA w/3bdrm Septic Design that has been approved. Close to Grand Forest Trail. Brian Wilson 360-689-2466 View at www.johnlscott.com/62547
BAINBRIDGE ISLAND
MASON COUNTY $169,500 Spacious hm located in prvt Collins Lake community feat 2 bd, w/ addnl rm, office space, sep laundry rm, living rm & fam rm w/wood stove & beautiful open kitch Jenny Geister 360-630-6037 View at www.johnlscott.com/84856
CENTRAL KITSAP $235,000 The possibilities here ....MU property lots of possibilities now or later? Large older home with lots of space LARGE lot, pad for garage? 2544 sq ft. Cheryl Bradley 360-620-5706 View at www.johnlscott.com/74565 BREMERTON $239,000 Here is your well kept West Bremerton charmer! 3BR/2.5BA, 2 car garage home with open concept plan, newer appliances plus a peek-a-boo view over Oyster Bay11 Becki Harness 360-340-2739 View at www.johnlscott.com/93737 NEW ON THE MARKET $329,900 Amazing views from this 4 bd, 3 ba home! 2 main flr beds inc mstr w/5pc ba. Kitch w/bkfst bar & open to fam rm. Rec rm down w/wd stove, 2 bd & full ba! CKSD Brian & Sharna McArdle 360-7101444 or 710-0644 View at www.johnlscott.com/47623 INDUSTRIAL 19.34 AC SILV $550,000 Right off Newberry Hill Rd. Nearly 20 acres zoned industrial, marketable timber, utilities in street, perfect for a lay down yard or storage house. Marcus Hoffman 360-308-2233 View at www.johnlscott.com/29648
SOUTH KITSAP PORT ORCHARD - NEW! $219,000 Close to downtown Manchester, this adorable 3BR/1.5BA home has a new roof, new paint, new carpet & more! Fully fenced back yard with large deck + RV parking!! Gary Lidstrom 360-340-6334 View at www.johnlscott.com/81198 PORT ORCHARD $299,000 New listing - Spacious hoe that offers 2,443 sqft, 3+bdrms & an upgraded kitchen w/tile counters, Maple cabinets & SS appliances, Large fenced backyard, great neighborhood. Listed by Jamie Jensen. 360-620-9351. View at johnlscott.com/17178 PORT ORCHARD - REDUCED! $315,000 Lovely craftsman style home with 2472 sqft + 2BR/2.5BA, remodeled in 2005 w/granite counters, cherry wd floors, heat pump & wrap around decks w/views galore!! JB Bartel, CRS, GRI 360-731-1051 View at www.johnlscott.com/52812 PORT ORCHARD $650,000 This home is on of a kind! 5543 sq. ft., 3BR/4.25BA, entry, formal dining,mother in law qtrs.in basement, music room, hot tub room & fantastic views!! Rick Ellis 360-871-1600 View at www.johnlscott.com/80444
JOHN L. SCOTT KITSAP COUNTY OFFICE LOCATIONS Bainbridge Island | Jamie Jensen, Managing Broker ............... (206) 842-5636 Kingston | Frank Wilson, Managing Broker ....................................... (360) 297-7500 Poulsbo | Frank Wilson, Managing Broker ........................................ (360) 779-7555 Port Orchard | Jacqui Curtiss, Managing Broker .......................... (360) 876-7600 Silverdale | Lee Avery, Managing Broker .................................. (360) 692-9777 Bremerton | Lee Avery, Managing Broker ................................. (360) 377-0046 John L. Scott Real Estate has 122 offices, some offices are independently owned and operated.
Employment General
Employment General
Employment General
Employment General
Experienced Inside Sales Consultant Be a part of the largest community news organization in Washington! Sound Publishing, Inc. is looking for a selfmotivated, results driven person interested in a career in multi-media sales. In this exciting role you will leverage your drive and creativity to develop, customize, and sell marketing programs to local businesses and private party adver tisers. Qualified candidate will be able to: Sell advertising to meet and exceed goals; Make sales presentations and c l o s e s a l e s ove r t h e phone and through use of email; Prioritize work flow and thrive in a fastpaced environment with multiple deadlines. Media experience a plus but not required. If you have the noted skills, please email your resume and cover letter to: hr@sound publishing.com Attn: KCDSALES
Messenger House Care Center is looking for exceptional candidates with a positive personality and excellent customer service skills to help us meet and exceed our goal of excellent care and service to our patients. We currently have positions open for
ADMINISTRATIVE ASSISTANT Are you looking for a job near home? Sound Publishing needs an Administrative Assistant in our Poulsbo, WA office. Will answer phones, handle petty cash, make deposits, enter advertising orders into our front-end business system, assist the advertising manager and sales team with ads and special projects, and assist all other depar tments as needed. Must possess strong customer service skills, excellent phone skills, excellent interpersonal, verbal, and written communication skills. Must be team-or iented and computer literate. This is a full-time, 30 hours per week position and includes excellent benefits including medical, dental, vision, and paid holidays, vacation and sick time. Please e-mail resume with cover letter to hr@soundpublishing.com or mail to: HR/AA, Sound Publishing, Inc., 11323 Commando Rd. W, Main Unit, Everett, WA 98204 CREATIVE ARTIST Sound Publishing, Inc and The Whidbey News Times, a twice-weekly community newspaper located in Coupeville, WA, has an immediate opening for a full-time Creative Artist. Duties include performing ad design, designing promotional materials, providing excellent internal and external customer service. Requires excellent communication skills and the ability to wo r k i n a fa s t p a c e d deadline-oriented environment. Experience w i t h A d o b e C r e a t i ve Suite, InDesign, Photoshop, Illustrator and Acrobat strongly preferred, as is newspaper or other media experience. Must be able to work independently as well as part of a team. We offer a great work environment, health benefits, 401k, paid holidays, vacation and sick time. Please email your resume, cover letter, and a few samples of your work to: hr@soundpublishing.com
CREATIVE ARTIST Sound Publishing, Inc. has a Creative Artist position available at our Poulsbo, WA office in Kitsap County. Position is hour ly and on-call. Duties include performing ad and spec design, trafficking as well as providing excellent customer service to the sales staff and clients. Newspaper experience is preferred but not required. REQUIREMENTS: Experience with Adobe Creative Suite 6, InDesign, Photoshop, Illustrat o r, a n d A c r o b a t ( fo cused on print); Excellent customer service, organization and communication skills; Ability to work independently, as well as part of a team, in a fast-paced environment. If you can think outside the box, are well organized and would like to be part of a highly energized, competitive and professional team, we want to hear from you! Please email yo u r c ove r l e t t e r, r e sume, and a few work samples to: hr@soundpublishing.com or mail to: Sound Publishing, Inc., 11323 Commando Rd. W, Main Unit, Everett, WA 98204 ATTN: HR/KCA Sound Publishing is an Equal Opportunity Employer (EOE) and strongly supports diversity in the wor kplace. Visit our website to learn more about us! www.soundpublishing.com
CNAs and LPN/RNs in our Nursing Dept and COTAs and PTs in our Therapy Dept. Interested in becoming a CNA but don’t have your license? We also offer CNA training and have a class starting SOON! We welcome applications from new nurses and will train the right dietary candidate. Messenger House Care Center is a locally owned and operated Skilled Nursing and Rehabilitation facility on Bainbridge Island with the mission of providing the best possible care and service to our residents. If interested, please stop by MHCC in person to fill out an application. The office is open Monday through Friday 9am – 4pm.
This position, based in Poulsbo, receives hourly pay plus commissions and a benefits package. Sound Publishing Inc. is an Equal Oppor tunity E m p l oye r ( E O E ) a n d strongly supports diversity in the wor kplace. Visit our website to learn PAGINATOR more about us! Peninsula Daily News, a www.soundpublishing.com six-day morning newspaper serving the beautiful North Olympic PeninLEAD sula of Washington, has TELEMARKETER a full-time opening on its Are you ready for an ex- design/copy desk in Port citing career with a lead- Angeles. The successful er in multi-media adver- c a n d i d a t e mu s t h ave tising?? S o u n d demonstrated and creaPublishing is looking for tive layout/pagination a Lead Telemarketer in skills using the Adobe our Poulsbo, WA office, Suite, copy editing expeto generate advertising rience, good grammar sales on new and exist- and syntax skills, be AP ing business in any com- style-savvy, know curbination for all our West- rent events, write accue r n W a s h i n g t o n rate and catchy headnewspaper publications. lines and possess sharp This includes display InDesign skills (we have and classified advertis- a Macintosh-based coming, special section, pre- p u t e r s y s t e m ) . D a i l y prints, print-and-deliver, newspaper experience internet, and any other preferred; will consider a p r o d u c t o r s e r v i c e s t o p - d rawe r c a n d i d a t e available within our fami- from a weekly newspaly of media products per looking to move to a We’re looking for some- daily. The design/copy one with: editor will produce pages *(Strong sales, customer and put together secservice, and phone so- tions. The shift is daylicitation skills. time Sundays through *Computer-proficient in T h u r s d ay s . T h e s u c database and spread- cessful candidate also s h e e t s o f t w a r e p r o - will post stories on the grams. PDN’s website as well *Excellent phone com- as have Facebook and munication skills (written Twitter responsibilities. and verbal). Affordable Port Angeles, *Ability to multi-task and gateway to Olympic Nawork well under pres- tional Park and Victoria, sure and deadlines in a British Columbia, gets fast-paced environment. half the rainfall of Seattle *Self-motivated, proac- yet is close enough to tive, and possess good enjoy Seattle as well as problem-solving skills. our rain forests, great We offer a competitive fishing and other outwage with commissions, d o o r s a c t i v i t i e s a n d and a benefits package pleasant lifestyle. Por t that includes health insu- Angeles just finished rance, life insurance, a s e c o n d i n a n a t i o n a l 401K retirement plan, magazine’s “Best Town p a i d v a c a t i o n , s i c k Ever” contest after beatleave, and paid holidays. ing out all four other If you’re interested in We s t e r n c i t i e s i n t h e joining our team, then contest. Peninsula Daily we want to hear from N e w s p u b l i s h e s t w o you today! zoned a.m. editions in Email your resume to: Clallam and Jefferson hr@soundpublishing.com counties. Pay commenfor immediate surate with experience; consideration. full benefits package inSound Publishing, Inc. is cludes medical/dental/vian Equal Oppor tunity sion insurance, 401(k), E m p l oye r ( E O E ) a n d paid vacation with immestrongly supports diver- diate eligibility and sick sity in the wor kplace. pay. Finalists may be inVisit our website vited to a tryout; preferwww.soundpublishing.com ence given to candidates to find out more about from the Northwest and us! We s t C o a s t . P l e a s e send cover letter, reAdvertising doesn’t sume and clips of pages have to break the bank. The Classifieds (PDFs are acceptable) with at least three prohas great deals on fessional references to everything you need. hr@soundpublishing.com
Sell it for free in the FLEA theflea@soundpublishing.com EDITOR Sound Publishing has an immediate opening for Editor of the Journal of the San Juans in the beautiful San Juan Isl a n d s o f Wa s h i n g t o n state. This is not an entry-level position. Requires a hands-on leader with a minimum of three years newspaper experience including writing, editing, pagination, photography, and InDesign skills. editing and monitoring social media including Twitter, FaceBook, etc. We offer a competitive compensation and benefits package including health insurance, paid time off (vacation, sick, and holidays), and 401K (currently with an employer match.) If you are interested, please email your cover letter, r e s u m e, a n d u p t o 5 samples of your work to: hr@soundpublishing.com Please be sure to note: AT T N : E D J S J i n t h e subject line.
Sound Publishing is an Equal Opportunity Employer (EOE) and strongly supports diversity in the wor kplace. Check out our website to find out more about us! www.soundpublishing.com D o g wa l ke r / C a t b ox cleaner/ Pet sitter needed in Kingston. Moving to Kingston and need help with two dogs and two cats during the tranSound Publishing is an sition. (360)621-1519 Equal Opportunity Employer (EOE) and PLUMBER strongly supports diverLicensed Service Plum- sity in the wor kplace. b e r n e e d e d fo r bu s y Check out our website to plumbing company. Re- find out more about us! tirement plan, benefits, www.soundpublishing.com excellent work environment.
$60,000 plus per year
DOE Background check, valid WA state drivers license required. Call Tom at: 360.373.1700 Fax resume to 360.373.6109 Veterans Always Welcome
Make a splash, reach new customers today!
SENIOR FOOT CARE
Provide nail care to senior clientele par t time throughout Kitsap County. 360-876-1612
SOUND classifieds SOUNDCLASSIFIEDS.COM 1.800.388.2527
Classifieds@soundpublishing.com
page 14 kitsapweek Friday, July 3, 2015 Employment General
Employment General
Employment Media
EXECUTIVE EDITOR T h e Pe n i n s u l a D a i l y News in Por t Angeles, Wash., a six-day morning newspaper and 24/7 online news operation serving the beautiful two-county North Olympic Peninsula, seeks a w e b - s a v v y exe c u t i ve editor with excellent writing, editing and pagination skills and proven m a n a g e m e n t ex p e r i ence. Reporting to the publisher, this is the No. 1 position in our newsroom. The executive editor provides day-today newsroom leadership, overseeing online n ew s c ove ra g e w h i l e spearheading the publication of our print newspaper and overseeing all its sections and special supplements. Particularly important on the print side are firstrate InDesign skills. T h e exe c u t i ve e d i t o r also oversees our website (avg 1.2 million page views monthly), Facebook pages and Twitter account and helps deve l o p a n d i m p l e m e n t strategies to grow the PDN’s social media, mobile and video audiences. The right candidate can identify major news and trends pertinent to our print and online readers, edit a story on deadline and help coach repor ters into tur ning their ideas into top-flight reads — and also has the ability to quickly fix a we b s i t e p r o bl e m a n d edit an occasional video or podcast. Affordable Port Angeles, gateway to Olympic National Park and Victoria, British Columbia, gets half the rainfall of Seattle yet is close enough to enjoy Seattle as well as our rain forests, great fishing and other outdoors activities and pleasant lifestyle. ?Port Angel?es just finished second in Outside magazine’s 2015 “Best Town Ever” online contest, beating out Santa Barbara, Calif., Flagstaff, Ariz., Bar Harbor, Maine, and two western cities. We a r e a m e m b e r o f Sound Publishing Inc., the largest community media organization in Washington state, and o f fe r a f u l l r a n g e o f fringe benefits. To apply, please e-mail to hr@soundpublishing.com (1) a resume including at least three professional references; (2) at least three relevant work samples (or a link to them); (3) a cover letter addressing the specific job requirements we’ve outlined. Please also include your salar y requirements.
Vashon Children’s Center is hiring two full-time Lead Teachers.
LIFESTYLES EDITOR The Daily World at Aberd e e n , Wa s h . , h a s a n opening for a Lifestyles editor. We are looking for someone who has an eye for design and a knack for finding the stories and trends that shed light on what life is like in our community. The section also includes ar ts and entertainment news. The ideal candidate will have a bright, lively writing style, a talent for social media and be skilled in InDesign. Magazine experience would also be a plus. Aberdeen is on the Washington Coast, an hour from the Olympic Rain Forest and two hours from Seattle. This is a full-time position. Benefits include, but are not limited to, paid vacation, medical, vision, dental and life insurance and a 401(K) p l a n w i t h a c o m p a ny match. Send a cover letter, resume and writing and design samples to: hr@soundpublishing.com To learn more about us, please visit us on the web at www.soundpublishing.com. The Daily World is an equal opportunity employer.
Monday-Friday 7:30AM-4:30PM and 9:30AM-6:30PM Starting Pay $13/hour After 90 day evaluation $17/hour Personal Character istics: Must have the understanding, ability, physical health, emotional stability, good judgment and personality suited to meet the physical, intellectual, mental, emotional, and social needs of the children in our care. Requirements: Must love working with children. Must be cheerful, warm, kind, with enthusiasm and lots of ene r g y, a n d t r u l y c a r e about the safety, happiness, and development of children. This is a leadership role requiring supervision of staff, children, curr iculum, and center’s overall philosophy and goals. Flexibility i s i m p e r a t i ve , a s w e wo r k w i t h a ra n g e o f ages and personalities. Our staff and families work as a team to ensure the absolute best for Vashon’s Children. BA in Early Education or Child Development, or a degree in a related field with at least 45 college quarter credits in early childhood education. Have knowledge of child d eve l o p m e n t a s ev i denced by professional reference education, experience, and on-the-job perfor mance. Have at least two years of experience working with children ages 11mo-5yrs. 21 years of age or older. Negative Tuberculosis Test. Current Food Handlers Card. Upon Hire Candidate will complete: First Aid/CPR Certification. HIV/AIDS and Bloodbor ne Pathogen Training. Department of Early Learning Criminal Background Investigation. STARS Child Care Basic Training. Center Orientation. Please email letter of interest and resume to alawson@vashon childrenscenter.com or mail to: Vashon Children’s Center 9822 Gorsuch Rd. Vashon, WA 98070
Employment Transportation/Drivers
Diesel Mechanic: Great Pay / Benefits. APPLY www.durham schoolservices.com 3212 S Sprague Avenue. Tacoma, WA 98409 253-475-0334 Schools & Training
AIRLINE CAREERS Start Here – Get hands on training as FAA certified Technician fixing jets. Financial aid if qualified. Call for free information Aviation Institute of Maintenance 1877-818-0783 www.FixJets.com
alawson@vashonchildrenscenter.com
SOLD IT? FOUND IT? Let us know by calling 1-800-388-2527 so we can cancel your ad.
Find your perfect pet in the Classifieds. www.SoundClassifieds.com
WE BUY DIRECT FROM THE MILL AND WE PASS THE SAVINGS ON TO YOU!
1X8 CEDAR BEVEL SIDING
stuff Electronics
Dish Network – Get MORE for LESS! Starting $19.99/month (for 12 months.) PLUS Bundle & SAVE (Fast Internet for $15 more/month.) 800-278-1401 Get CABLE TV, INTERNET & PHONE with FREE HD Equipment and install for under $3 a day! Call Now! 855-419-3334
Electronics
Flea Market
Miscellaneous
Get The Big Deal from DirecTV! Act Now$ 1 9 . 9 9 / m o. Fr e e 3 Months of HBO, starz, S H OW T I M E & C I N E MAX. FREE GENIE HD/DVR Upgrade! 2014 NFL Sunday Ticket Included with Select Packages. New Customers Only. IV Support Holdings LLC- An authorized DirecTV Dealer. Some exclusions apply - Call for details 1-800-8974169
Sears Kenmore Portable s ew i n g m a c h i n e, o n e owner, $60. Air Hockey game $35. Panasonic DVD/VCR deck, have manual $25. Portable 7 gallon air tank $15. Tiger Air Pot for beverages, $10. Electric towel warmer $20. 360-2718033.
Find the Right Carpet, Flooring & Window Treatments. Ask about our 50% off specials & our Low Price Guarant e e . O f f e r E x p i r e s Soon. Call now 1-888906-1887
flea market Flea Market
1 . 5 H P g a s p ow e r e d post hole digger with 2 bits. $125. Call 360-8717760. ALL GOOD CONDITION and negotiable! Crosscut S aw $ 5 0 . S o cke t s e t $15. 360-674-2340. Bedroom set, corner group, table with stereo in it. Great condition $150 360-871-3149. B I S S E L L VA C U U M Po w e r g l i d e d e l u xe vacuum with lift off technology. Brand new, still in box, $135. 253-8570539. CANNON PIXMA MG7120 Premium all in one advanced wireless printer. Print/copy/scan and Cloud link. 6 individual inks. Brand new, in box. Pd $300, selling for $150. 360-475-8644. Cotton Candy making machine comes with everything you need to make cotton candy for kids. Brand new, in the box. Paid $50. Selling $24. 360-475-8644. Grippins Longboard Skateboard Wheels ABEC 11. Brand new! $50 obo. Abe 360-7312291 or evenings, 360801-7873. LOWERY ORGAN with bench and music books $150 or best offer. Call 360-876-2089. NEGOTIABLE & GOOD C O N D. L a n e C e d a r Chest with padded top $65. 6’ oars $45. 360674-2340. PA P E R S H R E D D E R Fellowes Power Shredder P11C, brand new in box, never used $65. GAS WEED WACKER Home Lite 17” gas straight trimmer, brand new in box, never used $85. 253-857-0539 WAT E R S K I V E S T S : Two Cut-n-Jump water ski vests, sizes 32-36 and 42-44, yellow, $35 e a c h o r O B O, C a l l (360) 697-1816.
EXCELLENT SHAPE. New battery $700 obo.
206-941-8302 LIKE NEW RASCAL WHEEL CHAIR! Includes a new battery and an electric wheel chair car carrier. Excel.! $2500 obo
Miscellaneous
1x6”x6’ Cedar Fence Boards $1.25 EA. CEDAR PRODUCTS COMPANY
Assistant Teacher, Givens ECEAP $11.26 Per Hour
Fencing • Decking • Siding • Dimensional lumber
www.oesd.wednet.edu | 360-479-0993
360-377-9943 • CEDARPRODUCTSCO.COM
LIKE NEW GO-GO 3 WHEEL SCOOTER
is hiring for a
To apply:
EOE & ADA
Acorn Stairlifts. The AFFORDABLE solution to your stairs! **Limited t i m e - $ 2 5 0 O f f Yo u r Stairlift Purchase!** B u y D i r e c t & S AV E . Please call 1-800-3044489 for FREE DVD and brochure.
pets/animals Dogs
MINI AUSTRALIAN Reliable Storage Shepherd / Bichon Annual Garage Sales! Cross Puppies. Super Poulsbo June 13th cute, highly intelligent. Should be easily trainable. Non Shedding. Port Orchard June 20th Great for Any HouseKingston June 27th hold. Proven to Make Loyal, People Loving, Bremerton (Fairgrounds) Affectionate Pets. 20 July 11th 25 lbs mature. First Shots, 1 year genetic Bremerton (Waaga Way) July 18th guarantee. $375. 360697-9091. Poulsbo. Many tenants open their sayheytj@comcast.net units to sell some of their treasures including antiques, collectibles, clothing, toys, furniture and those special items you have been looking for. Treasures are finally coming out of storage! C o m e i n t o h u n t fo r those great bargains! Open to the general garage sales - WA public 9:00am- 3:00pm.
The opportunity to make a difference is right in front of you. RECYCLE THIS PAPER HANSVILLE, 98340.
DRIFTWOOD KEY COMMUNITY WIDE YARD SALE Fri., July 3rd, 9a-3p
~Best Sale Yet!!~
JUST TOO CUTE! MINIAUSSIE PUPPIES. We have 3 beautiful pups ready for forever homes now. 2 Merle Males and 1 B l a c k Tr i F e m a l e . They are ASDR registrable, come with one year health guarantee for genetic defects and will have first vaccination and de-wor ming. Parents eyes and hips certified good. Pups are socialized with other dogs and people on our hobby farm. Contact us at 360385-1981 360-385-1981 or 500emil@gmail.com
Garage/Moving Sales General Kitsap
KILL BED BUGS! Buy Harr is Bed Bug killer C o m p l e t e Tr e a t m e n t Program/Kit. Harris Mattress Covers add Extra Protection! Available: ACE Hardware. Buy OnV E RY N I C E m a t c h e d line: homedepot.com set of well made, high quality ceramic planters K I L L ROAC H E S ! B u y or pots for indoor or out- Harr is Roach Tablets. door plants. Both have Eliminate Bugs-Guaranholes in the bottom for teed. No Mess, Odordrainage. The small less, Long Lasting. p o t / p l a n t e r m e a s u r e s Available at Ace Hardapprox. 10” high and 15” ware & The Home Depot d i a m e t e r. T h e l a r g e planter measures ap- KILL SCORPIONS! Buy prox. 14” inches high Harris Scorpion Spray. a n d 2 0 . 5 ” d i a m e t e r. Indoor/Outdoor, Odor$125 for the set/both. less, Non-Staining. Effective results begin af- Garage/Moving Sales Poulsbo 360-697-5975 ter spray dries. Island County Ava i l a bl e : T h e H o m e Free Items Depot, Homedepot.com, Port Orchard Recycler ACE Hardware MOVING SALE: Friday, Sat & Sunday, FREE 36” TV SONY July 3rd, 4th & 5th TRINITRONE w/ stand. Sporting Goods 10 - 3pm daily. Older model. You pick Indoor furniture and up. 206-780-1314. Patio furniture, appliances, barbecue, lawn Mail Order m o w e r, h o u s e h o l d items, Lots of misc. 1016 Peru Ave E. Canada Drug Center is Port Orchard your choice for safe and affordable medications.Our licensed CanaGarage/Moving Sales dian mail order pharmaKitsap County cy will provide you with EAST BREMERTON. savings of up to 90% on all your medication needs. Call today 1-800418-8975, for $10.00 off D E L M O B I L L I A R D your first prescr iption POOL TABLE in great condition! Includes covand free shipping. er. Sacrifice $375 OBO. GARAGE SALE V I AG R A a n d C I A L I S Port Orchard. Call 360- BENEFITING PETS! USERS! 50 Pills SPE- 876-7202. 360-509-4328 Animal Rescue Families CIAL - $99.00. FREE is having a fundraising Treasure Hunting? Shipping! 100% guarangarage sale on Friday & teed. CALL NOW! 855- Check out our Recycler Saturday, July 10 th -11 th ads before someone 409-4132 from 8 to 3 at 8141 Old else finds your riches Military Road. We have VIAGRA - Pfizer brand! hundreds of brand new Lowest Price from USA dog/cat items @ bargain Pharmacies. No doctor prices!!!!!! Decor, kitchen visit needed! Discreet ware, gift items & much H o m e D e l i ve r y. C a l l more! Funds raised from 855-684-5241 the sale will go entirely toward our low cost spay/neuter event. Medical Equipment
206-941-8302
39¢ PER LINEAL FOOT
Specializing in cedar lumber at affordable pricing
Set of 20 pieces of hand-blown high quality ar t glass flowers and grass blades. 8 longstem flowers, 8 shor tstem flowers, and 4 green “leaves” or blades of grass. Excellent condition. $125. Poulsbo 360-697-5975
GET HELP NOW! One Button Senior Medical A l e r t . Fa l l s , F i r e s & Emergencies happen. 24/7 Protection. Only $14.99/mo. Call NOW 888-772-9801
Dogs
Follow Signs Bond Rd & Hansville Rd to Driftwood Key KINGSTON
Pre Moving Sale Thurs, July 9th & Sat, July 11th 9am to 4pm Antique furniture, Roseville & Hull, scrap booking, garden rack & tools, garage tools, rug, clocks, jewelry, linens, p u z z l e s & d o l l s, d o g grooming table, office chair & much, much more!
12201 NE Olive Drive Kingston CASH ONLY!
transportation Marine Power
CLASSIC 1972 16’ C H R Y S L E R B O AT. Matching 80 HP motor, 40 HP Suzuki, 3.5 HP Johnson Troller. Inludes trailer with new tires. Clean and in excellent condition. $2,000 obo. Ocean Shores. For sale by owner, call Er nest 360-580-4210. Automobiles Classics & Collectibles
1941 BLACK CADILLAC 4 Door Classic Car. Fully restored, and driveable. Winner at car shows! Estate sale; $29,999. Call Rich at 253-4553851. Can be viewed at Pioneer Automotive Services in Oak Harbor, ask for Doug or Kevin, call 360-679-5550 Automobiles Ford
2008 FORD Focus SES Sleek red crusier with leather interior. A/C, Sync System, aut o m a t i c, 4 d o o r, a l l power and CC. 26 MPG!! 48,400 miles. Great condition! Asking $8,700. Poulsbo. Call Robert 770-8833781. Automobiles Others
AU TO I N S U R A N C E S TA R T I N G AT $ 2 5 / MONTH! Call 877-9299397 Yo u c o u l d s ave o ve r $500 off your auto insurance. It only takes a few minutes. Save 10% by adding proper ty to quote. Call Now! 1-888498-5313 Find It. Buy It. Sell It. Looking for the ride of your life?
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24 hours a day
Measuring up to your expectations one ad at a time.
Whether you’re buying or selling, Sound Classifieds has it all. From automobiles and employment to real estate and household goods, you’ll find everything you need in the Sound Classifieds. Put Sound Classifieds to work for you, and inch even closer to your goals.
SOUND classifieds
visit Soundclassifieds.com • call toll free 1-800-388-2527 • email classifieds@soundpublishing.com
Friday, July 3, 2015 kitsapweek page 15
QUALITY BUILDINGS AT AFFORDABLE PRICES! 24x24x8 Two Car Garage
24x36x10 Garage/Hobby Shop
24x36x9 Garage / Hobby Shop
24x40x15 RV Garage
$12,997+tax
$17,880+tax
$17,342+tax
$22,641+tax
28x36x10 Hobby Shop
28x36x14 Two Car Garage/Shop
30x36x18 & 9 2-Story, 3-Stall Garage
30x38x10 Garage & Hobby Shop w/Covered Storage
$20,521+tax
$21,989+tax
$35,526+tax
$20,720+tax
32x48x10 Four Car Garage
30x48x15 Big Boy Toy Garage
36x36x16 & 9 Two Car & RV Garage
30x50x18 & 9 Two Story Garage & RV
Thorndike © 2000
$29,489+tax
$29,999+tax
$29,939+tax
$44,674+tax
36x36x14 Two Car Garage Shop & RV
30x50 2 Story RV Garage w/ Covered Deck
36x48 2 Story Three Car Garage
36x36x18 &12 Monitor Barn
49,754+tax $26,652+tax 29,991+tax 57,550+tax SERVING KITSAP, MASON, JEFFERSON, CLALLAM Co’s. All Prices Include Plans, Labor, Materials and Concrete Floors
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page 16 kitsapweek Friday, July 3, 2015
KITSAP SERVICES
Professional Services Professional
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~ Lonestar Painting & Construction LLC Painting, Remodeling, Siding, Etc. Accepting All Major Credit Cards. Free Estimate; Call Now 360-895-5405 LONESTC880LH.Bonded.Insured
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WEST SOUND CONSTRUCTION CO. 360-621-6131 Roofing, siding, decks, windows, garages. Free estimates, and affordable pricing. WWW.WESTSOUND CONSTRUCTIONCO.COM www.SoundClassifieds.com
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We are community & daily newspapers in these Western Washington Locations: • King County • Kitsap County • Clallam County • Jefferson County • Okanogan County • Pierce County • Island County • San Juan County • Snohomish County • Whatcom County • Grays Harbor County Sound Publishing is an Equal Opportunity Employer (EOE) and strongly supports diversity in the workplace. We offer a great work environment with opportunity for advancement along with a competitive benefits package including health insurance, paid time off (vacation, sick, and holidays), and 401k.
Accepting resumes at: hr@soundpublishing.com or by mail to: HR, Sound Publishing, Inc. 11323 Commando Rd. W Suite 1 Everett, WA 98204 Please state which position and geographic area you are applying for.
Sales Positions
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MULTI MEDIA ADVERITISNG CONSULTANT Be a part of the largest community news organization in Washington! Sound Publishing’s Kitsap County Community Newspaper Group is looking for self-motivated, results-driven people interested in a multimedia sales career in Poulsbo, Silverdale, Bremerton and Port Orchard, WA. As part of our sales team you will maintain and grow existing client relationships, as well as develop new client relationships. You must be goal oriented, have organizational skills that enable you to manage multiple deadlines, provide great consultative sales and excellent customer service. If you have these skills, and enjoy playing a proactive part in the financial success of local businesses, please email your resume and cover letter to: hr@soundpublishing.com. This position receives a base salary plus commissions, a benefits package including health insurance, paid time off, and 401K. Sound Publishing is an Equal Opportunity Employee (EOE) and strongly supports diversity in the workplace. Visit our website to learn more about us! www. soundpublishing.com
For a list of our most current job openings and to learn more about us visit our website:
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Friday, July 3, 2015 kitsapweek page 17 Automobiles Subaru
Financing Available!
1996 SUBARU LEGACY 4 door, AT, 121,246 mi, sunroof. 22 + MPG. Great tires. New battery! R u n s bu t n e e d s m e chanic work. Some one whose mechanically inc l i n e d , t h i s m a ke s a great car! $1200 or best offer. Vashon. 206-4630733. Sport Utility Vehicles Infiniti
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Page 18
kitsapweek
Friday, July 3, 2015
Meet author Bratspis on Aug. 15, Fuller on July 25 BOOKENDS
“Vanilla Grass” is the tale of John Carrows, a Vietnam War veteran with PTSD who, with the help of his Golden Retriever, begins a life of helping others.
What’s happening on the local literary scene
S
ILVERDALE — Meet Leslie Bratspis of Gig Harbor 1-3 p.m. Aug. 15 at Barnes & Noble, 10315 Silverdale Way NW, Silverdale. She’s the author of “Vanilla Grass,” a novel of redemption that takes place in the fictitious town of Ships Cove, Washington — similar to Gig Harbor and the surrounding area. It’s the tale of John Carrows, a Vietnam War veteran with PTSD living in seclusion until he finds and rescues an abused Golden Retriever puppy. From that moment, the dog he names Sage changes John’s life. When a group of stoned teenagers make a failed attempt to rob him at gunpoint, John — with Sage as his steady companion — implements a program to prevent the teens from self destructing. Months later, John comes to the aid of an Iraq War veteran suffering from battle-induced PTSD. “I wrote ‘Vanilla Grass’ with the hope of spreading awareness about the plight of veterans with PTSD,” Bratspis said. “Too often they return from battle with an ongoing war inside. “I also hope to inspire altruistic behavior among readers. I heard from a high school teacher who is reading my book she’s planning a project for her
school to re-purpose an old empty warehouse into a VA center.” Vanilla grass is a wild-growing fragrant sweet grass that grows in southwestern Washington. Native Americans use sweetgrass for baskets and other items. Considered a sacred plant, it is used in healing. “Its fragrance and symbolism appear throughout my novel,” Bratspis said. Here’s what one reviewer wrote about Bratspis’ novel: “Every once in a while, a book comes along that causes you not just to read it, but sit in silence afterwards thinking about what you have been reading. ‘Vanilla Grass’ is such a book. Once I started, I couldn’t put it down.” Online: www.lesliebrats pis.com.
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“My Sister’s Grave.” “An ode to American news served just the way I like it — fast, bloody, and utterly righteous.” — Roger Hobbs, New York Times bestselling author of “Ghostman.” Fuller will host a book launch on July 25, at which a special brew will be served: “The Anonymous Source Beer.” More details to come.
And now, the Pacific NW indie bestseller lists Here’s who’s on the Pacific Northwest Independent Bestseller Lists, as of June 28.
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A.C. Fuller of Hansville (below) and his new novel, “The Anonymous Source.”
Fuller’s debut novel, ‘The Anonymous Source’ HANSVILLE — A.C. Fuller of Hansville is the author of “The Anonymous Source,” a novel about a journalist set partly in New York City. Fuller is a former freelance journalist, adjunct professor at New York University and professional chef. He produces the WRITER 2.0 Podcast on iTunes: https://itunes. apple.com/us/podcast/ writer¬2.0¬podcast/ id924980625?mt=2. About his book (from www.acfuller.com): One year after the 9/11 attacks, Alex Vane — a brilliant, carb-obsessed reporter for The New York Standard — wants nothing more than to break into the flashy world of TV news. But when he stumbles on the scoop of a lifetime, Alex’s
tightly controlled world is rocked: his editor buries his story, a source turns up dead, and he finds himself at the center of a violent media conspiracy. Alex enlists the help of Camila Gray — a captivating media professor — as he receives a series of tips from a mysterious anonymous source. Aided by an Internet genius, a billionaire’s sexy widow, and a washed-up sports reporter, Alex and Camila uncover a $500-million secret that could derail the largest corporate media merger in history. It’s a secret that unearths dark memories from Alex’s past. It’s a secret that leads them back to the morning of 9/11. And it’s a secret that could get them both killed. Here’s what some reviewers wrote about Fuller’s novel.
“The Anonymous Source evokes comparisons to John Grisham’s finest — ‘The Firm’ and ‘The Pelican Brief,’ with a touch of ‘All the President’s Men’ … An explosive debut novel from a talented new writer sure to do damage to the best-seller lists.” — Robert Dugoni, New York Times bestselling author of
40th Annual
Strawberry
Festival Saturday, July 4th 11–4 pm
INDIANOLA Living Hope Church Corner of Midway & Division (20789NE)
Homemade Strawberry shortcakes with local berries and fresh whipped-cream, yard sale, pies, baked goods, live entertainment, friends and fun! Proceeds go to repair and renovate our beloved church building. A portion goes to our mission program to help the children in the Dominican Republic
Hardcover Fiction 1. “All the Light We Cannot See,” Anthony Doerr, Scribner, $27. 2. “The Girl on the Train,” Paula Hawkins, Riverhead, $26.95. 3. “Our Souls at Night,” Kent Haruf, Knopf, $24. 4. “In the Unlikely Event,” Judy Blume, Knopf, $27.95. 5. “Seveneves,” Neal Stephenson, Morrow, $35. 6. “Dry Bones,” Craig Johnson, Viking, $27.95. 7. “The Water Knife,” Paolo Bacigalupi, Knopf, $25.95. 8. “The Nightingale,” Kristin Hannah, St. Martin’s, $27.99. 9. “A God in Ruins,” Kate Atkinson, Little Brown, $28. 10. “The Cartel,” Don Winslow, Knopf, $27.95. Hardcover Non-Fiction 1. “The Life-Changing Magic of Tidying Up,” Marie Kondo, Ten Speed Press, $16.99. 2. “The Wright Brothers,” David McCullough, S&S, $30. 3. “Being Mortal,” Atul Gawande, Metropolitan, $26. 4. “Everything I Need to Know I Learned From a Little Golden Book,” Diane Muldrow, Golden Books, $9.99. 5. “Dead Wake,” Erik Larson, Crown, $28. 6. “Modern Romance,” Aziz Ansari, Penguin Press, $28.95. 7. “The Road to Character,” David Brooks, Random House, $28. 8. “H Is for Hawk,” Helen MacDonald, Grove Press, $26. 9. “Missoula,” Jon Krakauer, Doubleday, $28.95. See BOOKENDS, Page 19
Friday, July 3, 2015
Bookends
Continued from page 18 10. “The Shepherd’s Life: Modern Dispatches from an Ancient Landscape,” James Rebanks, Flatiron, $25.99. Paperback Fiction 1. “Grey,” E.L. James, Vintage, $15.95. 2. “Station Eleven,” Emily St. John Mandel, Vintage, $15.95. 3. “The Martian,” Andy
Weir, Broadway, $15. 4. “The Goldfinch,” Donna Tartt, Back Bay, $20. 5. “Euphoria,” Lily King, Grove Press, $16. 6. “The Storied Life of A.J. Fikry,” Gabrielle Zevin, Algonquin, $14.95. 7. “The Rosie Project,” Graeme Simsion, S&S, $15.99. 8. “The Invention of Wings,” Sue Monk Kidd, Penguin, $17. 9. “The Vacationers,”
Emma Straub, Riverhead, $16. 10. “Ready Player One,” Ernest Cline, Broadway, $14. Paperback Non-Fiction 1. “The Boys in the Boat,” Daniel James Brown, Penguin, $17. 2. “Astoria: Astor and Jefferson’s Lost Pacific Empire,” Peter Stark, Ecco, $15.99. 3. “I Am Malala,” Malala Yousafzai, Back Bay, $16. 4. “The Sixth Extinction,” Elizabeth Kolbert, Picador
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10. “The Big Burn,” Timothy Egan, Mariner, $15.95. Mass Market Paperback 1. “A Game of Thrones,” George R.R. Martin, Bantam, $9.99. 2. “To Kill a Mockingbird,” Harper Lee, Grand Central, $8.99. 3. “American Gods,” Neil Gaiman, HarperTorch, $7.99. 4. “The Name of the Wind,” Patrick Rothfuss,
Page 19
DAW, $8.99. 5. “Jurassic Park,” Michael Crichton, Ballantine, $9.99. 6. “Dragonfly in Amber,” Diana Gabaldon, Dell, $9.99. 7. “Slaughterhouse Five,” Kurt Vonnegut, Laurel Leaf, $7.99. 8. “Dune,” Frank Herbert, Ace, $9.99. 9. “Personal,” Lee Child, Dell, $9.99. 10. “Outlander,” Diana Gabaldon, Dell, $9.99.
GREATER KITSAP DINING & ENTERTAINMENT
FAMILY
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USA, $16. 5. “How to Love,” Thich Nhat Hanh, Parallax Press, $9.95. 6. “Wild,” Cheryl Strayed, Vintage, $15.95. 7. “Unbroken,” Laura Hillenbrand, Random House, $16. 8. “In the Kingdom of Ice,” Hampton Sides, Anchor, $16.95. 9. “The Opposite of Loneliness,” Marina Keegan, Scribner, $15.
kitsapweek
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North Kitsap Herald 360-779-4464
Central Kitsap Reporter 360-308-9161
Bremerton Patriot 360-308-9161
Port Orchard Independent 360-876-4414
7-3-15
Page 20
kitsapweek
Friday, July 3, 2015
SUMMER ENTERTAINMENT THE EVENT CENTER
Saturday, July 11th
Friday, July 17th
Philip Bauer as
Founding member of Santana and Journey, Rock & Roll Hall of Fame Inductee
Tickets: $10 Advance & $15 Day of Show Doors 7:00 PM | Show 8:00 PM
Tickets: $15 GA & $20 Reserved Seating Doors 7:00 PM | Show 8:00 PM
JOHNNY CASH GREGG ROLIE BAND
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Tuesdays & Thursdays in July 6:00 PM - 9:00 PM Fridays, July 24th & 31st 7:00 PM - 10:00 PM You could win $50,000 GRAND PRIZE See the Wildcard Club for details Starts July 7th
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| Full entertainment schedule online
Close to Home... Far From Ordinary.® Kingston, WA • www.the-point-casino.com • 1.866.547.6468 Tickets available now at these locations: In the gift shop | On our website For more information Call 866.547.6468 | Ages 21 and over The Point Casino is proudly owned and operated by The Port Gamble S’Klallam Tribe. See the Wildcard Players Club for complete details. You must be a member of The Point Casino’s Wildcard Players Club to participate in some programs. Some restrictions may apply. Point Casino promotions, offers, coupons and/or specials may not be combined without marketing management approval. Management reserves all rights to alter or cancel without prior notice. You must be at least 21 years old to participate in gaming activities, to attend entertainment events and to enter lounge/bar areas. Knowing your limit is your best bet—get help at (800) 547-6133.
TPC-5443-4 Kitsap_week.indd 1
6/30/15 4:13 PM
’Tis the season for cool, gluten-free frozen yogurt GLUTEN-FREE FOODIES By LISA GARZA
O
h, my — if ever there was a match made in heaven, it would be raspberry and bittersweet chocolate. Saturday is July 4 and in the Pacific Northwest we are expecting temps in the low 80s. So, I decided to make my secret recipe for Easy Gluten-Free Dairy-Free Frozen Yogurt (Raspberry Frozen Yogurt with Bittersweet Chocolate Chunks, of course). I must say that, for me, when the fresh slightly sweet flavor of the raspberries melds with bittersweet chocolate, oh my! To me it is the perfect bite, especially when it is cold and creamy. This year, I am on a mission to make my own treats at home. I am trying to save some money but I’m also trying to eliminate extra sugar, waste and extra ingredients that are not good for me. I am focusing on high-quality products with no added sugar, fresh organic produce, grass-fed meats, fresh wild fish and nonGMO products. So when the mood strikes me on a warm summer day, I make frozen yogurt — with coconut milk yogurt that I make at home, or with SoDelicious non-dairy, unsweetened plain or vanilla yogurt. My secret is in the jar! I love Bonne Maman Preserves with my yogurt in the morning during the winter when I can’t get fresh fruit. So it makes the perfect choice to use in my frozen yogurt as well. Bonne Maman Raspberry Preserves are perfectly sweet, so I don’t have to add sugar to my frozen yogurt. The flavor and the ruby color in the jar is beautiful too. The frozen yogurt melds into a pretty pink hue when it is mixed with the other ingredients. It just says fresh, light and delicious, doesn’t it?
Raspberry Frozen Yogurt with Bittersweet Chocolate Chunks 1 -16 oz. container *SoDelicious Unsweetened Yogurt (Vanilla or
Raspberry Frozen Yogurt with Bittersweet Chocolate Chunks. It just says fresh, light and delicious, doesn’t it? Lisa Garza / Gluten-Free Foodies
Want to make a treat that is sure to please a crowd in a jiffy on a hot summer day or evening? Go to Gluten FreeFoodies. co and read how to make Mini GlutenFree Ice Cream Sandwiches. Lisa Garza / Gluten-Free Foodies
Plain). 3 Tablespoons *Bonne Maman Raspberry Preserves. 1/2 cup *Lite Culinary Coconut Milk — SoDelicious. 2 Tablespoons unsweetened coconut (optional). 1 cup Dark Bittersweet Chocolate, chopped into small chunks. Cuisinart Ice Cream Machine and 1 pre-frozen freezer bowl. Mix all of the ingredients, except for the chocolate, into a bowl with spout. Assemble the machine according to the instructions. Turn the machine on and slowly pour the ingredients into the machine through the hole. Let
everything mix and freeze for 25 minutes. Slowly add the chocolate until all is mixed in. Turn the machine off. Carefully scoop out the frozen yogurt into freezer-safe containers with lids. I save and re-use my jars from Bonne Maman. I love the pretty red and white checkered lids. Allow the frozen yogurt to freeze for 20-30 minutes before serving. So go make some — Easy Gluten-Free Dairy-Free Frozen Yogurt! * Please note that I purchased all of these ingredients and this is my recipe. A typical ice cream or frozen yogurt recipe adds at least a cup of sugar. By using the preserves, I get all of the fruit flavor without adding sugar to the recipe.