Sequim Gazette - July 18, 2018

Page 1

Spreading the joy

A-10

Quilt Show hosts hundreds of local works

B-1

er Week d n ve A-B

d en

La

Red Cross changes in Carlsborg

SEQUIM GAZETTE www

Wednesday, July 18, 2018

Sequim’s Hometown Newspaper

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75 CENTS

Vol. 45, Number 29

Sequim resident survives plane crash in Alaska David Price thankful for community support, first responders’ actions BY MATTHEW NASH Sequim Gazette

A Sequim man is one of 11 survivors of a plane crash on an Alaskan mountain last week. David Price, owner of Price Ford in Port Angeles and a Sequim resident, was on a charter flight about

40 miles from Ketchikan, Alaska, when the float plane crashed on Mount Jumbo on Prince Wales Island, reports the U.S. Coast Guard 17th District Alaska. Andra Smith, a familyfriend speaking on Price’s behalf, said he wasn’t ready

See CRASH, A-11

My lavender marathon Alex and Sara Lehmann of California visit Washington Lavender Farm for the first time and take a look out at the Straits of Juan de Fuca on July 12. Sequim Gazette photo by Erin Hawkins Right, Sequim Gazette reporter Erin Hawkins visits Meli’s Lavender Farm during her lavender marathon where she visited 16 farms in one day. Photo by Julia Mader

Reporter visits 16 Sequim area farms in one day BY ERIN HAWKINS Sequim Gazette Eleven people were rescued including a Sequim man and his brother 39 miles southwest of Ketchikan, Alaska on July 10, after their plane crashed. Two Coast Guard Air Station Sitka MH-60 Jayhawk helicopter crews took survivors to a staging area nearby for further transfer to Ketchikan. Photo by U.S. Coast Guard

After 22 years, Sequim remains a destination for lavender lovers. Thousands, probably millions of people have walked the beautiful pink and purple rows each year but this year I wanted to try something that may not

have been done before: visit as many of the 16 free admission lavender farms in one day as possible. Why? My coworkers and I thought about the reality of just how much someone could actually see in three days. Some of that time would be spent traveling to Sequim, scheduling ferries, finding places to stay, etc. We also

thought some tourists are on a budget, which drew us to this idea, what I’m calling the Lavender Marathon. Disclaimer: this challenge was done the week prior to the Sequim Lavender Weekend set for July 20-22 so experiences may differ with traffic flow and

See MARATHON, A-3

Homeowners settle lawsuit over Dungeness cell tower BY MATTHEW NASH Sequim Gazette

A legal dispute between Dungeness homeowners and owners/operators of a 150-foot cell tower is over. Dungeness Heights Homeowners agreed to settle on July 12 with Radio Pacific, Inc., property owner Shirley Tjemsland, Clallam County, Bryon Gunnerson,Verizon Wireless and Clallam County Fire District 3 after two-plus years in courts. The homeowners’ original intent was to prevent the wireless communication facility at 766 Brigadoon Blvd. from go-

“It’s taken a lot of energy from members of Dungeness Heights Homeowners over the last three years.” Gerald Steel, Attorney

ing up in their neighborhood. However, Attorney Gerald Steel for the homeowners said the parties signed a settlement agreement last week to go their own ways with all challenges against the tower withdrawn. “(Homeowners) are ready to move on,” Steel said. “This is the best way to address it. It’s taken a lot of energy from members of Dungeness

Heights Homeowners over the last three years.” According to court documents from the Court of Appeals Division 2, the homeowners voluntarily withdrew their suits and that all parties are responsible for paying their own legal fees and costs. Homeowners also agreed not to file any further challenges to the tower or things

put on the tower consistent with original zoning permit, Steel said Their first case in 2016 fought zoning permits for Radio Pacific, followed by a second case challenging the building permit of the tower and lastly a challenge of the use permit for the tower after construction. All three were consolidated into one case and brought before the Court of Appeals. Prior to construction, the tower was set to be 100 feet tall at Clallam County’s set maximum, but developers

See TOWER, A-11

A cell tower in Dungeness will continue to operate broadcasting Radio Pacific, Inc. radio stations and as a hub for cell phone service providers following a settlement between Dungeness Heights Homeowners and owners of the cell tower and its property, and multiple other parties. Sequim Gazette photo by Matthew Nash

Port officials limit choices for marina Sale to private developer, levy off the table BY PAUL GOTTLIEB Olympic Peninsula News Group

Selling John Wayne Marina to a for-profit company or private developer is off the table. The same is true for a Port of Port Angeles property tax increase that had been considered for the Nov. Boats sit moored at John Wayne Marina near Sequim earlier this year. 6 election. It was suggested as a Peninsula News Group Photo by Keith Thorpe way to pay for breakwater and float

improvements at the port-owned, public Sequim Bay facility. Port commissioners also decided at their two-hour special meeting on July 12 to solicit the interest of local governments — the marina is in the Sequim city limits — as well as tribes and nonprofit entities in acquiring the marina. The special meeting was held to review comments from July 2 port

commissioner meetings in Forks, Port Angeles and Sequim in which residents were mostly opposed to selling to a private developer and to putting a levy on the ballot to fund marina improvements. “It’s not just about public access, it’s about the sense of community that’s created there,” Crossroads Consulting owner Holly O’Neil told commissioners.

See MARINA, A-6

Sports B-5 • Schools B-7 • Arts & Entertainment B-1 • Opinion A-8 • Classifieds C-1 • Crossword Section C

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A2 • Wednesday, July 18, 2018

SEQUIM GAZETTE

Protection Island cruise set during Lavender Weekend SEQUIM GAZETTE STAFF The Protection Island Puffin Marine Sunset Dessert Cruise, a one-of-a-kind voyage from Sequim, gives nature-lovers a unique view of the Protection Island National Wildlife Refuge during Lavender Weekend. The cruise is set for 6:30-9 p.m. Friday, July 20, and Saturday, July 21, starting from John Wayne Marina. Cost is $80 per person, or

The Weather is Always Nice... When You’re With 360-452-9813

Rotarian Jim McEntire looks over cooking salmon at the Rotary Club of Sequim’s salmon bake in 2016. Sequim Gazette file photo by Michael Dashiell

The Rotary Club of Sequim celebrates its 50th anniversary with its 50th Salmon Bake, set for noon-4 p.m. Sunday, Aug. 12, at the Sequim Boys & Girls Club, 400 W. Fir St. An annual tradition for Sequim residents and visitors alike, the event includes live music, raffle drawings for prizes and a vendor mall

featuring fresh-baked pies by Children’s Hospital Guild, and information booths featuring Red Cross, Fire District 3, Welfare For Animals Guild, Captain Joseph House, the Sequim High football team, PEO and Sequim City Band. Tickets, $16, are available at a number of local businesses/ facilities: Sequim-Dungeness Chamber of Commerce, Beal Carpet & Drapery, Thomas

“Everybody Calls Us”

Building Center and the Sequim Boys and Girls Club. Featured is an alder-baked salmon dinner; hot dog meal tickets for children under 12 years of age are available for $5. Proceeds help support the Sequim Boys & Girls Club, teacher grants at Sequim schools and other local charities.

Cont Lic#ALLWEHC150KU

SUNRISE/SUNSET

WEATHER

Date High Low Date July 10 July 11 July 12 July 13 July 14 July 15 July 16

68 76 79 75 82 84 83

56 54 54 56 52 55 55

CORRECTION

July 18 July 19 July 20 July 21 July 22 July 23 July 24

Sunrise Sunset 5:31 a.m. 5:32 a.m. 5:33 a.m. 5:35 a.m. 5:36 a.m. 5:37 a.m. 5:38 a.m.

N O W O P E N ! • Give your rug a chance to be alive!

These tides are corrected for Dungeness Bay.

July 18

NA

3:02 a.m. 3.2

8:05 a.m. 5.5

2:13 p.m. 0.9

July 19

NA

4:10 a.m. 2.4

9:37 a.m. 5.0

3:09 p.m. 2.3

July 20

NA

5:11 a.m. 1.7

11:26 a.m. 5.0

4:11 p.m. 3.5

July 21

NA

6:04 a.m. 0.9

1:10 p.m. 5.5

5:21 p.m. 4.4

July 22

NA

6:51 a.m. 0.4

2:28 p.m. 6.2

6:34 p.m. 5.1

July 23

NA

7:31 a.m. -0.1

3:25 p.m. 6.7

7:42 p.m. 5.5

July 24

12:30 a.m. 6.9

8:08 a.m. -0.4

4:09 p.m. 7.1

8:41 p.m. 5.6

RAINFALL

MOON

Rainfall for Week of July 10-16, 2018

July 19 July 27 August 4

0.00 inch of precipitation recorded. Rainfall recorded and reported at www.weather.com.

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attendees are asked to bring a warm jacket. Proceeds benefit education programs at the Dungeness River Audubon Center and Railroad Bridge Park (see www.DungenessRiverCenter. org). There is a limit of 55 people per cruise. For reservations, call 360681-4076 or email to rcoffice@ olympus.net.

$70 for Dungeness River Audubon Center members. Cruise on a 55-passenger, 65-foot Glacier Spirit around Protection Island for a narrated program on marine bird life and marine mammals found between Sequim and the Protection Island National Wildlife Refuge. Expect to see tufted puffins, rhinoceros auklets and other sea birds. The two-hour tour includes dessert and is casual dress;

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Wednesday, July 18, 2018 • A3

SEQUIM GAZETTE

Marathon From page A-1

farm availability. There are actually 19 farms on the map for Sequim Lavender Weekend, but I needed to narrow down the farms somehow because 19 in one day is daunting, let alone visiting 16. There are three lavender farms I didn’t visit that cost an admission fee to get in this weekend: Purple Haze Lavender Farm, and Jardin du Soleil Farm and Olympic Lavender Company who offer a joint admission. I definitely recommend you check out their festival events too. As for my marathon, I thought narrowing it down to free farms included most of the farms, and made the task more feasible.

How did I prepare? A few nights before the challenge, I made a list of the 16 farms I planned on visiting, and learned what times and days they were open. The next thing I did was look at the map for Sequim Lavender Weekend (found at all the farms and around Sequim in the official program) of all the farms and plan a tentative route. I knew my route might change, so I just had a rough idea of how I wanted to do it. Various driving maps are available from participating lavender farms, too.

The day of the challenge I knew the weather was going to be warm and sunny (it peaked at 76 on July 12) so I made sure to apply sunscreen, bring a hat and lots of water and some snacks. I know that sounds silly, but this weekend is going to be warm and sunny, so make sure you prepare for that accordingly. I also brought a good friend to come with me and keep me company. Thanks Julia! Initially, I was going to

Victor Gonzalez of Victor’s Lavender Farm specializes in wholesale lavender and sells lavender stalks to many farmers locally, nationally and internationally. Below, Tilly Nelson, 13, at Nelson’s Duckpond and Lavender Farm sells lavender lemonade every year and plans to donates the proceeds from this year to the Sequim Food Bank. Sequim Gazette photos by Erin Hawkins

start at Carrie Blake Community Park, where the Sequim Lavender Festival Street Fair is set for this year, but decided to start closer to where I live and hit the farms that open at 9 a.m. first so I could see more earlier. Most of the farms open between 9-10 a.m. and close between 5-6 p.m., with a few exceptions.

My route What I found was that each set of lavender farms was accessible in a sort of loop, which is what I would recommend if you want to see multiple lavender farms in one day. You also can get from one farm to the next within these loops fairly quickly and easily because they are located so close together. I think my comfort zone was four-five farms in one day, despite me visiting 16. Loop 1: I started at about 9:30 a.m. and headed to B&B Family Farm off Old Olympic Highway, then went up the road to Earth Muffin Lavender on Woodcock (which is only open July 20-22), followed by Fat Cat Lavender on Cays Road and Lavender Connection also on Cays Road. I was able to hit all these farms within an hour or so. Your time and experiences will vary. Loop 2: Next, I headed west to Kitty B’s Lavender Farm on Cameron Acres Lane, then hopped over to Victor’s Lavender Farm on Old Olympic Highway, followed by Washington Lavender Farm on Finn Hall Road. I had a chance to chat with Victor Gonzalez of Victor’s Lavender on Old Olympic Highway, who specializes in retail and wholesale selling lavender stalks to other lavender farms both locally, nationally and internationally. “The (Sequim Lavender) Festival is a time to celebrate and have fun,” Victor said. Loop 3: If you’re looking for a place to eat a picnic

lunch, Martha Lane Lavender has picnic tables, chairs and some shaded seating. I headed there to eat a quick lunch as this spot marked my half-way point (farm no. 8). This farm is up for sale as of this year as the owners are looking to transition to their next phase of life. Mike Greenhan, co-owner of Martha Lane Lavender, said they love meeting new people each year. I then set out for Nelson’s Duckpond & Lavender Farm off Hooker Road where you’ll run into Tilly Nelson, 13, selling lemonade for $1 per cup. Tilly has been selling lemon-

ade for years since she was a young girl and donates the proceeds of her lemonade to a community cause each year. This year, Tilly said she plans on donating the proceeds from lavender season to the Sequim Food Bank. “We like to give back to the community,” Tilly said. I concluded this loop at Lost Mountain Lavender off Taylor Cutoff Road. Loop 4: I got back on US Highway 101 eastbound to hit my last loop of farms closer to city limits and headed to Peninsula Nursery off Sequim Dungeness-Way, then Graysmarsh Farm off Woodcock Road and back

to hit Meli’s Lavender off Old Olympic Highway. At Meli’s, there’s a giant purple picture frame in the middle of rows of lavender to take a photo in. At this point, it was about 4 p.m. and I knew Sunshine Herb & Lavender Farm closed at 5 p.m. and had to hustle out there to make it in time. Blackberry Forest and Troll Haven were on my list, but as a reminder they only open their lavender fields during Sequim Lavender Weekend. I stopped by Sunshine first and then went out to Troll Haven and returned back to Blackeberry Forest to end my trip by about 5:30 p.m. All in all, I finished the route in about eight hours.

What I learned Timing is important. Every farm has different seasonal hours and opening and closing times. If you are interested in visiting a particular farm or farms, I suggest looking up the opening and closing times or calling the farm to get that information ahead of your visit. If I were to do it again, I would choose one loop to visit each day of the weekend (about three-four farms) and

stick to those few farms for the day to spend more time at each one. Get to know the owners or employees of that farm. My favorite part of the experience was chatting with the owners and learning what he or she is selling, what’s different about that farm and how he or she got started. Every farm is very different in its own way. It might sound cliche, but it’s true. Some farms offer U-pick, oils, tours, kids craft activities, food and drink options, music, and more. But aside from those things, the aesthetics of each farm is individual and charming and has its own personality from the moment you pull up to the venue.

Things to note Some farms have a public restroom available and others do not. The same goes with allowing pets in the farm: a few farms allow pets in as long as it is on a leash and others do not. Three farms/locations are only open during Sequim Lavender Weekend July 2022, those include Blackberry Forest, Earth Muffin Lavender and Troll Haven. For more information on Sequim Lavender Weekend, visit www.sequimlavenderweekend.com or www.visitsunnysequim.com. Reach Erin Hawkins at ehawkins@sequimgazette. com.

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A4 • Wednesday, July 18, 2018

SEQUIM GAZETTE

The nuts and bolts of Sequim Lavender Weekend BY MATTHEW NASH

Lane, starting at 10 a.m. for $15 pre-sale and $18 at the gate. Children 12 and under are free. Free shuttle from Carrie Blake Community Park. Purplehazelavender.com. • Jardin du Soleil, 3832 Sequim-Dungeness Way, and Olympic Lavender Heritage Farm, 1532 Marine Drive, continue their two-for-one $10 admission per person to both farms all weekend. Children 12 and under remain free to enter. Free shuttle from Carrie Blake Community Park. www. jardindusoleil.com, facebook. com/olympiclavender. For more information on all lavender weekend events, visit www.sequimlavender weekend.com and look for the Pay to visit farms: Sequim Gazette/Peninsula • Purple Haze Lavender Daily News’ “Sequim Lavenkeeps tradition with its Purple der Weekend” guide at all the Haze Daze, 180 Bell Bottom farms, local businesses, the Visitor’s Information Center, and Street Fair Information Booth. 9 a.m.-5 p.m. • Lost Mountain Lavender, 1541 Taylor Cutoff Road; open 10 a.m.-6 p.m. • Martha Lane Lavender, 371 Martha Lane; open 10 a.m.-5:30 p.m., (till 3 p.m. Sunday) • Sunshine Herb & Lavender Farm, 274154 U.S. Highway 101; open 10 a.m.-6 p.m. (till 5 p.m. Sunday) • The Lavender Connection, 1141 Cays Road; open 10 a.m.5:30 p.m. • Victor’s Lavender, 3743 Old Olympic Highway; open 10 a.m.-6 p.m. • Washington Lavender, 965 Finn Hall Road; open 10 a.m.-6 p.m.

Sequim Gazette

Like the plants it celebrates, Sequim Lavender Weekend continues to grow each year. Nineteen farms host visitors this weekend, July 20-22, with live music, U-pick, food and drinks and more events throughout the Sequim area. Of the 19 farms on tour, 16 open for free to visitors. Sequim Lavender Festival Farm Tour open 10 a.m.5:30 p.m. • Blackberry Forest, 136 Forest Road • Earth Muffin Lavender, 2333 Woodcock Road • Fat Cat Garden & Gifts, 21 Fat Cat Lane • Graysmarsh Farm, 6187 Woodcock Road • Kitty B’s Lavender Farm, 82 Cameron Acres Lane

Heson Giang of Seattle inspects some freshly cut lavender at Martha Lane Lavender last July. He visited the farm with his brother Henry, mom Maggie, and aunt Lyn Lang. It was their first time visiting Sequim. Sequim Gazette file photo by Matthew Nash

• Meli’s Lavender, 62 W. Sequim-Dungeness Way Diane Drive • Troll Haven, 950 Gardiner • Nelson Duckpond & Beach Road Lavender Farm, 73 Humble More free admission farms: Hill Road • B&B Family Farm, 5883 • Peninsula Nurseries, 1060 Old Olympic Highway; open

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Organizers of the Sequim Lavender Festival’s Street Fair anticipated construction to begin this year, hence why it was moved to Carrie Blake Community Park. However, construction was delayed but organizers pressed on and now feature more than 150 vendors, live music from the James Center for Performing Arts bandshell, and nearby accommodations for dogs at the Sequim Dog Park and at the fair, and a Kids Zone area. Visitors can park for free in the Blake lot used for the Sequim Irrigation Festival’s Logging Show and use a free shuttle. They can also park Friday and Saturday at Trinity United Methodist Church and after church on Sunday. The fair also features a celebrity photo booth with Sequim Mayor Dennis Smith and other dignitaries and a lavender scavenger hunt with prizes. It runs 9 a.m.-7 p.m. FridaySaturday and 9 a.m.-5 p.m. Sunday, www.lavenderfestival. com.

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OTA’s Children’s Theatre program performs “The Phantom Tollbooth” Aug. 31-Sept. 9 and show off their costumes and perform selections from the show at the Sequim Lavender Festival’s Street Fair noon-2 p.m. Saturday, July 21, in Carrie Blake Community Park. For more information on the show, visit OlympicTheatreArts.org or call 360683-7326.

Class and Sass benefit set at casino On Friday, July 20, Class and Sass III brings 11 drag queen performers from across the country for another Lavender Weekend to perform from 8-11 p.m. at 7 Cedars Casino, 270756 US Highway 101, as a benefit for the Sequim Food Bank. Tickets cost $15 through brownpapertickets. com or $20 at the door with raffle baskets/tickets available. Sequim native Jimmy Tilley (Miz Eva Sensitiva) helped develop the event. Last year it raised $6,000 for the Food Bank.

Soroptimists partner with vineyards Soroptimist International of Sequim will sell Port Townsend Vineyards wine at the Lost Mountain Lavender Farm 1541 Lost Mountain Road as a fundraiser on FridaySaturday, July 20-21. Lavender lemonade and Port Townsend Vineyards Discovery White and Red will be available with proceeds supporting Soroptimist’s efforts to empower and support women and girls in Sequim and Clallam County. For more information, contact, membership@sisequim.org, write “Soroptimist International of Sequim, PO Box 126, Sequim, WA. 98382,” or visit http:// sisequim.org/. Reach Matthew Nash at mnash@sequimgazette.com.

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• Art Jam 2018: 10 a.m.5 p.m. Friday-Sunday, Rock Hollow Farm, 505 E. Silberhorn Road, rockhollowarts. com. • Olympic Driftwood Sculptors: 10 a.m.-5p.m. FridaySunday,SequimMiddleSchool cafeteria, 301 W. Hendrickson

Road, olympicdriftwoodsculp tors.org. • Puffin Marine Cruise: 6:30 p.m.-9 p.m. Friday and Saturday, John Wayne Marina, 2577 West Sequim Bay Road. dungenessrivercenter.org. • Sequim Farmers Market: 9 a.m.-6 p.m. Friday and Saturday, Sequim Civic Center Plaza, 152 W. Cedar St., sequimmarket.com. • Sunbonnet Sue Quilt Show: 10 a.m.-5 p.m., Friday and Saturday, 10 a.m.-4 p.m. Sunday, Sequim Middle School, 301 W. Hendrickson Road, sunbonnetsuequilt club. org. • Victor’s Barn Dance with Joy in Mudville: 7-10 p.m., Friday, Victor’s Lavender Farm, 3743 Old Olympic Highway, victorslavender.com.


Wednesday, July 18, 2018 • A5

SEQUIM GAZETTE

COMMUNITY NEWS BRIEFS Revelation series begins July 20 Pastor, author, and professor Lee Venden of All About Jesus Seminars presents a free 12-part series “The Revelation of Whom?” at Sequim Adventist Church, 30 Sanford Lane, Sequim, starting at 6:30 p.m. Friday, July 20. It continues with three sessions at 9:30 a.m., 11 a.m., and 2 p.m. Saturday the 21. Lunch provided. The seminar offers practical suggestions on how to develop or deepen a meaningful friendship with Jesus. It continues at 6:30 p.m. every night, Sunday, July 22-Friday, July 27, and finishes at 9:30 a.m. and 11 a.m. Saturday, July 28. For more information or transportation to the meetings, call 360-683-7373.

Guild Thrift Shop open Saturday The Sequim Dungeness Hospital Guilds Thrift Shop, 204 W. Bell St., opens 11 a.m.-3 p.m. Saturday, July 21. Featured this weekend are lavender items, a glasstopped oak table and chairs, wedding and party attire and more. All white tagged items are half price. Volunteers and consignors needed. Call 6837044 for information.

Waffles, raptors benefit at Wild Birds

Ice cream social set for July 22

were unintentionally left open when recent regulation changes were implemented, state officials said; the 201819 sportfishing rules pamphlet should state that the Elwha River and tributaries are closed to fishing. The tributaries were intended to remain closed as part of the fishing moratorium that is currently in effect on the Elwha River mainstem and all tributaries to help facilitate the re-colonization of the Elwha River system following removal of two dams. For more information, call the WDFW Region 6 Office at 360-249-4628.

T he Sequim P ra ir ie Grange hosts an ice cream social from 5-7 p.m. Sunday, July 22, at 290 Macleay Road. Attendees choose either a banana split or a sundae for a $5 donation. Funds raised go to the Dungeness Health & Wellness Clinic. For more information, WSU Extension offers call Loretta Bilow at 360- sewing day camp 582-0100 or Marie at 360Clallam County 4-H and 683-4599. WSU Clothing Textile Advisors present 4-H CTA Sewing Mayor meeting set Day Camp for youth ages Sequim’s Coffee with the 8-18, in the mornings of July Mayor program continues at 24-27 at Viking Sew and Vac, 8:30 a.m. Thursday, July 26, 707 E. First St., Port Angeles. at the Black Bear Diner, 1471 At the camp, youths learn to E. Washington St. Com- navigate their sewing mamunications and Marketing chine and use basic sewing Director Barbara Hanna tools. The camp will provide joins Mayor Dennis Smith for opportunities for youths the event. The Mayor will be at various skill levels from at a published location each beginning to independent. month to listen to anyone To register, contact Clallam who wants to chat, ask ques- County 4H at clallam4h@ tions, express a concern, co.clallam.wa.us or 360-417or make a comment about 2279. Cost is $45 per youth, the City or the community. with some scholarships Contact Smith at dsmith@ available. sequimwa.gov. Space is limited. Participants are asked to bring Crash the Sequim a sewing machine. A limited Guild fundraising party number of machines are Sequim Guild of Seattle available for use and can be Children’s Hospital invites reserved at registration. Visit clallam.wsu.edu for the community to crash the group’s fundraising party: more information about Earlier this month, more WSU Extension programthan 200 invitations went ming. out to community members and businesses, inviting Trinity United hosts them to join in the Guild’s free community dinner Party-no-Party. All parA free community dinticipants need to do is send a ner is served at 6 p.m. check to: Sequim Guild, c/o Thursday, July 26, at Trinity Arlene McClelland, PO Box United Methodist Church, 4135, Sequim WA, 98382. 100 S. Blake Ave.; the meal Funds raised help pay for re- includes baked fish, rice, search and uncompensated vegetables, coleslaw, dessert care for sick children. and beverages. Reservations are required Elwha River tributaries and may be made by calling close to fishing the church at 360-683The Washington Depart- 5367 between 9 a.m.-2 p.m. ment of Fish and Wildlife has on the Monday, Tuesday closed to fishing all tributar- or Wednesday before the ies to the Elwha River in that dinner, or by email at din portion of the watershed that nerstumc@aol.com. The church presents the is outside Olympic National dinners on the last Thursday Park. The river’s tributaries of each month.

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SIGNS OF SUPPORT

Community members gather July 15 for the fourth Sunday asking government officials to reunite all migrant children with their families separated at the US/Mexico border. Sequim Gazette photo by Matthew Nash

Community members rally to reunite migrant families SEQUIM GAZETTE STAFF On four consecutive Sundays, community members and participants with Indivisible Sequim and MoveOn have rallied at the corner of Priest Road and West Washington Street seeking support to reunite migrant children with their families in the US. “We’ll be here until all the kidnapped children are returned to their parents,”

Working to keep our community safe • 16 years of legal experience, worked as both public defender and prosecutor • Established Mental Health Court to help offenders get/comply with treatment to prevent reoffending • 7 years on the PublicSafety Advisory Board working with emergency personnel to serve our community’s safety • General counsel and volunteer with the Clallam County Hoarding Taskforce www.pam4judge.com • plindquist@justice.com Paid for by Pam Lindquest for District Court Judge 1909 W. 6th Street, Port Angeles, WA 98363

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Wild Birds Unlimited in Gardiner hosts a “Waffles & Raptors” benefit event for the Northwest Raptor Center on Saturday, July 21. Mariepaul Vermersch will be on hand making her family’s original, authentic Belgian waffles, and $1 from each sale will go to the Northwest Raptor Center. Jay and Gary Moore from the Northwest Raptor and Wildlife Center, a 501(c)3 nonprofit organization, will be in the Wild Birds gardens from 1-3 p.m. with their live birds of prey that have been rehabilitated through their efforts. The public is invited to get an up-close look at the birds. The wildlife center is also seeking donations; items that are helpful include: towels, Kleenex, potty pads (human or puppy), laundry baskets, heating pads, mealworms, dog or cat food (wet or dry), towels, new or gently used wool blankets, vet wrap,

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A6 • Wednesday, July 18, 2018

SEQUIM GAZETTE

Dine on the Dungeness set for Aug. 3

Marina

SEQUIM GAZETTE STAFF

She started the meeting Thursday by reviewing comments penned on 75 surveys about the marina’s future and spoken at the July 2 “listening sessions,” as port officials called them, that drew 101 participants, 80 of whom showed up in Sequim. O’Neil is the listening-session facilitator whose Bellingham-area firm commissioners want to hire to carry the public process forward past Thursday’s meeting. Of those who attended the listening sessions or responded to the surveys, 55 percent did so because they opposed selling the marina, O’Neil said. The overall response was that “most lack confidence that public access would be protected, even with deed restrictions,” according to her presentation. O’Neil said “mistrust” was a key theme, citing under that heading in her presentation mistrust of the port, mistrust of the process, challenging the port’s legal right to sell the marina and a “determination to fight.” As the port moves forward, “it’s important we build trust whenever we can,” Sequimarea District 1 Commissioner Colleen McAleer said. “Obviously, one of the messages was the public doesn’t trust our process.” Steve Burke, the Port Angeles-area District 2 port commissioner, is a marina user who put forward the motion to seek input from tribes, nonprofits and governments on their interest in acquiring the marina. “This is about working with (the city of) Sequim, working with the tribes, working with nonprofits to see if they have a good idea.” Port commission President Connie Beauvais said some important questions remain to be answered about the marina’s infrastructure. “We are still trying to find the best way to pay for the improvements that need to be made in the future to keep (the marina) the way it is. “For me, the issue is about, is the port the right entity to do that.” The port developed the marina in the 1980s on land donated for a marina by the late actor John Wayne. Wayne’s late son Michael told port officials in 1995 that sale to a private owner “violates the spirit and intent of your original understandings and relationship with the donors.”

The historic Dungeness River Railroad Bridge is the setting for the fourth Dine on the Dungeness, slated for Aug. 3. Sequim Gazette file photo by Matthew Nash

trained chef from Kokopelli Grill. The event will also have a no-host wine and beer bar. Dine on the Dungeness is hosted by the Dungeness River Audubon Center, a nonprofit organization whose mission is to “inspire understanding,

enjoyment and stewardship of the Olympic Peninsula’s unique natural and cultural resources, with emphasis on birds, rivers, fish and people.” For more information, email to rcoffice@olympus.net or visit www. dungenessrivercenter.org.

Inspire Wonder Capital Campaign

Annette Hanson, Capital Campaign Committee Chair for the expansion of the Dungeness River Audubon Center, and W. Ron Allen, Tribal Chair/CEO for the Jamestown S’Klallam Tribe, revealed a new sign on June 22 at the entrance to the Railroad Bridge Park announcing the campaign to build a new parking lot and expand the center.

We’ve outgrown the Center!

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Setting the table for an evening of fine dining in a unique setting, organizers of the fourth Dine on the Dungeness invite the community to the dinner fundraiser set for Friday, Aug. 3. The event is slated for 6-8 p.m. on the historic bridge in Railroad Bridge Park, 2151 W. Hendrickson Road, Sequim. Cost: $95 per person, $570 per table of six, or — new to this year’s event — $300 for an exclusive “Couple’s Table,” which includes table-side dinner service, one bottle of wine or a growler of beer, dessert, flowers and live music on a private area of the bridge. Tickets are available through Brown Paper Tickets or by calling the Dungeness River Audubon Center at 360-681-4076. The one-night-only event is catered by Chef Michael McQuay, a classically

From page A-1

Port officials have said that as a recreational facility, John Wayne Marina does not fit the port’s mission to create jobs and that it has yet to generate the remaining $1.3 million from $6.2 million in capital outlay the port spent on building it. Port Controller Melinda Smithson said detailed financial information is on the port’s website at www.portofpa.com. It’s instantly available at https://tinyurl.com/PDNMarinaFinances. Port officials have said $22 million is needed by 2035 to fund breakwater and float improvements, half of which would have been paid by the levy. The commissioners’ unanimous rejection of putting the marina up for sale to a private developer — one of three who have contacted the port with interest in buying the 300-slip marina since October 2018 — put in limbo an upcoming hearing examiner hearing on the facility. After port officials decided in March to consider selling it to a private developer, Sequim city officials said the city shoreline master program does not allow the marina to be privately operated, setting up the hearing examiner showdown. A hearing is set for Aug. 17. Simon Barnhart, the port deputy executive director and legal counsel, said after the meeting Thursday that he will talk with Sequim City Attorney Kristina Nelson Gross about whether the port will withdraw the appeal since the commissioners no longer are considering a private owner for the marina. Sound Law Center of Seattle is providing the hearing examiner under a $5,000 contract with the city of Sequim. During the public comment session last week, Jim Dries of Sequim — one of five commenters — said he was “saddened” by the lack of opportunity for public comment until the end of the meeting, saying it “goes back to that lack of trust.” A Port Angeles resident said she was “so glad” she was there. “Something actually happened that did something for me, which is build my trust with you,” she said. “Let’s not kick the can down the road.” Paul Gottlieb is a Senior Staff Writer with the Olympic Peninsula News Group, which is composed of Sound Publishing newspapers Peninsula Daily News, Sequim Gazette and Forks Forum. He can be reached at 360-452-2345, ext. 55650, or at pgottlieb@penin suladailynews.com.

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Wednesday, July 18, 2018 • A7

SEQUIM GAZETTE

Business

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Now they’re cooking … with lavender

Victoria Redhed Miller

After owning and operating a fullservice bakery for seven years and continuing to bake wedding cakes and specialty cakes for several years after that, Patti and Farm to Jake Bostwick had experience baking Table with just about evCheck out some edible lavender from Patti and Jake Bostwick’s Blue Mountain Baking Company, featured erything … except at the Sequim Farmers Market. Submitted photo Elli Rose lavender. Needless to say, available locally. Making these conwhen they moved to Sequim and nections has been meaningful, as Sequim Farmers Market got the itch to start baking again, the Bostwicks place plenty of value Sequim Lavender Weekend, extended hours/days they began to experiment with the on participating in their commuWhen: 9 a.m.-5 p.m., Friday-Saturday (July 20-21) unique flavor of lavender. In short nity and finding ways that people Location: Sequim Civic Center Plaza, West Cedar Street time they have mastered the art can help each other out. More info: manager@sequimmarket.com or of baking with lavender, capturing In May they were excited to bake aroma and flavor in a subtle and with locally grown rhubarb, and 360-582-6218 • www.sequimmarket.com tastefully delivered rendition of in June they partnered with Graylemon-lavender pound cake and smarsh Farm to make strawberry Lavender Weekend fun lemon-lavender cupcakes. shortcake. The Sequim Farmers Market is Their new bakery, Blue Mountain Just wait to see what new special- proud to be a part of the Sequim Baking Company, offers an everties they feature with as more ber- Lavender Weekend! Details about series both Friday and Saturday changing assortment of cupcakes, events throughout the weekend this weekend with Cort Armstrong cookies, dessert bars, and hand pies. ries start to ripen! Visiting the Blue Mountain Bak- can be found at www.sequimlav- performing on Friday from 10:30 “It is a fun way to express our ing Company is yet another way you enderweekend.com. artistic side,” Jake says. a.m.-1:30 p.m., and Ashley Kramer You can hop on the in-city When you visit their booth at the can bring the bounty of our local performing on Saturday from 11 Sequim Farmers Market, you will farms to your table. This local bak- shuttle bus sponsored by the City of ery can only be found at the Sequim Sequim to get to the Sequim Farm- a.m.-2 p.m. understand what he means. Each Farmers Market. A special thanks to Bell & Davis ers Market, located downtown at individual bakery item is truly a Raspberry season is upon us, and the Civic Center Plaza. The Sequim Law, Brokers Group Real Estate, work of culinary and visual appeal. The couple’s attention to detail is on Saturdays at the Sequim Farm- Farmers Market offers Clallam First Federal Savings & Loan, for evident down to their selection and ers Market you can find raspberries County’s best selection of local supporting the Sequim Farmers placement of the toppings on every at Emily’s Flowers, Graysmarsh, and food and beverages, handmade arRiver Run. Sea Basket Farm extends tisan gifts and services, live music, Market. delightful treat. Elli Rose is the Sequim Farmers Often times their inspiration the harvest with their late-season community, and fun! comes from what is in season and raspberries. Enjoy our summer live music Market manager.

If you see news happening, let us know. Send your leads to editor@sequimgazette.com.

PUD seeks commissioner applicants SEQUIM GAZETTE STAFF

The position of PUD Com missioner pays a salary of $2,567 per month, plus a per diem of $128 per day for meetings attended on behalf of the district to a maximum annual compensation of $48,724. Commissioners are also eligible for group insurance for themselves, their immediate family, and dependents.

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Assured Hospice of Clallam and Jefferson Counties offers a free educational program from 10 a.m.12:30 p.m. Friday, Aug. 10, at John Wayne Marina, 2577 W. Sequim Bay Road. Guest speakers are Dr. Paul Cunningham (speaking about tremors) and Dr. Emily Trittschuh (speaking about delirium, depression and dementia). DSHS offers three continuing education hours for the event; certificates are provided. Refreshments and raffle items are also provided. Call 360-582-9309 for more information.

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Learn about a simpler approach to handmade bread with sourdough starter at a presentation by Victoria Redhed Miller at 11 a.m. Saturday, July 28, at Nash’s Farm Store, 4681 Sequim-Dungeness Way, in Dungeness, The talk and demonstration is free and open to the public. Sourdough starter, activated by wild yeast, can be used for making a lot more than just loaf breads and pizza. Miller, author of the new book “From No-knead to Sourdough: A Simpler Approach to Handmade Bread,” shares how to make and maintain a sourdough starter to take home and use. Miller will bring sourdough starter that participants may share. It is recommended that everyone bring their own clean jar with a lid to carry their starter home; a widemouth, pint-sized Mason jar is ideal.

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Dungeness West, Fairview, Lost Mountain, Macleay, Monterra, Mount Pleasant, O’Brien, Prairie North, Riverside, and Robin Hill voting precincts. Some of the issues ahead for commissioners include compliance with the Energy Independence Act, rising costs of power and operations, minimal load growth, and budgets.

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A8 • Wednesday, July 18, 2018

SEQUIM GAZETTE

Build it and they will come

To submit a letter 147 W. Washington St., Sequim, WA 98382 Phone: 360-683-3311 • Fax: 360-683-6670 E-mail: editor@sequimgazette.com Deadline noon the Friday before publication

And they have. But first, husband Paul and I are celebrating the exact anniversary date of our arrival in Sequim 20 years ago on the day this column is published. By way of celebrating, I am dedicating this column to the reason we moved here; that is, the confluence of years of experience and my professional mission in health care and being offered a position at Olympic Medical Center (OMC), then Olympic Memorial Hospital, to cap my career. Think Never mind that within three About It ... months of being offered the position and uprooting from Seattle Bertha Cooper and beginning to unwind my consulting business, the administrator who hired me unexpectedly and unceremoniously left, taking my vision with him. Noting the obvious, I stayed at OMC and in the community, albeit in a different role than I expected, but one that offered me a ringside seat into the evolution of a rural hospital into an integrated medical center. As the Assistant Administrator of Planning and Development, I can claim membership in the team that started the development and expansion of health services in Sequim. I resigned my position more than 10 years ago and turned over my role in what have become a community cancer center, specialized services such as cardiac services located in Sequim, home health services, integrating physician service, strategic planning and being the Sequim liaison.

I will be forever grateful for my OMC experience. Near death experience of primary care on the peninsula The most significant, unexpected and seismic shift in the role of OMC began later in my OMC tenure. Some of you will recall the general unease, panic in some quarters, when Virginia Mason unexpectedly and unceremoniously left our community, first Sequim and later Port Angeles. Up until then, Virginia Mason had invested in hiring numbers of primary care physicians who would refer patients needing more complex treatments and surgeries to their Seattle medical center. Apparently it wasn’t working out for them, so they left the patients, the physicians and the community. Physicians and OMC became reluctant suitors, and, in the end, both accepted the inevitable direction of establishing an employee/employer relationship. It was the only way OMC could sustain a hospital and outpatient services and one of the limited options available to physicians to manage an evolving complicated medical reimbursement system. Fortunately for OMC and the community, the Jamestown S’Klallam tribe stepped up and became an active partner in providing primary care services. This bit of history is important to understanding the issues that face OMC today in maintaining services at the level a growing, dynamic community needs. So far, the board and administrators of OMC have navigated the complexities of being a sole community hospital and provided our community much needed and desired services.

Back to the future OMC CEO Eric Lewis has ably led the effort for the past 10-plus years. My friend and former colleague gave me some time to catch up with what he sees as priorities now and in the future. He started by reminding me that rural health care is in crisis. It’s not quite as serious for smaller hospitals called critical access hospitals because they are paid at 100 percent of cost. OMC, far too big to be designated anything but a community hospital, is paid at 80 percent of cost for services

See COOPER, A-9

Opinion SEQUIM GAZETTE

SEQUIM GAZETTE Published every Wednesday 147 W. Washington St. Sequim, WA 98382 Phone: 360-683-3311 Fax: 360-683-6670 www.sequimgazette.com Sound Publishing Inc. Vol. 45, Number 29 USPS 685-630 • ISSN: 1538-585X

Firearms and … warning labels? Back in 1965, with mounting evidence of the ill effects of smoking, Congress decided every pack of cigarettes should come with a few words of caution. Thus was born the first Surgeon General’s Warning. Its effectiveness in coaxing a smoker to quit or convince someone not to start is considered minimal these days. But Guest those few words — enshrined in law — are a Opinion signature and abiding element of a multifaceted Jerry Cornfield and multimillion-dollar campaign against the use of tobacco products. Now a similar approach toward guns may be on the horizon in this country — and in front of Washington voters this fall. Initiative 1639, which would impose new restrictions on gun owners and buyers, is awaiting certification by the Secretary of State for the Nov. 6 ballot. Most of the attention is on its ban on sales of semiautomatic rifles to anyone under 21 and a requirement for background checks on buyers. It also requires owners to lock up their firearms or potentially face criminal charges if one of them is used to injure or kill someone. There’s also a provision, in a vein similar to the Surgeon General’s Warning, to alert would-be buyers of dangers associated with firearms. It calls for adding the following language to the application form which buyers must complete and sign at the time of purchase: “CAUTION: The presence of a firearm

in the home has been associated with an increased risk of death to self and others, including an increased risk of suicide, death during domestic violence incidents, and unintentional deaths to children and others.” Drafters of I-1639 snared the verbiage from a law on the books in New York City. They want to make Washington the first place where it is employed statewide. “This was really a common-sense approach for us,” said Renee Hopkins, chief executive officer of the Washington Alliance for Gun Responsibility, which is spearheading the ballot measure. They hope that buyers, after reading the words, will be inclined to take steps to ensure their new weapon is locked up at home, she said. “We believe most gun owners are responsible and want to do what is needed to keep their family safe,” she said. “This language is about ensuring they know and understand that having a gun in the home increases the risks.” The purpose is not to deter anyone from making a purchase. “It is about how you deal with firearms once you own them,” she said. Certainly more than words on an application would be needed to change a buyer’s mind at the check-out counter. Adding a photo from a crime scene or a mass shooting to the paperwork might get them to pause. That’s not the vision of those behind this year’s initiative, Hopkins said. “Our intent is to be sure people are wellinformed when they purchase a firearm,” she said. “It is a really modest approach.” Contact The Herald (Everett) columnist Jerry Cornfield at 360-352-8623, jcornfield@ herald net.com or on Twitter, @dospueblos.

LETTERS TO THE EDITOR Keep fireworks tradition alive in Clallam

I am a resident of Sequim and I read in the Sequim Gazette that there will be a public hearing regarding whether or not to have fireworks in Clallam County for the celebration of the 4th of July. I cannot make this meeting as I have family from back east arriving that afternoon, however my voice is a resounding yes! I am a 68-year-old senior, and I was told that the seniors are opposed to having fireworks because it frightens their dogs? I do hope that is a rumor going around and not a fact! Fireworks of one form or another have been around ever since we succeeded in defeating the British in 1781. The Colonies celebrated with noise. The pioneers crossing the prairies put explosives under anvils and blew them into the sky with a huge bang as they danced and made music to celebrate the 4th of July. Fireworks are part of America’s celebration, just as the French have fireworks to celebrate Bastille Day on the 14th of July. Having no fireworks throws an amazing tradition out the window - how can that happen?! Please allow fireworks in Clallam County forever - and in Sequim, too, while you’re at it! The only exception would be a critical fire danger due to extreme dryness because of drought, and even then you can have them out

A-8

on the spit. I certainly hope we continue to have fireworks in the United States of America, and in Washington state counties! Mary Van Dyke Sequim

Deep concern

The majority of Americans should be deeply concerned by President Trump’s recent actions on the international scene. He has sown discord and chaos on the domestic scene. Now he has disrupted the world order which has kept us safe since the end of the Second World War. Democratic countries are under attack, the world trade order is being unravelled. It is clear from the recent indictments of Russian intelligence operatives that our election system is under attack by Russia. But, Trump, in his love for dictators, especially Putin, and his attacks on democracies is undermining the strength of our alliances and our standing in the world. He uses baseless and misleading accusations to attack our allies. He ignores information that indicts our enemies. He wants to befriend our own enemies, especially Russia. When he is called out for his lies and distortions, he calls those corrections “fake news!” He did admit at one point that “fake news” is any report that disagrees with him. It is

clear he will have tens of millions of followers because they love his bombast and his intolerance. But I hope more and more of the majority will see the need to resist and speak out against him and his dangerous policies both at home and abroad. Hopefully, thoughtful Republicans will challenge the leadership of their party, or follow the lead of other Republicans like columnist George Will and will leave the party and admit how it is failing the majority of the American people, the country itself, our true allies, and, as a result, the whole world. Jim Dries Sequim

Neupert worth your vote for judge

With his legal knowledge, calmand-collected temperament, his family values and community commitment, Dave Neupert has earned my vote in the Aug. 7 primary election for Clallam County District Court 1 judge. He is the only candidate in the primary with proven judicial experience, and he is certainly the most qualified. In addition to more than 25 years successfully practicing civil and criminal law in Clallam County, he has served as a judge pro-tem for District Court 1 and is now the acting presiding judge of that court

after being appointed last February. He is a graduate of the Washington State Judicial College and is a member of the District & Municipal Court Judges’ Association. I’ve watched him when he is on the bench — he is no-nonsense but unfailingly fair, and patient and even-handed with attorneys, litigants and witnesses. Outside the courtroom, Neupert has helped the community by serving with volunteer groups, rising to board president of Habitat for Humanity Clallam County, vice president of Peninsula Behavioral Health and working as a board member of United Way Clallam County and the Peninsula College Foundation. District Court 1 deserves a qualified and trustworthy judge. That person is Dave Neupert. John Brewer Port Angeles (Editor’s note: Brewer is former publisher/editor of the Sequim Gazette and Peninsula Daily News.)

Nation’s immigration stance belies its history

I’m surprised by the seeming lack of tolerance, empathy and understanding in some of the recent PDN and Gazette letters regarding the US Government’s cruel policy of separating children from their asylum seeking Central American parents at

See LETTERS, A-9

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LETTERS POLICY Your opinions on issues of community interest and your reaction to stories and editorials contained in your Sequim Gazette are important to us and to your fellow readers. Thus our rules relating to letters submitted for publication are relatively simple. • Letters are welcome. Letters exceeding 250 words may be shortened. We strive to publish all letters. • Letters are subject to editing for spelling and grammar; we contact the writer when substantial changes are required, sending the letter back to the writer for revisions. Personal attacks and unsubstantiated allegations are not printed. • All letters must have a valid signature, with a printed name, address and phone number for verification. Only the name and town/community are printed. • Deadline for letters to appear in the next publication is noon Friday. Because of the volume of letters, not all letters are published the week they are submitted. Time-sensitive letters have a priority. • Letters are published subject to legal limitations relating to defamation and factual representation. • To submit letters, deliver or mail to 147 W. Washington St., Sequim, WA 98382; fax to 360-683-6670 or e-mail editor@sequimgazette.com.


Wednesday, July 18, 2018 • A9

SEQUIM GAZETTE

FROM THE POLICE BLOTTER West Washington Street 8:18 p.m. —Residential Structure Fire, 200 block of McFlarland Drive July 13 9:29 a.m. — Vehicle Accident, 200 block of West Washington Street 1:07 p.m. —Vehicle Accident, 900 block of West Washington Street 4: 33 p.m. —DUI-DWI, 2000 block of Port Williams Road 10:28 p.m. —Fireworks Violation, 2000 block of Chicken Coop Road July 14 9:17 a.m. — Assault Misdemeanor, 600 block of East Washington Street 2:12 p.m. — Brush Fire, 200 block of West Bell Street 2:57 p.m. —Theft, 800 block of East Washington Street 5:45 p.m. —Theft, 1200 block of West Washington Street July 15 7:43 a.m. —Burglary, 200 block Macleay Road 11:05 a.m. —Domestic Violence, 800 block of Thornton Drive 10:36 p.m. — Domestic Violence, 700 block of Rhodefer Road

The weekly police blotter includes incidents that occurred in the City of Sequim and in unincorporated Clallam County in the SequimDungeness Valley area. July 10 8:45 a.m. —Auto Theft, 100 block of East Cobblestone Lane 8:59 a.m. —Theft, near 100 block of Ruths Place 9:39 a.m. —Burglary, near 100 block of West Nelson Road 12:17 p.m. —Vehicle Accident, Old Olympic Highway/Gunn Road July 11 7:35 a.m. —Vehicle Accident, Sequim-Dungeness Way/Medsker Road 10:39 a.m. —Theft, 600 block of West Washington Street 12:14 p.m. —Vehicle Accident, 2000 West Sequim Bay Road 4:27 p.m. —Vehicle Accident, North Blake Avenue/ East Spruce Street July 12 9:03 a.m. —500 block of Keeler Road 12:58 p.m. — Theft, 900 block of East Washington Street 6:29 p.m. —Vehicle accident, South 9th Avenue/

PD warns of mail scam cards and send pictures of the scratch page of the cards and the receipts to a specific email or text number. If cashed, the checks will later return with insufficient funds, police said in a press release last week. “In these cases, the person who deposited the check will likely lose any money spent from the account.” Residents who receive packages they suspect are a scam are encouraged to notify the Sequim Police Department at 360-683-7227.

SEQUIM GAZETTE STAFF The Sequim Police Department is warning area residents of a new mail scam involving unsolicited packages, City of Sequim officials said last week. A local resident received a package in the mail containing a check for $1,988 from Henry Dixon through Hometown National Bank; the package included elaborate instructions on how to deposit the check. The recipient was then instructed to “scratch” the

Cooper

From page A-8 billed to Medicare and 75 percent for services billed to Medicaid. I have yet to have a conversation or presentation about OMC that doesn’t include the startling fact that 82 percent of its reimbursement comes from Medicare/Medicaid and is paid at 75-80 percent of what it costs. That leaves 18 percent to cover the shortfall, except the 1 percent of services provided as uncompensated and charity care. OMC levy dollars received through our taxes represents 2 percent of OMC’s revenue and currently covers most of uncompen-

sated care in addition to maintaining a trauma level 3 emergency department and labor and delivery services. (Note to community: Care without any source of reimbursement used to be up to 5 percent until the Affordable Care Act —aka ACA or aka Obamacare — took some of the burden off.) On the other hand, Lewis explains, “The expanded coverage in the ACA (Medicaid expansion and Health Insurance Exchange) was fully paid for by cuts to Medicare reimbursement and new taxes. These cuts to Medicare were significant to OMC given our high Medicare volume of 60 percent of our patients.” The slow de-funding and

Sequim man sentenced for molestation SEQUIM GAZETTE STAFF A Sequim man was sentenced on July 3 to six months jail and a year of supervision by the Washington State Department of Corrections after pleading guilty crimes of Child Molestation in the Third Degree and Communication with a Minor for Immoral Purposes. Michael Douglas Millsap, 52, of Sequim, pleaded guilty to the crimes on April 16, the Clallam County Prosecutor’s Office reported. As a condition of Superior Court Judge Christopher Melly’s sentence, Millsap is now also required to register as a sex offender.

On Aug. 8, 2017, the Clallam County Sheriff’s Office received a report that Millsap had sexually assaulted a 14year old-girl. Sheriff’s office representatives interviewed the victim, who described Millsap as an uncle figure to her even though the two were not biologically related, according to the prosecutor’s office. Further investigation into the relationship revealed that Millsap would invite the victim to help him clean horse stalls, took the victim to lunch and shopping for clothes and for drives, the prosecutor’s office said. Investigators further learned that on July 8, 2017, Millsap invited the victim to

work on demo cars, bought the victim cigarettes and offered her alcohol before taking her to a residence in Joyce, where they drank alcohol together, the prosecutor’s office said. That evening, the victim went to sleep on a couch and woke up in the middle of the night to find Millsap lying next to the victim touching her. The victim reportedly kicked Millsap and told another adult resident what had happened the next morning. The sheriff’s office investigation further revealed that Millsap had been texting the victim using highly inappropriate language of a sexual nature, prosecutors said. Millsap was ordered to un-

dergo a pre-sentence investigation, which was completed in late June, and sentenced in early July. Given that the case resolved through a plea in place of a trial, the victim was not required to testify in open court about the underlying sexual assault. At the time of sentencing, Millsap’s standard sentence range under Washington State law was six to 12 months jail. The state recommended a sentence of six months jail and one year of supervision, while the defense recommended that two months be converted to electronic home monitoring and that one month be converted to community service work.

Jury convicts for domestic violence crimes SEQUIM GAZETTE STAFF A 38-year-old Sequim man was convicted of domestic violence crimes in late June, the Clallam County Prosecutor’s Office said. Joseph Brian Ueltzen, 38, of Sequim, was convicted by a Clallam County jury on June 27 of Felony Harassment — Threat to Kill, Intimidating a Witness and Assault in the Fourth Degree. The jury found that all crimes consisted of Domestic Violence. The jury also found Ueltzen not guilty of Unlawful Imprisonment. Ueltzen — who had three prior misdemeanor convictions from 1999 and 2000 for Assault in the Fourth Degree– Domestic Violence, but no prior felony

Letters

From page A-8 our Mexican border, with the parents going to detention centers and the children to group shelters or individual foster care across the country. There is no evidence any thought was given to how to systematically reunite the families. The legal ports of entry are not staffed to handle large numbers of refugees with children fleeing violence and desperate gutting of the ACA will erode that advantage if less people enroll. In addition, Lewis worries about the real possibility that Medicare reimbursement cuts will not be restored to compensate the loss of ACA revenue. OMC is in near constant contact with federal/state legislators to remind them of sole community rural hospitals’ struggle to remain viable, especially in communities with high Medicare/ Medicaid populations. Second on Lewis’ smart list of ongoing challenges is the existing workforce crisis. There simply aren’t enough, especially for filling the critical need of primary health care providers – MDs, DOs, ARNPs, PAs.

convictions — was sentenced on July 5 by Superior Court Judge Christopher Melly to 15 months prison and a year of supervision by the Washington State Department of Corrections. According to court records, Ueltzen and the victim — with whom he had been in a relationship for about five years — checked into a hotel room the evening of Nov. 25, 2017. After about 45 minutes of verbal abuse, the victim flung food at Ueltzen, who then pinned the victim down on the bed and held her nose pinched and mouth closed with his hand. The victim testified that she could not breathe for over a minute and that she “pleaded with her eyes” to be let go. Ueltzen let go and then forcibly grabbed the victim’s cheek, leaving significant

gouges in the flesh on her face, the prosecutor’s office said. Ueltzen told the victim to clean up the blood, threatened to kill the victim by throwing her off the third story of the hotel and also told the victim that he would “dump her body in the bay” if she reported the assault to the police, the prosecutor’s office said. The state recommended a sentence of 20 months prison, the high end of the sentencing range under Washington law, one year of supervision and treatment conditions, the county prosecutor’s office said. The defense recommended a first time offender option that would have resulted in a sentence of not more than 90 days jail and 12 months supervision.

circumstances. Both the US Refugee Act of 1980 and international law provide asylum seekers protections the Central Americans have not been given. More important than the various legalities of the situation is what our American values are as a nation. Readers should realize non-native American US citizens (ALL of us!) are immigrants or descendants of immigrants and refugees, who came here either forcibly as slaves, seeking asylum from various abuses, or for

economic reasons and opportunities for a better life? Our nation (ONCE?) represented “The American Dream” not available to many around the world. We fortunate US citizens should not be judging others, who are seeking to live a safer life. How many readers truly believe that non-white refugees seeking asylum in the USA should be summarily prosecuted and have the parents separated from their children (many permanently), who are caged like animals in various deten-

tion centers across the USA? This Government policy violates the required legal procedures, which are being summarily denied, for processing US asylum seekers. We, the people, as a Nation of Constitutional rights, freedoms, and Rule of Law should be above supporting Trump’s arbitrary, cruel immigration policies and his complicit, self-serving Congress, which has avoided immigration issues for too many years. Richard Hahn Sequim

OMC always is running to catch up to the population growth and looking ahead. They recently announced planned additions to the cancer center and to Sequim’s medical office building to provide office space for primary care.

Should we worry? Lewis is reassuring and explains the loss is part of the cost of growth. OMC opened the new medical office building on the Port Angeles campus. Moving out, moving in and settling in takes people and time and resulted in onetime high labor costs for the volume of services. OMC is on track for year 2018. Lewis said he feels confident that OMC can maintain its community owned and governed status for at least five more years. He’s reluctant to look any further ahead. He knows, too, that he can never be complacent, a strategy bound to fail in the politicized and complex industry of health care. We — the community —

cannot be complacent either. Our job is to continue to support our strong health care system which includes supporting federal/state legislators who recognize the importance of an effective health care system in our growing community. A healthy health care system is essential to the health of our community and all individuals living here. Any less and they won’t come … or stay. Bertha Cooper spent her career years as a health care organization and program administrator and consultant and is a featured columnist in Sequim Gazette. Cooper has lived in Sequim with her husband for nearly 20 years.

Strong community commitment Build it and they keep coming to live, work and retire in our beautiful corner of America. Our own history reminds us that it can fall apart and, if it does, so does the community. I asked Lewis about fiscal year 2017 that saw OMC in a hole for the year to an amount over $2.5 million.

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A10 • Wednesday, July 18, 2018

SEQUIM GAZETTE

Sequim lab partners Red Cross redistributes emergency with college to study resources across Olympic Peninsula fish around turbines Volunteers remain on-call 24/7, continue training in Sequim area BY MATTHEW NASH Sequim Gazette

Scientists in Sequim’s Marine Sciences Laboratory with Pacific Northwest National Laboratory plan to monitor fish with an injectable acoustic fish tracking tag around a tidal turbine (similarly to a dam pictured) to see how they react to the machinery with the aim to better protect them. Photo courtesy of PNNL

BY MATTHEW NASH Sequim Gazette

A new five-year agreement between Pacific Northwest National Laboratory and the University of Alaska Fairbanks makes Sequim’s Marine Sciences Laboratory a key part of upcoming research for aquatic animals’ safety around turbines. The partnership brings the entities together for multiple efforts including underwater technology development, hydropower generation, and marine renewable energy. PNNL officials report their scientists, who work and help operate the Sequim lab, and the UAF’s Alaska Center for Energy and Power’s staff and students, will work together on research, grant requests/funding, and college faculty and graduate research appointments. Dr. Genevra Harker-Klimes, technical group manager, Coastal Research Group in Sequim, said they plan to monitor fish they tag near the seabed and their general

behavior related to how they use the flow at different states of the tide. She said the University of Washington, another longtime partner of the Sequim lab, plans to bring in an underwater turbine, about 1-meter by 1-meter, to study how fish react around it. “It’s about how to protect the fish and if we put something in the water, how do fish react to it,” she said. Her team will look for behavioral changes and whether or not the fish stay around or avoid the turbine. Harker-Klimes’ plan is to monitor currents and animals in the channel for 4-plus months later this year with the University of Washington using sonar, acoustic cameras and video cameras. The National Laboratory helps manage an arctic observatory on the North Slope of Alaska as part of DOE’s Atmospheric Radiation Measurement Climate Research Facility, ACEP, which

See Lab, A-11

Ida Nordquist March 16, 1924 - June 28, 2018

Red Cross of Kitsap and Olympic Peninsulas in Carlsborg recently consolidated to one suite to distribute its emergency resources throughout Clallam County, leaders said. Sequim Gazette photo by Matthew Nash

Olympic Peninsulas’ more than 150 active disaster response volunteers. Washington hosts seven chapters and the Olympic Peninsula’s Red Cross chapter joined Kitsap County a few years ago, Finley said, after it branched off from King County. “A lot of the plan is to get the direct services out in the field rather than having a top heavy administration,” Finley said. “We’ve gone away from that model and even in Washington, D.C. it’s more of a coordination center.” Zanon said Red Cross leaders wanted to keep a satellite office in Carlsborg but asked to look for partners to share/store items for emergencies. Red Cross volunteers have spoken to a number of entities, he said, with Clallam Transit storing some resources and the City of Sequim and Clallam County Fire District 3 considering long-term options for emergency storage. The Red Cross stores cots, blankets and other equipment in trailers in multiple spots across the West End, including Clallam Bay, Forks, and Neah Bay for emergencies, too. They’ve also partnered with residents in Joyce to store items in their emergency container, Zanon said. “We just didn’t need all the space we had,” he said. “I think it’s a good plan. Resources are made more available. If

something happens, they can be drawn from rather than being stored in one place. Something in one location may not ever make it to another location in an event like the (Cascadia subduction zone earthquake).” The Carlsborg office remains a training and meeting area, Zanon said, and they continue to seek new volunteers. Finley said the Red Cross’ two major focuses are immediate assistance, whether for a house fire or mass emergency, and for mass care in an emergency such as sheltering, feeding, and family reunification. Red Cross leaders say they help with fire prevention too, including a successful recent effort to install smoke alarms in a Carlsborg neighborhood. Up next, Finley said they’ll be working with emergencies managers, such as the fire districts, to “have a clear understanding with what we can do and what people can expect when a disaster happens.” “We have a good relationship with emergency managers already, but it never hurts to update information,” he said. The Red Cross of Kitsap and Olympic Peninsulas in Carlsborg opens 10 a.m.4 p.m. Tuesdays and Thursdays at 151 Ruth’s Place, Sequim. Contact it at 360457-7933 or visit www.redcross.org.

‘Rock Walk’ set at wildlife refuge Dave Parks, a Port Angeles geologist with the Washington Department of Natural Resources, leads a “Rock Walk” at the Dungeness National Wildlife Refuge on Saturday, July 28. The program starts at 10 a.m. and is expected to last about 90 minutes. The program is free; however, there is a required Refuge entrance fee of $3 which covers up to four adults while children 15 years of age and younger enter for free. The “Rock Walk” will begin at the upper overlook at the top of the trail leading down to the Dungeness Spit. Participants

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Anne Jordan Davis passed away peacefully at her home in Sequim on July 9, 2018. Anne was born to Verna Lee Hoover Jordan and William Harrison Jordan in Bellingham, Washington on December 1, 1929. In 1947 she graduated from Weatherwax High School in Aberdeen, Washington and went onto the University of Oregon to study art. There she met William Chester Davis, Jr. whom she wed on September 30, 1950. Together Anne and Bill built a successful business in Longview, Washington, known as Cowlitz Candy and Tobacco, Co., which they operated for 38 years before retiring in 1993. She was involved in many community organizations and activities with a focus on children and education, including PEO and the Seattle Children’s Hospital Guild. Her foremost love was her family, available at any time of day or night. She also enjoyed the times when her sister Jerrine Behrens would come to stay after long overseas assignments. She and Bill traveled extensively loving the different cultures of the world. She was a stickler for etiquette, a trait much appreciated by her granddaughters. More recently she enjoyed the company of her new great granddaughter and the community of Sequim. Anne is survived by her sister Jerrine Behrens of Port Angeles, daughter Connie Dyberg (Mike) of Samish Island, son Jeff Davis (Mindy) of Sequim, daughter Laura Schmucker (Eric) of Kingston, two granddaughters, Taryn and Cailin, and one great granddaughter, Daryn. She was preceded in death by her husband Bill on January 24, 1995, her parents, and her sister Barbara Schnorr on October 9, 2012. The family sends a special thanks to Neila Cameron for the care, respect and devotion over the last several years, the Women of Wrights Home Care, led by Beth, Volunteer Hospice of Clallam County, and Sue Clary for unselfishly coming to Anne’s home every week to read to her. A celebration of Anne’s life will be held at St. Luke’s Episcopal Church in Sequim at 11:00 a.m. on July 28th. In lieu of flowers, please donate to the Volunteer Hospice of Clallam County.

should wear sturdy walking shoes and weather-appropriate clothing. Parks, a licensed Engineering geologist and hydro-geologist, will discuss the geologic history and coastal evolution of Dungeness Spit and examine the stratigraphy of the coastal bluffs west of the base of the Spit. He will also discuss recent research on the rates of coastal bluff erosion in the Dungeness drift cell. For more information, call the Refuge office at 360-457-8451 x25, or email to david_falzetti@fws.gov.

721799522

Ida Mary Clark Nordquist, beloved mother, grandmother, great-grandmother, sister and friend, transitioned peacefully on June 28, 2018, at home with her daughter Mary Beth Johnson in Beloit, WI, at age 94. She had previously lived in Sequim, WA, until January 2017. She is survived by her sister Elizabeth Cronan; her five children, Sally Sheola and husband Ted, Connie Meyer and husband Alden, Mary Beth Johnson, Walter Clark and Hal Clark; 11 grandchildren and 18 great-grandchildren. She is predeceased by her husband Gil Nordquist and brother Walter. Born in Albany, New York on March 16, 1924, to Mary Bell Churchyard Shepard and John Berdan Shepard, she grew up in the town of Somerset in Chevy Chase, MD, and graduated from Bethesda-Chevy Chase High School in1942. Her childhood was filled with friends, riding her pony Patches and horse Cyclone and trips to the family farm in Poolesville, MD, where her father raised cattle, turkeys, corn and wheat. She loved animals, raising a baby lamb when she was 10, and was devoted to many dogs and cats in her lifetime. Sadly, her brother Walter was killed in Italy serving in World War II in July 1944, and her beloved father passed soon after in 1945. She met Maynard Clark in 1941 at a USO dance in Washington, DC, when he was training as a fighter pilot in the Army Air Corps. She attended the University of Wisconsin. They married in Lafayette, LA, on February 26, 1944. They were married 44 years. She met the challenges of raising five children very close in age in Bucks County, PA, and Hunterdon County, NJ, with a positive, spiritually based attitude. Far ahead of her time, she was committed to a healthy, nutritious diet for herself and family. Later in life she married Gilbert Nordquist in 1989 and lived with him in Seattle and then Sequim, WA, until he passed in 2001. Ida loved and lived life fully. She lives on in the hearts of those who knew her and experienced her unconditional love and support. Ida inherited her love of gardening and flowers from her father and grandmother. She was an inquisitive life-long learner, a freethinker who loved new adventures. She traveled the world — England, Egypt, France, Italy, Ireland, a lengthy camping trip through Central America and many motorcycle and car camping trips with Gil, including a six-month cross-country camping honeymoon. Perhaps her greatest gift was her spiritual attunement, a total trust in God that lives in all of us. As a community builder with a great network of friends, she frequently hosted and convened spiritual groups in her home. Ida loved her spiritual community at the Sequim Center for Spiritual Living. The family gathered on July 9 at her daughter Connie and husband Alden’s summer home in Canada for a celebration of her life. Her final request was that the words on her tombstone read “She loved life.” She died looking forward to “coming home” again.

Following a consolidation of space, staff and volunteers with The Red Cross of Kitsap and Olympic Peninsulas look to partner with local agencies in distributing/storing some of its disaster resources. In the last few years, the Red Cross nationally and locally has been “assessing its resources and creating efficiencies,” said Don Zanon, disaster team coordinator for the Red Cross’ office in Carlsborg at 151 Ruth’s Place. Part of that included a recent downsizing of the Carlsborg office from two suites to one. “Our chapter started in 1917 and like any organization it evolves with time,” Zanon said. “The Carlsborg office we’ve had for about 10 years. (The chapter) has been located in Port Angeles and Sequim and it was set up for the needs at the time.” In the local chapter’s 100-plus years, Zanon said they’ve acquired a lot of disaster readiness items but not all of it was needed. Some of the second suite in Carlsborg housed old records, outdated literature, fundraising items and more, he said. Steve Finley, disaster program manager for local Red Cross chapter that includes Clallam, Jefferson and Kitsap counties, said their emergency items range from cots to blankets to bath care items. Carlsborg’s office last hosted paid staff operating out of it about four years ago, Zanon said, and it currently opens 10 a.m.-4 p.m. Tuesdays and Thursdays. Volunteers run the office, he said, and remain on-call 24 hours a day for emergencies. Their most recent effort was supporting a house fire victim in Sequim. Finley, who oversees the Carlsborg office, operates in Bremerton coordinating the Red Cross of Kitsap and


Wednesday, July 18, 2018 • A11

SEQUIM GAZETTE

Lab

Tower

conducts research on river and ocean energy generation and integration at the Tanana River Test Site near Nenana, Alaska. As part of the new agreement between PNNL and the university, one of the ACEP team members will come to Sequim. “We hope to refine their techniques and share knowledge and manpower for doing those techniques,” HarkerKlimes said. “We hope it will lead to joint appointments for the Alaska site or Sequim.” PNNL director Steven Ashby said PNNL is proud to partner with the University of Alaska Fairbanks. “We will leverage unique capabilities across the two institutions, including PNNL’s Marine Sciences Laboratory in Sequim, and help build our future workforce by providing rich research opportunities for graduate students,” he said. PNNL officials report future partner projects with the University of Alaska Fairbanks may include the use of unmanned aerial systems for oil spill and ecosystem restoration monitoring, improving energy efficiency in maritime infrastructure, and more. Harker-Klimes said she sees the new partnership really as a three-way agreement with the University of Fairbanks, PNNL, and the Pacific Marine Energy Center, that coordinates research, development, education and testing for marine energy. Partnering universities include Oregon State University, University of Washington and the University of Alaska Fairbanks. For more on the Pacific Marine Energy Center, visit nnmrec.oregonstate.edu. For more on PNNL, visit www.pnnl.gov/news.

applied for a conditional use permit and variance to raise it to 150 feet so long as the tower was disguised. Hearing Examiner William Payne approved the decision in March 2016 and later Clallam County Superior Court Judge Erik Rohrer ruled against a land petition by the homeowners in February 2017. This allowed cell tower owner Radio Pacific Inc. to build the tower. Homeowners protested multiple issues for the tower

From page A-1

Crash

From page A-1 to speak publicly about the crash but said he and his family appreciate the community support and prayers. Price, along with his brother Bob Price, a parttime Sequim resident, and two friends from Scottsdale, Ariz., and Chicago, had been fishing in Steamboat Bay and were taking the flight to return home, Smith said. Coast Guard officials report two Coast Guard

and the subsequent certificate of occupancy null and void. Eric Quinn, attorney for Radio Pacific, Inc., said his party “is relieved that (the homeowners) agreed to withdraw its appeals.” Gunnerson, the cell tower project consultant, said following the settlement, Radio Pacific, Inc., parent company of KONP 1450AM/101.7 FM, KSTI 102.1 FM and KZQM 14.9 FM can continue to operate with KONP’s extension of service through Sequim expected this week. Verizon, one of three possible cell providers on the tower, is almost up and wait-

ing for final connections, he said, and AT&T and T-Mobile remain interested parties in expanding services, too. Gunnerson previously said phone customers with Verizon will have have better inhome penetration of wireless service within about 3 miles of the site, Clallam County Fire District 3 signed on and is already operating from the tower with an an increase in its radio frequency into Dungeness. Mary Ellen Winborn, Director, Clallam County director of the Department of Community Development, said following the lawsuits, she

and her staff plan to bring the “Wireless Communications Facilities” zoning chapter to the county’s Planning Commission for review “to better serve and protect residential character, property values, vistas, public health, safety and welfare.” “By looking at site locations, new technology, rural zones, site priorities and development standards we can better serve the community while addressing the needs of the (Wireless Communications Facilities) providers,” she said. Reach Matthew Nash at mnash@sequimgazette.com.

Air Station Sitka MH-60 Jayhawk helicopter crews rescued 11 people from the mountain at about 2,000 feet in elevation and were taken to emergency medical personnel for further care. Smith said David Price reported some bumps and bruises and his brother Bob sustained a subdural hematoma where blood pools between his brain and his head’s inner-lining. The unnamed friends were admitted to Harborview Medical Center in Seattle with various injuries,

she said. Multiple news reports state all victims were taken to PeaceHealth Ketchikan Medical Center, with four transferred to Seattle for further care, said Mischa Chernick, communications manager for the Ketchikan hospital. “Both Bob and David are very complimentary of the medical emergency people, especially the Coast Guard,” Smith said. Alaska State Troopers reported that the plane’s pilot, Mike Hudgins, 72, of Ket-

chikan, reported the crash around 8:30 a.m. that morning as he was flying from Steamboat Bay on Prince of Wales Island to Ketchikan. Anchorage Daily News reports that Hudgins told Clint Johnson of the National Transportation Safety Board in Alaska he put the plane, a float-equipped Taquan Air de Havilland Otter, into an emergency climb before hitting the side of the mountain. The Juneau Empire reports Taquan Air confirmed the plane was one of their

flights and it suspended all scheduled flights that day and was cooperating with authorities. Hudgins told Johnson he saw rising terrain and tried to gain altitude but it collided with the terrain. Coast Guard officials reported a preliminary report on the crash is tentatively expected this week. They also reported the weather at the time of the crash was about two miles in visibility. Reach Matthew Nash at mnash@sequimgazette. com.

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including it would cut into property values, emit dangerous radiation, be too close to nearby neighbors, and that it would go much higher than specified of nearby trees. However, Rohrer said the homeowners couldn’t prove the tower would hurt property values, and that the tower wouldn’t denounce the county’s code of protecting natural views and local aesthetics. David Alvarez, Clallam County chief civil deputy prosecuting attorney, said the settlement makes the homeowners’ appeals of the conditional use permit, the variance, the building permit

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A12 • Wednesday, July 18, 2018

SEQUIM GAZETTE

BUY ONE GET ONE

FREE If you cancel wireless service, credits may stop & remaining balance is due. With 24 monthly bill credits when you add a line. For well-qualified buyers. +tax.

W Washington St & River Rd Tax on pre-credit price due at sale. Limited time offer; subject to change. Qualifying credit, service, & finance agreements on both devices required. Samsung Galaxy S9: $0 down + $30/mo. x 24, pre-credit price: $720. 0% APR. If you cancel wireless service remaining balance at full price becomes due on 1 or both devices & credits may stop; contact us for details. $720 back on second device of equal or lesser value. Must be active and in good standing to receive credits; allow 2 bill cycles. Max 6 free or discounted devices/account. May not be combined with some offers or discounts (e.g. Carrier Freedom). See Open Internet Page & Terms and Conditions (including arbitration provision) at www.T-Mobile.com for additional information. T-Mobile and the magenta color are registered trademarks of Deutsche Telekom AG. Š 2018 T-Mobile USA, Inc.


B Community Wednesday, July 18, 2018

SECTION

SEQUIM GAZETTE

The hype behind hydrangeas B-3

Sports • Arts & Entertainment • Schools • Calendar

93 The joy of days of

summer

SEQUIM GAZETTE STAFF

• July 19 The Port Townsend Marine Science Center features exhibits, programs, and more with local marine and shoreline habitat, history, flora and fauna. Admission is $5 for adults, $3 for children (6 and younger, free). The center is open six days a week (no Tuesdays) during the summer, 11 a.m.-5 p.m. (www.ptmsc.org, 360-385-5582)

• July 20 During the lavender weekend, check out Art Jam Show and Sale. A 10-artist consortium that works in a variety of styles in 2D and 3D, from metal and colored resin to porcelain and found objects (www.rockhollowarts.com, rockhollowfarm@olypen. com). Or, if you’ve never seen driftwood art up close, now’s your chance. The Olympic Driftwood Sculptors Art Show is 10 a.m.-5 p.m. July 20-22 at the Sequim Middle School, 301 W. Hendrickson Road. Call 360-683-6860.

quilting Loretta Bilow talks love for Sunbonnet Sues, grange program creating more professionals to share than 4,000 quilts with with children experiencstuffed animals for first ing trauma or unwelWhether she’s setting responders and medical come transition in their up ice cream socials at the Sequim Prairie Grange or making quilts with fellow Sunbonnet Sues, Sequim’s Loretta Bilow, 76, has a lot of joy to share. A portion of her garage is a testament to that. Since 2008, Bilow, a retired financial ex- Last year’s featured artist Murph Gerber, left, talks pert with Frank Russell about her technique with Trudie Holt of Bremerton Co. consulting firm, at the Sunbonnet Sue Quilt Club’s annual show in has organized the Sun- 2017. This year’s show returns to the school July bonnet Sue’s Joy Quilts 20-22. Sequim Gazette file photo by Matthew Nash

BY MATTHEW NASH Sequim Gazette

lives. To make space for the quilts, Bilow transitioned her garage into her “Joy Factory.” Inside, friends from the club come every few months to wrap stuffed animals and bag them in plastic for various agencies and nonprofits helping someone in need, she said. Each Wednesday, they turn in their quilt work to her at the club meeting.

See QUILTING, B-8

Loretta Bilow’s quilts typically feature applique, small strips of fabric used to create a 3-D effect, such as with these koi fish. “If you like working with your hands, it’s very relaxing,” Bilow said of applique. “It’s like painting on fabric.” Sequim Gazette photo by Matthew Nash

Sunbonnet Sue Quilt Club’s annual Quilt Show “In Bloom!” Sequim Middle School, 301 W. Hendrickson Road 10 a.m.-5 p.m. Friday-Saturday, July 20-21; 10 a.m.-4 p.m. Sunday, July 22. $5 entry fee donation www.sunbonnetsuequiltclub.org

• July 21 Take a bicycle tour of some incredible local tribal art with the Jamestown S’Klallam Totem Tour on July 21 and 22. Call 360-683-2666 or see www.bensbikessequim.com/ totem-tour-recumbent-rally for more info.

• July 22 Check out this year’s Shakespeare in the Woods theater production of “As You Like It” on Sunday, July 22. Plays are set for Fridays, Saturdays and Sundays, July 20-Aug. 5, at the Port Angeles Fine Arts Center in Webster’s Woods’ Art Park, 1203 E. Lauridsen Blvd., Port Angeles. Pre-show is at 6 p.m., followed by the production itself at 6:30 p.m. Plays are free; donations are accepted. Bring blankets, low lawn chairs and a picnic. (www. pafac.org/shakespeare-inthe-woods.html)

• July 23 Enjoy some great local history by heading west for a tour of the Forks Timber Museum. The museum offers a look into the rich history of homesteading, farming and logging in the Pacific

See SUMMER, B-2

Driftwood sculptors celebrate 10 years with Lavender Art Show ton Street and at Carrie Blake Community Park for the Sequim Lavender Festival’s Street Fair. Admission Ten years in and Tuttie Peetz, is free with donations accepted for co-founder of Olympic Driftwood club operations. Sculptors, says the amount of talent The driftwood show features that turns out for its annual Laven- one-of-a-kind items to view and for der Festival sale along A r t s h o w Olympic Driftwood Sculptors with a raffle always suran un10th Lavender Festival Show for prises her. named drift“It ’s a l- 10 a.m.-5 p.m. Friday-Sunday, July 20-22 wood piece. ways fun for Sequim Middle School, 301 W. Hendrickson Road Peetz said me because seven artAdmission free with donations accepted you’re never ists worked sure what on the driftpeople will complete and bring in,” wood sculpture for two-three weeks she said. each. Some club members work on “You never knew what they were dozens of driftwood art pieces a year going to do before passing it along,” while some meticulously work on she said. only a few. Raffle ticket sales continue This year, more than 150 drift- through the club’s September meetwood sculptures will be on display ing. Last year, they raised $2,000 for from 10 a.m.-5 p.m., July 20-22, at a college scholarship for a student the Sequim Middle School Cafeteria, pursuing art or art education. 301 W. Hendrickson Road. An in-city Interest in driftwood in Sequim shuttle stops in front of Sequim High has remained high in 10 years. School, at Second Avenue/ WashingPeetz continues to offer driftwood BY MATTHEW NASH Sequim Gazette

Dale and Joyce Blankenship of Sequim look at work from the Olympic Driftwood Sculptors inside Sequim Middle School at last year’s Lavender Festival Art Show. The event continues for the 10th year July 20-22 in the school. Sequim Gazette file photo by Matthew Nash

classes but because the interest has grown so much with people coming to Sequim from as far as Gig Harbor or Canada she has a wait list. A key part has been the club’s encouragement of experimenting, i.e. using woods with metals.

“The big thing is that we’re so excited to not have any limitations on creativity,” Peetz said. “People are doing all kinds of fun things and we have a huge diversity of people

Art Jam returns for annual event BY ERIN HAWKINS Sequim Gazette

Art Jam 2018 is hosting its annual art show and sale during Sequim Lavender Weekend and will reveal its theme for this year’s event — a 10-foot totem representing the “fifth” element. From 10 a.m.-5 p.m. starting Friday, July 20 through Sunday, July 22, Art Jam will have a variety of art demonstrations, art for sale, craft activities, music and more at the barn at Rock Hollow Farm, 505 E. Silberhorn Road.

Art Jam 2018

There are nine artists in Art Jam and two guest artists each year. The artists participating in this year’s Art Jam include: Lynne Armstrong, Barb Boerigter, Brian Buntain, Ed Crumley, Mary Franchini, Terry Grasteit, Tammy Hall, Stephen Portner, Susan Gansert Shaw and guest artists Linda Collins Chapman and Gray Lucier. Each artist specializes in different art mediums, from acrylic and watercolor to sculpture to jewelry and Art Jam artists Stephen Portner and Susan Gansert Shaw stack four layers of the group’s more. The show each year 2018 project “The Great Totem”, a rotating totem that all the Art Jam artists created a

See JAM, B-8

See DRIFTWOOD, B-2

piece. It will be on display from July 20-22 at Rock Hollow Farm. Sequim Gazette photo by Erin Hawkins

Art show and sale When: 10 a.m.-5 p.m., Friday, July 20- Sunday, July 22 Where: In the barn at Rock Hollow Farm, 505 E. Silberhorn Road

New deadlines: Deadline for items appearing in B-section is noon Wednesday one week before publication at editor@sequimgazette.com or delivered to the Sequim Gazette office at 147 W. Washington St.


B2 • Wednesday, July 18, 2018

SEQUIM GAZETTE

Shakespeare in the Woods opens for a three-week run PAFAC: Where magic and enchantment fill the summer air

“As You Like It,” a romantic comedy by William Shakespeare

For Sequim Gazette

In this forest, our heroine Rosalind challenges society’s rules. Shaking them off, this whip-smart woman makes a rule set of her own, all while frolicking in the deep green. So begins Shakespeare’s pastoral “As You Like It,” a play that has explored the mysteries of love for some 400 years now. The tale of a woman who crosses all manner of borders — while teaching her companions how to live and love — arrives in Port Angeles’ forest and meadow this weekend. Shakespeare in the Woods, the Port Angeles Fine Arts Center’s summer foray into outdoor theater, is back for a three-weekend run, with performances Friday, Saturday and Sunday through Aug. 5. “As You Like It,” with a cast ranging from teenagers to seasoned actors from Sequim and Port Angeles, is about to unfold in the Webster’s Woods art park beside the center, with the meadow as performance space. As ever, admission is free. Also as always, Shakespeare in the Woods artistic director Anna Andersen will start the evening with a quick guide to full Shakespeare enjoyment, aka the pre-show, at 6 p.m. “It’s a little bit different this time,” she said, “a little more quirky with a lot more audience participation,” plus prizes for those who can answer some lighthearted quiz questions. “It’s going to be a tongue-in-cheek romp through some Shakespeare trivia and the plot of ‘As You Like It,’” said Andersen, adding that some of the community’s most skillful performers will appear. Theater artists across Clallam County, be they retired professionals, high school students or working

Dates: Friday, Saturday and Sunday, July 20-Aug. 5 Times: Pre-show 6 p.m.; main show 6:30 p.m. Location: Webster’s Woods art park at the Port Angeles Fine Arts Center, 1203 E. Lauridsen Blvd. Admission: Free; donations accepted Note: Blankets, low lawn chairs and picnics welcome; no pets nor glass containers. Contact: PAFAC.org, 360-457-3532 people with energy to spare, have been bringing Shakespeare to life here for four years now. Soon after moving here in 2014, Andersen visited Webster’s Woods, and her thoughts turned immediately to the bard’s tales. She staged “A Midsummer Night’s Dream” in 2015, “The Tempest” in 2016 and “Much Ado about Nothing” last summer. “As You Like It,” set by the bard in the lush Forest of Arden, fits right in. Seventeen-year-old Madelynne Jones of Port Angeles, already a Shakespeare in the Woods veteran, this year has the role of Rosalind. Sequim’s Tom Challinor, a Shakespeare scholar who appeared in Key City Public Theatre’s “Henry IV, Part 1” in Port Townsend last summer, plays the philosopher Jaques in “As You Like It.” Port Angeles actor and director Josh Sutcliffe portrays Touchstone, the court jester who accompanies Rosalind and company, while Ryan Chen, another Port Angeles teen, is the brave and tender Orlando. Benjamin Komar and Jonas Brown play the good duke and the

From page B-2 Northwest — including the Great Forks Fire in 1951 — all presented in a log cabin structure built by talented local volunteers. Admission is just $3 (children under 12 and military folks get in free). Summer hours are Monday-Saturday, 10 a.m.-5 p.m., and Sundays, 11 a.m.-4 p.m., through the end of September. (www.forkstimbermuseum.org, info@ forkstimbermuseum.org, 360-374-9663)

Shakespeare in the Woods

By DIANE URBANI DE LA PAZ

Summer

Celia (Sage Hunter), left, and Rosalind (Madelynne Jones) are cousins exiled to the Forest of Arden in “As You Like It,” the Shakespeare in the Woods production at the Port Angeles Fine Arts Center Friday, July 20, through Sunday, Aug. 5. Photo by Diane Urbani de la Paz bad duke; Brad Alemao is Oliver, Orlando’s loveless brother; Sage Hunter is Celia, Rosalind’s beloved cousin. Andersen plays Audrey, the goatherd who agrees to wed Touchstone even if she doesn’t understand half of what he’s saying. Together they pour themselves into the show, loaded as it is with Shakespearean sauciness and grace. There’s Jaques’ “All the world’s a stage/And all the men and women merely players” speech, Touchstone’s “We that are true lovers run into strange capers” remark, and near the conclusion Orlando, ever chivalrous, promising to love his sweetheart “forever and a day.” Since the show is free — donations are welcome, of course — audience members can return as often as they like, and perhaps catch something new each time, said Jessica Elliott, executive director of the Port Angeles Fine Arts Center. She noted that the audience grew from 300 in 2015 to more than 1,000 last summer; this year she hopes to top 1,200. Director Cheryl Koenig is shepherding her cast with help from stage manager Tavin Dotson, hair and

makeup artist Jennifer Horton and costume designer Richard Stephens. The show has music, too: a recorded soundtrack with live accompaniment on selected songs. Musicians include Chen on guitar, violist Luke Gavin who also plays the First Lord and the Second Lord, and violinist Marissa Wilson, who portrays Lord Amiens. Horton, the Sequim thespian who produced the pre-show for last summer’s “Much Ado,” is happy to be back in Webster’s Woods, and happy to see many of 2017’s performers have returned with her. “There is something magical about this space,” she said. “With Shakespeare enthusiasts in it, the meadow blooms.” For Koenig, a choreographer and actress who portrayed Rosalind in Western Washington University’s summer 1981 production, “As You Like It” is pure delight. “The show has the goods, she said: multiple romances, mistaken identities and villains who transform. And in the end, It has joy.”

A&E BRIEFS

• July 24 Go the distance or simply go for a stroll on the Dungeness Spit, a great place to take in sights and sounds of sea-faring wildlife. At 5.5 miles, it’s the world’s longest naturally occurring sandspit and a sanctuary for more than 250 species of birds, 41 species of land mammals and eight species of water mammals. Hike or a paddle to the end of the spit to find the old Dungeness Lighthouse, built in 1857 and now on the National Register of Historic Places. Admittance is a reasonable $3 per family. (www.fws. gov/refuge/dungeness/)

• July 25 Need a getaway with a view? Explore Lake Quinault, about 65 miles south of Forks, and cozy up in the exquisite Lake Quinault Lodge. It’s a great base from which you can get in day hikes, go for a paddle or simply relax in front of an epic fireplace. (www.olympicnationalparks.com/lodging/lakequinault-lodge/)

Driftwood From page B-1

Red Yarn brings the folk to Sequim As part of the North Olympic Library System’s Summer Reading Program, Red Yarn and friends visit the Sequim Library outdoor stage, 630 N. Sequim Ave, at 10:30 a.m. on Thursday, July 19. Red Yarn is Andy Furgeson, a family performer who weaves folk songs and puppetry into a show for all ages. “This redbearded bard shares positive values while reinvigorating the American folklore tradition for younger generations,” library representatives note. Furgeson is a musician, puppeteer and educator from Austin, Texas, but based in Portland, Ore., since 2005. His fifth album, “Red Yarn’s Old Barn,” was released earlier this year. The Sequim stop is one of four for Red Yarn as Furgeson visits all four North Olympic Library System branches. For more information about the Summer Reading Program and other events, visit www.nols.org/srp, call 360-417Red Yarn (Andy Furgeson) brings folk songs and puppetry 8500 or email to discover@nols.org.

Learn to make art journals

to the Sequim Library’s outdoor stage on July 19. Submitted photo

An art journal workshop is set for 10 a.m.-1 p.m. Saturday, July 28, in the art room at the Shipley Center, 921 E. Hammond St. Limit of 10 people; fee applies. Learn techniques and skills to create a unique art journal, and take a sampler-type journal home at the end of the workshop.

Participants are encouraged to bring materials — pencils, pens, erasers, rulers, scissors, glue/glue stick, watercolor paint and brushes, water container, colored pencils, etc. Materials are provided for those who don’t have them, however. No experience is necessary. Register in advance by calling 360-683-6806.

in their 30s-80s and everywhere in-between.” Peetz feels experimenting with art might be one reason the club has grown from 13 members to 95 since starting in 2008. Three of the founding members continue to participate, too. “It’s amazing how much it’s grown,” Peetz said. “It feels fabulous and rewarding.” At the show, a boutique features original driftwood pieces for sale, and visitors can take their photo with a large heart driftwood piece. For more information on Olympic Driftwood Sculptors, visit www.olympicdriftwoodsculptors.org/ or contact Tuttie Peetz at 360683-6860. Reach Matthew Nash at mnash@sequimgazette. com.

Seven artists worked twothree weeks each on this driftwood sculpture for a raffle at the Olympic Driftwood Sculptors’ Lavender Festival Art Show July 2022. Sequim Gazette photo by Matthew Nash

If you see news happening, let us know. Send your leads to editor@sequimgazette.com. 751863316

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Wednesday, July 18, 2018 • B3

SEQUIM GAZETTE

Olympic Cellars’ summer series brings back benevolent bands By MICHAEL DASHIELL Sequim Gazette

Get in the groove and give back at the same time. Olympic Cellars’ Summer 2018 Concert Series is once again hosting a number of peninsula- and out-of-area-based music acts this summer, with each concert benefiting local non-profit organizations. The family-friendly venue, at 255410 US Highway 101 between Sequim and Port Angeles, opens

Saturday, July 21, at 6 p.m. with music starting at 7 p.m., rain or shine. A local restaurant will be onsite for each concert with food available for purchase. Attendees are urged to get there early, bring warm clothes and bring a lawn chair, as there is limited seating. A patio near the stage is reserved for dancing. Carpooling also is encouraged, with limited parking spots on winery grounds. Food and non-alcoholic bever-

The West Coast Women’s Blues Revue plays the Olympic Cellars’ Summer 2018 Concert Series on Saturday, Aug. 11, helping support the Sequim Food Bank. Submitted photo

ages are allowed in the venue, but smoking/vaping and pets are not. All concerts are staffed by volunteers from the nonprofit of the week. Tickets are $13 in advance, $15 at the door; get tickets at the winery or on-line at Brown Paper Tickets. Season passes are available for $75.

The Nick Drummond Band plays the at Olympic Cellars’ Summer 2018 Concert Series on Saturday, Aug. 4, supporting Peninsula Friends of Animals. Submitted photo

Gleaners: Berries, cherries a boost for seniors, children

Locals with an abundance of berries (such as raspberries) are encouraged to donate to local youth and senior citizens through the WSU Extension Office of Clallam County’s gleaner program. Submitted photo

SEQUIM GAZETTE STAFF The WSU Extension Office of Clallam County is looking for gardens with ripe cherries and berries to share. The organization has a group of volunteer gleaners who come and harvest from local gardens and donate much of what they pick to food banks, senior centers and after school programs. “If you have too much of a good thing, consider sharing the wealth with your neighbors in Clallam County,” WSU Extension Gleaning Coordinator Sharah Truett said.

Children at food banks are fond of cherries and berries and they can be a great “gateway fruit” toward a healthy diet, Truett said. “You can really put a smile on the face of a senior who visits one of our local senior centers, by helping put fresh cherries and berries on their table,” Truett added. “We often hear from low-income seniors that our gleaned produce reminds them of their childhood growing up on a farm”. Learn how to sign your yard up to be a glean site by calling 360-565-2619 or contacting Truett at struett@ co.clallam.wa.us.

Summer series schedule • Saturday, July 21 — Fat Chance Band, supporting Port Angeles Chapter IV of the Philanthropic Education Organization (PEO) Playing for more than 30 years all over the Olympic Peninsula the Fat Chance Band brings to the stage classic rock covers and original tunes for the audience’s dancing pleasure • Saturday, July 28 — Shaggy Sweet, supporting Peninsula Trails Coalition A four-man band that gelled in 2008, Shaggy Sweet performs poprock-blues with a mix of originals and cover songs • Saturday, Aug. 4 — Nick Drummond Band, supporting Peninsula Friends of Animals Nick Drummond has been a performing songwriter for more than 10 years, selling out runs at historic venues such as Seattle’s Triple Door and Dimitriou’s Jazz Alley with Pacific Northwest band favorite, The Senate. Drummond is also known for his work with his former band, Impossible Bird.

• Saturday, Aug. 11 — West Coast Women’s Blues Revue, supporting Sequim Food Bank Established in 2010, The West Coast Women’s Blues Revue brings a variety of original and covers to audiences of all ages and musical tastes, tunes tinged with blues, funk, rock and soul. • Saturday, Aug. 18 — Longstride, supporting VIMO (Volunteers in Medicine of the Olympics) Longstride’s high-energy stage show features a “unique and distinctively lyrical reggae-rock-groove identity.” • Friday, Aug. 24, and Saturday, Aug. 25 — Creme Tangerine, supporting the Port Angeles Noon Rotary (24th) and Welfare for Animals Guild (25th) Expect all your favorite Beatles songs from Creme Tangerine, who plays faithful-but-not-carbon-copy versions of the classic band. For more about Olympic Cellars’ Summer 2018 Concert Series, see www.olympiccellars.com/summerconcert-series/.

All about hydrangeas With flower clusters like fluffy balls of cotton candy, hydrangeas are among the most popular summer-flowering shrubs for shady gardens. Hydrangeas can provide huge flower heads of white, pink, blue and blends of these colors above their rich green leaves. The word “hydrangea” comes from two Greek words meaning “water vessel,” which describes the cup-form of the small seed pod. There are 70-75 species of hydrangeas, the most popular being the Hydrangea macroGet It phylla, which are deciduous shrubs originally Growing native to Japan. They include mop-head hydrangeas, which have huge round heads of Bill Wrobel sterile flowers, and lace-cap hydrangeas, which have a central cluster of small fertile flowers, surrounded by a ring of attractive sterile flowers. There are several varieties of both which vary in size from dwarfs to climbers (consult local nurseries for details). One of my favorite species, the oak leaf hydrangea (Hydrangea quercifolia), is native to the United States. It has large pointed cones of white flowers that age to dusty rose on dark green attractive leaves (see photo). Growing 4 to 8 feet tall and wide, oak leaf hydrangeas are deciduous and have the added attraction of orange to burgundy fall foliage color. Hydrangeas should be planted in a spot where they receive some shade during the day. Avoid hot, sunny, dry areas or beds that are baked by the afternoon sun. Morning sun is much preferred by these plants, so an eastern exposure is excellent. As their name implies, hydrangeas are intolerant of dry conditions and need an evenly moist soil. They do best in beds that have been amended with generous amounts of organic matter, which helps retain soil moisture. Once planted, it is important to keep hydrangeas wellwatered. Hydrangeas also benefit from a 2- to 3-inch layer of mulch – such as leaves, pine straw or bark – over their root system to help maintain moist soil conditions. Interestingly, the colorful parts of the hydrangeas’ flower heads are not flower petals at all; they are modified leaves that surround the petals (called sepals). The actual flowers are tiny,

Photo by Sandy Cortez

inconspicuous and located in the middle of the sepals. Prune in the summer right after the colorful flower heads turn green. Cut off the faded flower heads with about 4 to 6 inches of stem. If you are trying to reduce the size of your bush, cut longer stems with the heads. If you need to reduce the size of the bush, you can cut back shoots to the ground. Most hydrangeas set their flower buds for the next year in late summer, so any pruning after that removes the flower buds and reduces or eliminates flowers the next year. The flower heads of hydrangeas are rather unique. Depending on the acidity or alkalinity of the soil the plant is growing in, the sepals can be different colors. Furthermore, you can change the color. If you have pink hydrangeas and you want them to be blue, treat the soil around the bushes with aluminum sulfate, an acid, (follow label instructions, usually 1 tablespoon per gallon of water) in March and again in October each year. Gradually, over time, the flower heads will turn blue. If your hydrangeas are blue and you want them to be pink, treat the soil around the bushes with lime (which is alkaline) following the same dosage and schedule. It may take a couple of years to be fully effective, but it can work. The intensity of the color is controlled by genetics and depends on the variety you are growing. White hydrangeas do not have pigment in their sepals and are white regardless of the soil pH. With proper pruning you will have gobs of these globes, and they are easy to dry so you can enjoy the blossoms all winter! Bill Wrobel is a Clallam County Master Gardener.

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Time for a “tune-up” at Sequim Health & Rehab with our outpatient therapies. You know you shouldn’t be chasing your grandchildren around the slippery pool area, but if you do, and injure yourself, Sequim Health & Rehab is ready to help you get back to the pool with our seven-day-a-week therapy department. FINALIST Best Rehabilitation Facility

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B4 • Wednesday, July 18, 2018

SEQUIM GAZETTE

COMMUNITY CALENDAR Deadline for items appearing in the community calendar is 5 p.m. Wednesday one week before publication at editor@sequimgazette.com or delivered to the Sequim Gazette at 147 W. Washington St.

Music/Dance/Etc. Thursday, July 19 • Red Yarn, folk for youths, 10 a.m., Sequim Library, 630 N. Sequim Ave. Friday, July 20 • Robert Hagan/Awesome Bob One-Man Variety Band, 6-8:30 p.m., $10, Sequim Elks Lodge, 143 Port Williams Road. • Hannah and Christian, rock-blues, 7-9 p.m., Wind Rose Cellars, 143 W. Washington St. • Norman Baker, 7-10 p.m., 7 Cedars Casino’s Rainforest Cafe, 270756 US Highway 101. Saturday, July 21 • Sarah Shea and Chez Jazz, vocal jazz, 7-9 p.m., Wind Rose Cellars, 143 W. Washington St. • Fat Chance, classic rockoriginals, 7 p.m., $13/$15, Olympic Cellars Winery, 255410 US Highway 101. • Joel Gibson Jr., 7 p.m., 7 Cedars Casino’s Rainforest Cafe, 270756 US Highway 101. Sunday, July 22 • Soul Posse, hillbilly rock & classic country, 6 p.m., $10, Sequim Elks Lodge, 143 Port Williams Road. Tuesday July 24 • Caribe Steel Band, Caribbean, 6-8 p.m., James Center for the Performing Arts/Carrie Blake Community Park, 500 N. Blake Ave. Thursday, July 26 • Olympic Express Big Band, 6 p.m., 7 Cedars Casino’s Club Seven, 270756 US Highway 101. Friday, July 27 • Jungible Music Series: The True Loves, modern soul, 6-9 p.m., $15, Jardin du Soleil, 3932 Sequim Dungeness Way. • Dawn Martin, rock, 7-9 p.m., Wind Rose Cellars, 143 W. Washington St. • Hippy & The Squids, 7-10 p.m., 7 Cedars Casino’s Rainforest Cafe, 270756 US Highway 101. Saturday, July 28 • Linda Dowdell and Craig Buhler, vocal jazz, 7-9 p.m., Wind Rose Cellars, 143 W. Washington St. • Shaggy Sweet, pop-rockblues, 7 p.m., $13/$15, Olympic Cellars Winery, 255410 US Highway 101. • Bread & Gravy, 7 p.m., 7 Cedars Casino’s Rainforest Cafe, 270756 US Highway 101. • After Midnight, Eric Clapton tribute, 10 p.m., 7

Cedars Casino’s Club Seven, 270756 US Highway 101. Sunday, July 29 • Black Diamond Junction, classic hits, 6-8:30 p.m., $10, Sequim Elks Lodge, 143 Port Williams Road. Tuesday, July 31 • Gansango Music & Dance, West Africa music, 10:30 a.m., Sequim Library, 630 N. Sequim Ave. • Black Door Alley, eclectic rock, 6-8 p.m., James Center for the Performing Arts/Carrie Blake Community Park, 500 N. Blake Ave. Friday, Aug. 3 • Jungible Music Series: Crushwater, folk-rock-punkLatin, 6-9 p.m., $15, Jardin du Soleil, 3932 Sequim Dungeness Way. Saturday, Aug. 4 • Nick Drummond Band, alt-folk, 7 p.m., $13/$15, Olympic Cellars Winery, 255410 US Highway 101. Sunday, Aug. 5 • Old Sidekicks & Side Chic, 6 p.m., $8,Sequim Elks Lodge, 143 Port Williams Road.

Events, exhibits • Art in the Library, featuring work by Clallam Mosaic artists, at Port Angeles Library, 2210 South Peabody St., through July 24. • House of Learning-Peninsula College Longhouse Art Gallery retrospective exhibit, 1502 E. Lauridsen Blvd, Port Angeles, through Friday, Aug. 31. scrowe@ pencol.edu.

Auditions/Submissions

Email to grandolympicschorus@gmail.com or call 360775-1425.

Ongoing music/dance Sundays • “Audio Cinema — The Music that Makes the Movies,” with Shelley Taylor Morgan, 3 p.m., KSQM 91.5 FM. Also at 9 p.m. Mondays. For program schedule, see www. ksqmfm.com. Mondays • “Audio Cinema — The Music that Makes the Movies.” (See Sunday listing) • Grand Olympic Chorus rehearsals for women’s a cappella four-part harmony. 6:30 p.m. 990 E. Washington St., Ste. 103. Call Beth, 360-775-1415, or Wendy, 683-0141. • Shipley Center ukulele group. 1-3 p.m. $3 non-members/$2 members. Beginner’s classes available, 360-4774240. 921 E. Hammond St. Tuesdays • The Cat’s Meow, jazz for dancers hosted by Port Angeles Senior Swingers Dance Group, 6:30-8:30 p.m., Port Angeles Senior Center, 328 E. Seventh St., $5 (first time free), 360-582-9026. • Sequim Community Orchestra rehearsals. 7-9 p.m. September-June, James Center for the Performing Arts, www.sequimcommunityorchestra.org. • Olympic Peninsula Men’s Chorus rehearsal. 6:308:30 p.m. Sunland Golf and Country Club clubhouse, 109 Hilltop Road. • Olympic Mountain Cloggers. 6 p.m. Howard Wood Memorial Theater, 132½ W. Washington St., 360-6813987. • Rhody O’s Square Dance Club. 7:30 p.m. Gardiner Community Center, 360683-2409. Wednesdays • Open mic with Victor Reventlow. Sign-ups 6 p.m., Nourish, 101 Provence View Lane. • Jerry’s Classic Country Band, 6 p.m. Sequim VFW Post 4760, 169 E. Washington St. • Sequim City Band rehearsal. 7-9 p.m. James Center for the Performing Arts (in north Carrie Blake Park), 350 N. Blake Ave., www.sequimcityband.org, scb@sequimcityband.org or 360-207-4722. Saturdays • Jerry’s Classic Country Band, 6 p.m. Sequim VFW Post 4760, 169 E. Washington St.

• Organizers of the 2019 Soroptimist Gala Garden Show are calling all artists to submit their work for the event’s featured garden theme. Mediums can be photos, watercolors, acrylics or oils. Interested applicants can find information for submission at the Gala Garden Show website at sequimgardenshow.com. • Blue Whole Gallery welcomes submissions from high school artists to be the focus of the Art Student of the Month. Students whose work is selected are asked to display one piece of work at the gallery (129 W. Washington St.) for a month and be a featured guest on the First Friday Art Walk that month. For more information, call Lynne Armstrong at 360-775-4788. • Grand Olympics Chorus of Sweet Adelines International is accepting new members. The chorus invites any woman who is interested in learning to sing a cappella harmony to join the group at Ongoing Events • Alcoholics Anonymous, 6:30 p.m. Monday evenings at 990 E. Washington St., Suite 877-682-4143 or 360-797E-103. Sing with the group 0259 or www.district55aa. or watch members practice. com for meeting schedule,

Rhodefer’s reminisce family tractor By ERIN HAWKINS Sequim Gazette

Grand Pioneer Wilma Rhodefer Johnson and her brother Sam Rhodefer paid respects to their father Bill Rhodefer’s tractor one last time before it was placed at Sequim Museum & Arts’ new exhibit center. The Rhodefer’s tractor is a 1940 Co-op B-2 row-crop with a Chrysler 6 cylinder engine, one of about 500 tractors manufactured between 1939 and 1941, according to Sequim Museum & Arts Executive Director Judy Reandeau Stipe. Reandeau Stipe said the tractor was built for power and speed and could reach times. • Shipley Center classes, activities. 921 E. Hammond St., Sequim, 360-683-6806. Sundays • Full Contact Trivia, 6 p.m., Wii Bowling 8 p.m. Oasis Bar & Grill, 301 E. Washington St., 360-5823143. • Bingo, noon, Sequim Elks Lodge, 143 Port Williams Road. $10 buy-in, 360683-2763. Mondays • WSU Clallam County Master Gardeners tend plots at Port Angeles Fifth Street Community Garden, 10 a.m.-noon; home gardeners welcome to ask questions about vegetable gardening. 360-565-2679. • Ping-pong, advanced, 681-4675; bingo, 360-6839546. • Sequim Duplicate Bridge Club games, 12:30 p.m., Masonic Lodge, 100 S. Fifth Ave., $5. 360-582-1289. • Sequim Valley Car Club, 6 p.m. third Monday, Sequim Elks Club, 143 Port Williams Road, 360-460-8319. • Ecumenical Taize service, 7 p.m. fourth Monday, St. Luke’s Episcopal Church, 525 N. Fifth Ave. • Peninsula Button Club, 1-3 p.m. fourth Monday, First Federal, 1202 W. Washington St., 360-683-7935. Tuesdays • Civil Air Patrol Dungeness Squadron, 6-8 p.m. Tuesdays, Sequim Middle School cafeteria, 301 W. Hendrickson Road, open to cadets age 12-18 and adults with aviation interests, mark. swanson@wawg.cap.gov or 360-912-2888. • Highland Irrigation Dis-

a speed of 35 miles per hour on the road. It sold for $1,200 at the Clallam Co-op in Sequim, Reandeau Stipe said, “a huge amount for any farmer pre World War II.” The tractor was used for a variety of purposes on the Rhodefer’s farm and became Sam’s after their father died. The tractor still runs today and Wilma said she remembers her brother driving the tractor and her trying it out on occasion. Reandeau Stipe said the tractor will be restored and placed at the museum’s new exhibit center, 544 N. Sequim Ave. tentatively set to open March 2019, It tentatively will appear in shows and parades.

trict, 7 p.m., first Tuesday, Adagio Bean & Leaf, 481 E. Washington St. • Sequim/Dungeness Kiwanis Club, noon-1 p.m., second/fourth Tuesday, Paradise Restaurant, 703 N. Sequim Ave. • Sequim Diabetes support group, 10-11 a.m., first Tuesday, Shipley Center, 921 E. Hammond St., 683-6806. • The Skwim Toastmasters Club, 7 p.m., first/third Tuesday, 680 W. Prairie St. Guests welcome. Victoria, 360-379-3814. • Drop-in grief support group, 1:30-3 p.m. first/third Tuesday, Sequim Community Church, 950 N. Fifth Ave. Paul Fiorini, 360-582-3796. • Peninsula Community Drum Circle, 6:30-8:30 p.m., fourth Tuesday; for July and August at Pam’s Labyrinth, 186 Deer Ridge Lane, Carlsborg, 360-683-3819. • National MS Society support group, 2-4 p.m., last Tuesday, OMC Sequim Medical Building, second floor conference room, 840 N. Fifth Ave., 206-817-5636. Wednesdays • Celebrate Recovery, 6-8 p.m., Dungeness Community Church, 45 Eberle Lane, 360-683-7333. • PAL (Parents of Addicted Loved Ones), 6-7:30 p.m., first and third Wednesdays, Sequim Community Church, 950 N. 5th Ave., 360-565-6368. • Blue Mountain Yoga+, 803 Carlsborg Rd, Suite D, has all levels of classes in yoga, tai chi and meditation. Also, studio available to rent for events. Call 360775-9078 or visit bluemountainyoga.co for class times/

cost, visit FB page. • The Olympic Peninsula Oneness Blessings Circle, 6:30-8 p.m. every Wednesday, 2227 E. Lindberg Road, Port Angeles, 360-477-5682. • Bird walks at Railroad Bridge Park, 681-4076; blood pressure checks, 360-4177486. Thursdays • Bingo, noon, Sequim Elks Lodge, 143 Port Williams Road, $10 buy-in, 360683-2763. • Ping-pong, advanced, 681-4675. • The DUCK Discussion, 9:15-10:45 a.m., Parkwood clubhouse, 261520 U.S. Highway 101. • Trivia Time Live, 8-10 p.m. 7 Cedars Ca sino, 270756 US Highway 101, Blyn, 360-683-7777. • Q u e s t er s Cl a ll a m C’lectors, 1-3 p.m. first Thursday. Call Nancy Hoffman, 360-582-0022, for location. • Strait Stamp Society, 6-8 p.m. first Thursday, library, 630 N. Sequim Ave. www.straitstamp.org. • Gardiner Community Cemetery Commissioners, 5 p.m. second Thursday, Gardiner Community Center, 980 Old Gardiner Road, Gardiner. • Alzheimer’s Association family caregiver support group, 1-2:30 p.m. second Thursday, Sequim Bible Church, Room 401, 847 N. Sequim Ave., 360-683-5294. • Olympic Peninsula Chapter of Club Miata Northwest, second Thursday. Call 716-704-5789 for time and meeting location.

See EVENTS, B-8

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Sports

Wednesday, July 18, 2018 • B5

SEQUIM GAZETTE

SPORTS BRIEFS Sprint boats competitions set for July 28-29

B-5

SEQUIM GAZETTE

Academy

continues tennis tradition

Tickets and reserved camping spots for the two upcoming sprint boat races on Saturday, July 28, and Saturday, Sept. 29, at Extreme Sports Park are available online at www. brownpapertickets.com. Ticket prices are now $25 for adults (ages 16 and older); $20 for seniors (55 and older) and the military; $15 for kids ages 6-15 and free for youths age 5 and younger. Camping fees are $30 for Friday through Sunday and $40 for Thursday through Sunday. Pit passes are available at the event only for an additional $5. Canopy spots and VIP passes are available by calling Kelie Morrison at 360-460-2601.

SkyRidge hosts own ‘Open’

Sixkiller, Huskies back for eighth ‘Classic’

SkyRidge Golf Course, 7015 Old Olympic Highway, hosts the course’s annual Clallam Links “Open” on Sunday, July 22. Format is individual medal play on the links-style course. Play starts after The Open finishes. A Mulligan stew-and-fixings lunch is at noon. A mini-shotgun opening starts at 1 p.m. on holes 1 and 7. The tourney features three divisions: men’s amateur 0-14, men’s amateur 15 and up, and women’s amateur. The first 40 paid players signed up are in. Cost is $55 per player and includes 18 holes of golf range balls, KPs, longest putt competition and lunch; power carts are $15 per seat. Call 360-683-3673 for more information or to register.

SEQUIM GAZETTE STAFF

PA golfer sinks first ace

Sequim Junior Tennis Academy just finished another successful week of teaching the basics to Sequim youths. Peninsula Tennis Club and the Sequim High School tennis program led the academy for its 11th year and first following the retirement of long-time organizer Don Thomas. This year, 37 students ages 8-18 participated July 9-13 at Sequim High School in four different groups with coaches Mark Textor, Doug and Allison Hastings, Mo Brasher, Stephen Prorok, Stephanie Lacour, Al Lizzul and Brenda Landstrom. Participate with Peninsula Tennis Club at noon each Sunday at Sequim High School’s tennis courts, 601 N. Sequim Ave. Sequim Gazette photo by Matthew Nash

It’s hard to keep a pack of Huskies down. Sonny Sixkiller, the heralded University of Washington quarterback, is bringing plenty of purple and gold back to Sequim for his 2018 Sonny Sixkiller Celebrity Golf Classic, slated for Friday, July 20, at The Cedars at Dungeness, 1965 Woodcock Road. Format for the eighth-annual tournament is a Florida Scramble, and will once again pair a participating foursome with a Husky legend. The event kicks off with a cocktail reception pairings party and a dinner and auction on Thursday evening, July 19, at 7 Cedars Casino a live auction will feature several Husky items and experiences. (Get tickets, $60 per person, at www.omhf.org/sonnysixkiller-celebrity-golf-clas). The next day, a slew of Husky athletic greats hit the course, including former players Damon Huard, Steve Emtman, Robin Earl, Bill Douglas, Jeff Jaeger, Earle Irvine, Famed University of Washington quarterback Sonny Sixkiller brings back a host of UW greats to Lincoln Kennedy, Greg Lewis, Derrin Doty, The Cedars at Dungeness on July 20. Photo courtesy of the Olympic Medical Center Foundation Rick Fenney, Bob Schloredt, Don McKeta, Bill Cahill, Jason Chorak, Michael Jackson, Scott Jones, Mark Lee and Ray Pinney, along with former coaches head football coaches Tom Baermann Keith Gilbertson and Jim Lambright. tees off on the Proceeds from the annual tourney benefit first hole at the Olympic Medical Center Foundation. The Cedars at Dungeness, playFans can attend the golf tourney free of ing in the annual charge. Sonny Sixkiller Backing the tourney is presenting sponHusky Golf sor Wilder Automotive Center, along with Classic in 2017. major sponsors 7 Cedars Casino and The Sequim Gazette Cedars at Dungeness golf course. photo by Michael Sixkiller was the dynamic quarterback Dashiell who helped turned around the Husky football program — and led the nation in passing in 1970. As a sophomore at the UW, Sixkiller took the reins of a team that had gone 1-9 the year before and directed

See SIXKILLER, B-6

BMX

riders raise

$3K+

for causes

Anglers set meeting The next meeting of Puget Sound Anglers-North Olympic Peninsula Chapter is set for 6:30 p.m. Thursday, July 19, at Trinity United Methodist Church, 100 S. Blake Ave., and features a special “Boat Set-up Show and Tell.” As many as four club members will bring their boats and speak about how they enhanced safety, catching, or organization of boat interiors. Some of the topics/demos will be windlass, drop fins, high speed pot puller, electronics (radar, three kinds of sonar, AIS and overlays) and more. Attendees are encouraged to bring a short step-stool/ladder to aid in viewing. The club will also host a short presentation by a representatives of Clallam County Marine Resources Committee to talk about 2018 educational outreach. The evening begins with viewing raffle prizes and fish stories. Following the county presentation at 7 p.m. there is break, then a short business meeting — which includes a financial report, government relations report, upcoming events discussions and fishing reports from members. The club meets the third Thursday of each month. The public is welcome. See www.psanopc.org and www. facebook.com/psanopc for more information.

Record turnout drawn for Clallam amateur tourney BY PIERRE LABOSSIERE Olympic Peninsula News Group

Local and regional BMX riders once again turned out to help race and raise funds for a good cause in Port Angeles this summer. On July 7, Lincoln Park BMX hosted its annual Race for Life, raising funds for USA BMX and the Leukemia & Lymphoma Society. With 151 riders participating, the event raised $3,170, BMX officials said last week. Top fundraisers for the Lincoln BMX Race for Life event include, from left, George Williams, Ty Bourm, Claire Luce, Gregory Jourdan, John De Shazo, Taylor Coleman, Tom Dalgardno, Zebastian Ferrier-Dixon, Cash Coleman and Andy Goldsbury, with track operator Sean Coleman. See race results online at www.sequimgazette.com. Submitted photo

Glenn Singer of Port Angeles aced his first hole-in-one on July 10 at The Cedars at Dungeness. Singer used an 8-iron to drive the 141-yard hole No. 17 at The Cedars. Scott Aughtry of Sequim and Robin Read of Port Angeles witnessed the feat.

Ed Klein won over the biggest-ever field of the Clallam County Amateur, building up a solid lead after two days and hanging on for the third day to finish first. Klein, based at Highland Golf Course in Tacoma, won with a three-day total of 226 (10 over par), beating Paul Schuller of Useless Bay Golf and Country Club, who finished with a 229 overall gross. Klein shot a 77 on July 6, had a great round of 72on July 7 and shot well enough at 77 on July 8 to hang on for the win. He won a purse of $275. Schuller shot a 72 Sunday to make it close. Klein won the overall gross, won the Flight 1 gross and won the Flight 1 net with a 205. The overall net champion was Bob Madsen of the Sky Ridge Golf Course, who finished with a 194 net (22 under

par), beating out Klein’s net by 11 strokes. Madsen also won the gross of Flight 3 with a score of 238 and received a purse payout of $225. The Flight 2 gross winner was Darrell Moody of The Cedars at Dungeness with a 242. He wins a purse of $225. Garrett Smithson, head professional at The Cedars at Dungeness, said 70 golfers participated in the three-course event that took place at Peninsula Golf and Country Club, SunLand Golf and Country Club and The Cedars at Dungeness on Friday, Saturday and Sunday. “The weather was perfect, the courses were fabulous,” Smithson said. He said scores were a bit up. “The scores were higher (this year). There was a little wind Friday and Saturday. I don’t know what to attribute the higher scores to other than the wind,” he said. See top three flight winners on B-6.


B6 • Wednesday, July 18, 2018

SEQUIM GAZETTE

COMMUNITY SCOREBOARD

Sixkiller

Sequim High grad Derrin Doty makes an approach to the green at the Sonny Sixkiller golf tournament at The Cedars at Dungeness in 2017. Doty played baseball at the University of Washington and was drafted by the California Angels in 1993. File photo by Dave Logan

From page B-5

seasons of 6-4, 8-3 and 8-3. Sixkiller led the nation in passing in 1970, completing 186 of 362 for 2,303 yards and 15 touchdowns. A native of Ashland, Ore., Sixkiller played for The Hawaiians in the World Football League and was a cast member in the original “The Longest Yard” film. Later, he appeared as a boat captain in “Hawaii Five-0.” For more information, contact Bruce Skinner at 360-417-7144, 360-8083204 or bruce@omhf.org, or George Hill at 360-417714 4, 360 - 808 -2856 or george@omhf.org.

2018 CLALLAM COUNTY AMATEUR GOLF TOURNEY RESULTS Flight 1 Gross Brandon Lancelle, third, 248 Ed Klein, first, 226 Flight 3 Gross Paul Schuller, second, 229 Bob Madsen, first, 238 Michael Dupuis, third, 231 (secAllen Osterberg, second 271 ond for purse) Ray Dejong, third, 273 Tom Nelson, third, 231 (second Flight 1 Net for purse) Ed Klein, first, 205 Flight 2 Gross Paul Schuller, second, 211 (first Darrell Moody, first, 242 for net purse) Steve Drundie, second, 246 Jade Tisdale, second, 211 (first for Jay Keohokalole, second, 246 net purse) (second for purse) Jim McCausland, second, 211

(first for net purse) Flight 2 Net Derek Moore, first, 214 Darrell Moody, second, 215 Steve Durndie, third, 218 (second for purse) Flight 3 Net Bob Madsen, first, 194 Michael Drescher, second, 207 (first for purse) Bill Rinehart, third, 210 (second for purse)

FAITH LUTHERAN CHURCH L.C.M.S.

FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH SEQUIM (SBC)

382 W. Cedar 683-4803

1323 Sequim-Dungeness Way

2027870

Sunday Worship Services 8:30 & 11 a.m. Adult Bible Classes and Sunday School 9:45 a.m.

VACATION BIBLE SCHOOL “SKY”

The Baha’i

Dungeness Valley Lutheran Church

Faith

1-800-22-UNITE

E.L.C.A. 925 N. Sequim Ave. Sunday Worship

TWO SERVICES 8:30 a.m. & 11:00 a.m. Christian Education: 9:40 a.m. Grace Abounds www.dvelca.org

360-681-0946

Sequim Worship Center

683-5367

w w w. s e q u i m c o m m u n i t y c h u r c h . o r g

Saint Joseph Parish 101 E. Maple St., Sequim

360-683-6076

www.clallamcatholic.com

Pastor Rich Hay

414 N. Sequim Ave.

WEDNESDAY

683-6170 255 Medsker Rd.

Pastors: Mark & Collette Pekar sequimadventist@sequimsdachurch.org

Traditional Worship Services

Nursery Available

Worship ..................................................................................11:00 A.M. Praise & Fellowship Service......................................................6:00 P.M. Wednesday Night Prayer Meeting ............................................7:00 P.M.

www.faithbaptistsequim.com

7652 Old Olympic Hwy., Sequim • 360 683-7303

PENINSULA Worldwide

CHURCH OF GOD A Bible Based Church Services: Saturday at 1 p.m. Gardiner Community Center 980 Old Gardiner Road Visitors Welcome For more information 360-417-0826

2152722

2027857

If you have a Bible question we will give you a Bible answer. Phone: 360 808-1021

30 Sanford Lane Mountain View Christian School

Family Oriented Ministry Emphasizing Bible Preaching & Teaching

Holds Sunday Service 10:00 Pioneer Park

Meeting at the American Legion Hall 107 E. Prairie Street off Sequim St. Sunday Bible Study and Worship at 10 am Wednesday Bible Study at 7:00 pm

Church 683-7373

2027869

THURSDAY

AWANA – 6:00 p.m.

Sat. 9:30 a.m. Sabbath School 10:45 a.m. Worship Service

Pastor Lonnie Jacobson

A Center For Positive Living

Rev. Lynn Osborne INFORMATION CALL 681-0177

Sequim Seventh-day Adventist Church

Faith Baptist Church

Sequim Center for Spiritual Living

2027884

Dave Wiitala, Senior Pastor Shane McCrossen, Family Life Pastor Pat Lynn, Student Ministries Pastor

2027882

Youth Groups - 6 p.m. Adult Bible Study & Prayer – 6 p.m.

Sunday Service: 10:00 a.m. Wednesday: 7:00 p.m. Sunday School: 10:00 a.m. (held at Reading Room) Christian Science Reading Room 121 North Sequim Avenue Tuesday through Saturday 12 noon until 3:00 p.m. ALL ARE WELCOME

2027880

847 North Sequim Ave. 683-4135 www.sequimbible.org

360-683-6731

Mass Schedule: Saturday Vigil: 5:00 p.m. Sunday: 8:30 & 10:30 a.m. Monday, Thursday & Friday: 8:30 a.m. Wednesday: 12:00 p.m. Spanish Mass every 2nd Sunday 2 p.m. Confession: 30 minutes prior to all daily Masses on Wednesday & Friday Weekend Confessions: Saturday 3:30 - 4:30 p.m.

2027878

Traditional Worship - 9:30 a.m. Contemporary Worship - 11:00 a.m. Bible Studies & Classes for all ages Check web or phone for more information

Website: www.obfchurch.org

2027876

2027889

SUNDAY WORSHIP

www.dcchurch.org

337 West Spruce • 683-9174

(in the Olympic Theatre Arts Building)

“Sharing Good News from the edge of the Olympic Mountains to the Ends of the Earth”

360-683-7333

Office open Mon-Thurs 8-4 and Fri 8-1

Sunday School for all ages 950 N. Fifth Avenue - (360) 683-4194 Loving infant care Dr. Scott E. Koenigsaecker, Lead Pastor Rev. Rick Dietzman, Associate Pastor Nathan Funston, Director of Worship, Music & Arts Keith Sandell, Director of Youth Ministries Jennifer Gillis, Director of Children’s Ministries

Weekly programs provided for youth and adults, such as AWANA and Precept Bible studies

SUNDAY MORNING SERVICE 10:45 AM

(4.5 miles N. of Hwy 101 on Sequim-Dungeness Way)

Christ, Scientist

10:00 a.m. Worship, Nursery & Children’s Church 10:00 a.m. Tuesday Precept Bible Study

640 N. Sequim Avenue 360-683-7981

church@sequimtumc.org www.sequimtumc.org

First Church of

OLYMPIC BIBLE FELLOWSHIP

Rev. David L. Westman

sequimworshipcenter.org

100 South Blake Ave.

9:00 am and 10:45 am Nursery through 5th-Grade Programs are available at 2nd service, 1st service offers Nursery through 1st-grade. Junior High Classes at 10:45, High School Classes 10:15-10:45 Pastors: Tim Richards, Wayne Yamamoto David Piper, Britt Hemphill 45 Eberle Lane, Sequim

2027873

Weekly study sessions

2027866

2027855

Welcome Pastor Russ Britton July 29, 2018

Sunday Worship Services

SUNDAY WORSHIP 9am: Contemporary 10am: Blended 11am: Modern

2027887

Call 683-5520 or 683-3285 “It is the hour of unity of the sons of men and of the drawing together of all races and classes. You are loosed from ancient superstitions which have kept men ignorant, destroying the foundation of true humanity.” Abdu’l-Baha

TriniTy UniTed MeThodisT ChUrCh

2027861

P.O. Box 925, Sequim, WA 98382 Pastors Steve Eaton and Roger Stites www.FLCsequim.org

Dungeness Community Church

2027892

July 9-13, 9am-12pm • For kids ages 4-12

Peoples, 34. Putts: Peoples 31 Second division — 1. Hyesuk The Cedars at Dungeness Haglin, 34; 2. Lori Oakes, 34.5; 3. • Merchant’s League, July 5 Sue Mobley, 35.5. Putts: Mobley 29 Team scores: KPs: Lisa Ballantyne, Jan ClenSequim Plumbing 5.5, Eric’s dening, Wanda Synnestvedt RV 4.5 Birdies: Ballantyne, Hash, PeoDungeness Golf Shop 10, Skyples, Synnestvedt. Ridge Golf Club 0 Dungeness Tile and Stone 10, • 7 Cedars Cup Summer Series, Angeles Plumbing 0 Mischmidt 10, Stymies Bar and July 11 First flight — Gross: 1. Ron Grill 0 Castell Insurance 6.5, Griffin Grant, 72. Net: 1. Joe Sheriff, 65; 2. Roberth Mares, 66; 3. Tracy Custom Homes .5 Jamestown Aces 10, Bliemeis- Dunlap, 69 Second flight — Gross: 1. (tie) ters 0 Bill Mair Insurance 7, Liquid Brian Anderson and John Nally, 79. Net: 1. (tie) Justin Ewing and Jim Painting 3 Jaqubino, 70 Individual scores: Third flight — Gross: 1. Kenneth Low division — Gross: 1. Jeff Jones, 36; 2. (tie) Mark Hash, Josh See, 77. Net: 1. Cameron MacdonKoester and Chad Morgan, 39. ald, 67; 2. Bill Berry, 69; 3. Donald Net: 1. Josh Francis, 29; 2. (tie) Myers, 71 Fourth flight — Gross: 1. Kris Rick Ferguson and Judy Reno, 32; 4. (tie) Justin Ewing and Mark Lether, 82. Net: 1. Karl Brehm, 67; 2. (tie) Cary Richardson and Gary Haag, 33 High division — Gross: 1. Jan Williams, 69 Fifth flight — Gross: 1. James Clendening, 44; 2. Brooke Griffin, 46; 3. Ken Hagan, 47; 4. (tie) Matt Engel, 85. Net: 1. Joe Tomita, 65; Bailey and Mel Stevens, 50. Net: 1. 2. Ken Beard, 66; 3. (tie) Morris (tie) Mark Ausmus, Dennise Ket- Fosse and Vincent Stackhouse, tel and Randy Kokrda, 30; 4. Joel 68 Sixth flight — Gross: 1. Michael Berson, 31 KPs: Clendening, Francis, Haag, Drescher, 93. Net: 1. Barry Tuteur, 69; 2. Lawrence Trafton, 70; 3. (tie) Rich Burlingame. Bates Bankert and Wally Jenkins, • CADWGA, Five & Four, July 10 73 KPs: Dunlap, Engel, Tomita, DaFirst division — 1. (tie) Linda Hash and Yoon Park, 33.5; 3. Jane vid McArthur, Jerry McLinn.

Sunday School & Nursery: 10:00 a.m. Worship Service: 10:00 a.m. Bill Green, Pastor 2027871

SUNDAYS Bible Study 9:15 a.m. Morning Service 10:45 a.m. Evening Service 6:00 p.m. WEDNESDAYS Prayer Meeting 6:00 p.m. www.fbcsequim.com Pastor Wes Funkhouser Pastor to Senior Adults Ed Dorstad 360-683-2114

Golf


Wednesday, July 18, 2018 • B7

SEQUIM GAZETTE

Schools

B-7

SEQUIM GAZETTE

Keeping communication open Parenting Matters Cynthia Martin

MacKenzie Worley cuts down a net after he and fellow Boys & Girls Club campers enjoyed a Seattle Storm basketball game last week. Submitted photo

B&G Club campers enjoy hikes, hoops and crafts BOYS & GIRLS CLUBS OF THE OLYMPIC PENINSULA For the Sequim Gazette

Thanks to a fantastic relationship with Seattle Storm, we were able to take 34 Boys & Girls Club summer campers to enjoy a game in a suite. Our most involved club members who have gone above and beyond so far this summer demonstrating leadership and community were rewarded for their outstanding character and service to the club. These kids were taken to Key Arena and enjoyed some playground time at Seattle Center before the game. They watched the Seattle Storm lose by a bucket in a close game before the highlight of the trip going court-side. When the game ended, our members took the court and each climbed a ladder and cut down the net. They were able to see and feel what it’s like to be center stage and to be a champion.

Morning Camp We had two great literary weeks; first, the kids read together the book “Wonder,” where main character Auggie has a facial deformity and must undergo upsetting situations and hardships in middle school coupled with traditional comingof-age issues. Our kids participated in crafts and activities and all took a kindness pledge, signed a contract and posted them up in the Club lobby. Our Brain Gain members followed suit, by learning about diversity and wrote and delivered their own public service announcements.

Enjoying a day at Rialto Beach are Boys & Girls Club campers, with a National Park ranger. Submitted photo

The last week, members explored the poetry of Shel Silverstein. The amazing author has written many classics and famous poems so it wasn’t hard filling the day with all sorts of silly fun. The poems and stories inspired crafts. After reading “The Giving Tree,” together morning camp participants used brown lunch bags, frayed and twisted them into their own mini tree and topped them with tissue paper leaves. “The Zebra Question” reading led to several discussions about how we view things — perhaps you are black with white stripes, or maybe white with black stripes. Our members took a position and then created abstract art by rolling marble dipped in white paint on black paper or by rolling on white paper with black paint. We wrapped the week with a trip around the building to see where the sidewalk ends before loading up on the bus for an outdoor barbecue field

trip to Kitsap Memorial Park to soak up the great summer sun.

Junior Rangers One of our very favorite programs is back and better than ever, as our Olympic National Park rangers deepen their relationship with the club youths. The first adventure took our 30 kids age 8 and older to Spruce Railroad Trail for a 6-mile hike. They split into groups and set out on their way. Our Unit Director “Diamond Dave” and his group the “Turtles” were the caboose of the group keeping up and enjoying the trail a slightly slower pace. The highlight was enjoying lunch in a cave. Last week we went to beaches at Rialto Beach exploring tide pools and hiking to Hole In the Wall. The rangers led our group of juniors through a booklet on Ocean Stewardship and each of our kiddos learned a bit on how to be a good neighbor to the beaches we live near.

It is easy to forget about the importance of talking with your children. After all, you don’t need to reach out to talk to them because they will let you know if they have anything they need to talk about. Wrong. If you do not do the right things, your line of communication with this very important person in your life will be lost. There are specific things you can do to help improve and/or repair a

broken communication system. Make time available to talk Make sure you open the lines of communication. Have your child sit down and tell you about her day. When you pick her up from her friend’s house and are riding home in the car, ask how things went. Sometimes it is good and other times it isn’t. If you are puttering around the kitchen, ask questions but encourage more than one word responses. Do it repeatedly and you will help your child open up about her life to you. Listen to the little stuff If you listen, more information will come. Sometimes it takes a little time and effort but that is okay. When your child knows you are listening, he is more likely to trust you enough to talk about more things in his life. This is true on the heavy issues such as sex and drugs or everyday things like schoolwork, friends and his relationship with you. Show him articles that discuss issues you should be discussing and see what he says about them. You can even talk about issues in your own life that might help him open up about his life. Listen between the lines For many kids, especially teens, it is hard to talk to parents about things that really matter. Pay attention to the subjects your child struggles to talk about with you. Then take the time to make it happen. Figure out ways to bring up topics that might be important to talk about. Something that happens to others might get him to open up about his own life. Ask his opinion Few things please children (or anybody else) more than being asked their opinion. Ask your child’s opinion on little and big things. Don’t interrupt In a national survey, more than half of children said that when they talked, their parents often or sometimes did not give them a chance to explain themselves. Give your child some extra time to explain her opinions or desires, even if you think you know what she is likely to say. The Head of the Children’s Defense Fund wrote a message to her children (Edelman, M.W., “The Measure of Our Success: A Letter to My Children and Yours, “Harper Perennial, NY, 1992) that teach all of us about raising our children: “I seek your forgiveness for the times I talked when I should have listened; got angry when I should have been patient; acted when I should have waited; feared when I should have delighted; scolded when I should have encouraged; criticized when I should have complimented; said no when I should have said yes and said yes when I should have said no. I did not know a whole lot about parenting or how to ask for help. I often tried too hard and wanted and demanded so much, and mistakenly sometimes tried to mold you into my image of what I wanted you to be rather than discovering and nourishing you as you emerged and grew.” There is a lot to learn about being a parent. It is like learning to be a good partner. It all begins and too frequently ends when communication between the parties becomes hindered. Your relationship with your child is worth investing in effective communication, When you see that it has been a long time without much talking between you and anyone important to your life, fix it. Talk about it. Think about it. Work on it. Make time for it. Make it happen. If you need to go someplace different to make it happen, go there. If you need to close the door to have privacy, do it. Talking together and understanding each other is a critical thing in positive relationships. Invest the time to make sure you have that understanding. Communication is really worth it. Cynthia Martin is the founder of the First Teacher program and former executive director of Parenting Matters Foundation, which publishes newsletters for parents, caregivers and grandparents. To reach current First Teacher Executive Director Nicole Brewer, email nicole@firstteacher.org or call 360-681-2250.

‘Hands On’ museum to visit libraries SEQUIM GAZETTE STAFF History comes alive with the Hands On Children’s Museum, an exhibition visiting the North Olympic Library System on Tuesday, July 24. The museum exhibit first Library volunteers work with youths at a Hands On Children’s Museum in Port Angeles. Photo courtesy of the North Olympic visits the Sequim Middle Library System School Gym, 301 West Hen-

drickson Road, from 10:30 a.m.-12:30 p.m, before a stop at the Forks Library later that day (4-5:30 p.m.). Youths and families are encouraged to stop by any time to try their hand at creating a kazoo, tracing fossils, race “Rumble-Bots” and try out Makey-Makey creations. The Hands On Children’s

Museum “stimulates curiosity, creativity and learning through fun, interactive exhibits and programs for children, families and school groups,” library representatives say. Located in Olympia, the museum is known regionally as a destination for children and families, and its participation in the

library’s annual summer reading program is part of an ongoing outreach to bring the museum to new audiences. For more information about the Summer Reading Program and other events, visit www.nols.org/srp, call 360-417-8500 or email to discover@nols.org. 7A1983054

Ollie the Otter’s

Kids Savings Club


B8 • Wednesday, July 18, 2018

SEQUIM GAZETTE

Quilting From page B-1

Recent joy quilts will be on display for the 32nd annual Sunbonnet Sue Quilt Club’s annual Quilt Show from July 20-22 at the Sequim Middle School where Bilow also is the show’s featured artist. This year’s “In Bloom!” theme features hundreds of quilts on display along with vendors, demonstrations and more. Raffle tickets for this year’s quilt, also called “In Bloom!” features work from 12 quilters using hand applique and machine quilting. Bilow is one of the participants and a veteran applique hand stitcher, too.

Applying applique “If you like working with your hands, it’s very relaxing,” Bilow said of applique. “It’s like painting on fabric.” Applique, she said, includes cutting small pieces of fabric and layering them, i.e. a rose with five-six pieces of fabric for petals and leaves on the stem. “It’s a 3-D effect and it doesn’t have to be heavy,” she said. Bilow said she’s always loved to sew and remembers her first quilt from 1971 was hand-stitched applique. She made two things that first year, she said, and remembers bringing projects to her children’s sporting events in the years following. In 1997, Bilow said she found her love for quilting grew exponentially. She joined the National Applique Society and became heavily involved

Since 2008, Loretta Bilow has coordinated Joy Quilts featuring stuffed animals wrapped in quilts for first responders and medical professionals to share with children experiencing trauma or unwelcome transition in their lives. She’s helped distribute more than 4,000 Joy Quilts in the area, in Washington and worldwide. Sequim Gazette photo by Matthew Nash

helping putting on shows throughout the country. Years later, she retired from the group as president. Applique has quite the following in the area with nine National Applique Society chapters operating at one point, four officially and a few more unofficially continuing today. Bilow continues to host an applique retreat “Applique by Seabeck Bay” the last weekend of March. She welcomes about 50 women each year since it started in 2005.

Featured quilter Bilow said she was “flabbergasted” when former featured quilters selected her for this year’s Quilt Show. “I don’t put my quilts up in national shows. I’m happy to do what I do,” she said. That’s usually making quilts for her many family members, including three children, 17 grandchildren and three great-grandchildren. She’ll feature dozens of her quilts at the quilt show but prefers not to

sell them. Going to the show has been a tradition since 1999 following the tragic death of her husband Dennis Bilow, a Sequim High graduate. Bilow said two weeks following her husband’s death she opted to volunteer at the show in 2000 because she wanted to stay busy. “I had to do something,” she said. The club has welcomed her ever since then. “It’s wonderful to see everyone’s

projects,” Bilow said. Along with her work with the Sunbonnet Sues, Bilow remains active with the Sequim Prairie Grange. She and Marie Paddock serve as co-chairmen of its ice cream socials, and Bilow volunteers at each function. “It’s a great organization,” she said. “I wish we could get a lot more people involved in it.” People can see more of her work, a 6-foot by 6-foot Barn Quilt hanging outside Macleay Hall at 290 Macleay Road in Carlsborg as part of the Washington State Heritage Quilt Trail. With help from many parties in the project, Bilow designed the wooden quilt and with Nancy Hutt painted its four corner blocks that represent Washington’s pattern. While she’s stayed out of the national competitive quilting scene, Bilow has entered and won ribbons for many of her quilts through the Washington Grange’s state convention. She continues to partner with grange members who supply animals and quilts for the Joy Quilt program. People can donate stuffed animals about 10”-12” and fabric to Joy Quilts by calling Bilow at 360-582-0100. For more on the Sunbonnet Sue Quilt Club, visit sunbonnetsuequiltclub.org or attend a weekly meeting starting at 9 a.m. Wednesdays at the Sequim Masonic Lodge, 700 S. Fifth Ave. Reach Matthew Nash at mnash@ sequimgazette.com.

Jam

Events

offers artists an opportunity to display a large body of his or her work reflecting personal style, vision and technical proficiency. Art Jam’s theme this year is the “fifth” element: a 10foot rotating totem created by Art Jam artists called “The Great Totem” that will be on display for the weekend event. Each artist was given a 1-foot section of irrigation pipe to build their totem piece around and each piece could not be taller than 12 inches and no wider than 36 inches and could not exceed 10-12 pounds. “Each piece (of the totem) is how each artist has interpreted the fifth element,” Susan Gansert Shaw said. Every year the group works on a group project for

• Sequim Valley Lions Club, 6:30 p.m. second/ fourth Thursday, Paradise Restaurant, 703 N. Sequim Ave. Fridays • Open mic with Victor Reventlow, 4:30-7:30 p.m., Fairmount Diner, 1127 West Highway 101, Port Angeles, 360-797-4906. • Fourth Friday Readings, 6:30 p.m. fourth Friday, The Lodge, 660 Evergreen Farm Way. Heidi@olypen.com. • Sequim Duplicate Bridge Club games, 12:30 p.m., Masonic Lodge, 100 S. Fifth Ave., $5. 360-5821289. • Great Decisions Discussion Group, 10 a.m.-noon first and third Fridays, Sequim Library, 630 N. Sequim Ave. Moderated Discussion group sponsored through the Foreign Policy Association; participants learn about, discuss important current foreign policy issues. Guests and new members encouraged.

From page B-1

From page B-4

The artists of Art Jam, from left, Mary Franchini, Tammy Hall, Lynne Armstrong, Susan Gansert Shaw, Ed Crumley, Barb Boerigter, Brian Buntain, guest artist Linda Collins Chapman and Terry Grasteit prime a board for the community mural available for guests to contribute to at Art Jam 2018. Sequim Gazette photo by Erin Hawkins

the event and last year the group created a 6-foot raven woman called “Our Raven.” Rock Hollow Farm is

872087017

Dining Guide

open for guests to bring food walk along if they choose. and drinks to have a picnic For more information and there will be music and about Art Jam, visit http:// trails available for guests to rockhollowarts.com/.

Topics announced and communicated in advance. geonoa@yahoo.com. Saturdays • Family Flicks, free family friendly movies, 2 p.m. first Saturday, OctoberApril, Sequim Library, 630 N. Sequim Ave., 360-6831161. • Meditation group, 9-10:30 a.m. second/fourth Saturdays. Dungeness Valley Lutheran Church parish house, 923 N. Sequim Ave., 360-683-4775. • The Northern Olympic Lung Pulmonary group, 11:30 a.m. fourth Saturday, Mariner Cafe, 609 W. Washington St. Call Annette Mari, 360-681-3010, or Diane Dettmer, 360-565-8301. • National Federation of the Blind of Clallam County, 1-3 p.m. first Saturday, Mariner Cafe, 609 W. Washington St., Ste. 1, 360-582-6931 or nfbclallamcounty@gmail.com. No host luncheon. • Retired Coast Guard, 10 a.m. breakfast, third Saturday, Joshua’s, 113 Del Guzzi Drive, Port Angeles.

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Clallam Co

Interested candidates, contact: eebling@shr.cssnf.com

Clallam Co

1116 East Lauridsen Blvd., Port Angeles

650 West Hemlock St., Sequim

360.452.9206

360.582.2400

For more information, please visit either facility online at:

650 West Hemlock St | Sequim, WA 98382 360. 582.2400 • www.sequimskillednursing.com

www.crestwoodskillednursing.com www.sequimskillednursing.com

MARK ITCounty SOLD Wide Classifieds

Your Real estate search ends here!

Sequim Gazette’s real estate guide to homes and land in Clallam County See more at www.sequimgazette.com/classified | See locator map on Page 2

A

30+ MIXED USED ACRES

C

PRICE REDUCTION!

OPPORTUNITY AWAITS! Unique opportunity to own 30+ acres zoned Urban Center which allows for a mixed use of residential, low impact commercial and limited industrial activities. Property borders Department of Natural Resources land. Power and septic are installed to current home which will likely need to be removed/demolished. Property also comes with one Crescent Water Association share, a $5,100 value. Current zoning may allow for subdividing. MLS#320621 $289,000

RARE LOW BANK WATERFRONT with spectacular views of Protection Island, Mt. Baker, San Juan Islands, & the Straits. This .21 acre lot includes a private community beach/boat launch. 75’ of beach frontage. Water hooked up, Septic installed! Call Team Tenhoff (206) 853-5033. ML#320652 $280,000

D

B 46+ ACRES IN HISTORIC SEQUIM NEIGHBORHOOD

RARE OPPORTUNITY TO OWN A FARM in a historic Sequim neighborhood! This 46.8 acre property sits 1.8 miles up Chicken Coop Road. Trees, mountains, a creek, Irrigation water rights and more all packed into this valley oasis. There is the potential to subdivide or build your dream home complete with a shop/barn, etc. So many options with this land! The Chicken Coop Dance Hall sits on part of the property and is included with the sale or can be removed if desired. Timber was recently valued at $228,000. MLS#311338 $462,000

YOUR REAL ESTATE LISTING COULD BE HERE!

LUXURY, WATER VIEWS, PRIVACY! This architecturally designed 2 BR, 2 BA home overlooks Discovery Bay on over 9 acres. Built in 2005, the exquisite 3523 SF interior has custom metal & wood work throughout. Spectacular features incl. a gourmet kitchen, wine cellar w/ dumbwaiter, game room, radiant floor heat & custom lighting. Extravagance carries on the outside w/ resort like gardens, flagstone patio, hot tub, pet shower, greenhouse, secret gazebo & solar energy. This property has it all. Call Katie Marble (360) 460-4487. ML#321193 $899,000

To place your listing email: realestate@sequimgazette.com E MOUNTAIN VIEW ESTATE

UNIQUE, PRIVATE 5 ACRES w/beautiful shrubs, plants, & towering trees, and a lovely 2 story custom old growth cedar 2 BR, 2.5 BA, home w/finished basement. Wonderful cedar exercise room w/large windows & a cozy den w/pellet stove. Finished 3 car show garage w/shop area, plus separate garage/shop w/ woodstove & storage area. Paved driveway to all the buildings. 2 RV sites for guests or could be rented out. ML#321367 $675,000.

F

PARKWOOD

LOVELY 3 BR, 2 BA MANUFACTURED HOME in Parkwood, a 55 or older mobile home park. Features include den w/ woodstove. Laundry room. Attached garage w/electric door opener. Covered front porch. Very nice corner lot w/ tall trees & easy care bark. Private fenced back yard w/wood deck. Access at side to greenbelt, walking trails & clubhouse. ML#320804 $119,500.

G

MOUNTAIN VIEW

GREAT BUILDING LOT in Aspen Creek Subdivision. This mountain view parcel is located at the end of a cul-de-sac and next to a creek. The parcel is level and power, water, phone, and sewer available to the parcel. Great location with easy access to shopping, restaurants, and all downtown. ML#321333 $62,500.

H

PRIVATE SETTING

BEAUTIFUL 3 BR, 2 BA HOME on 1.26 semi secluded acres located close to town . Features include a covered entry. Kitchen w/garden window. Living room w/ fireplace. Master suite w/fireplace & sauna. The property is completely fenced, & offers a nice assortment of fruit trees, berries, and garden spaces plus a greenhouse, RV/boat shelter, & storage building. ML#311898 $339,900.

872137052

Associate Director of Nursing (ADON) Unit Manager:


C-2

CountyWide Classifieds D Serving Clallam County D July 18, 2018

RENTAL PROPERTIES ARE IN DEMAND

LET OUR FRIENDLY TEAM RENT OUT YOUR RENTAL PROPERTY

FAST!

YOU PAY NOTHING UNTIL WE PLACE A TENANT WE OFFER:

Real Estate for Sale Manufactured Homes

• Protection of Your Investm ent •Tenant Screening • Rent Collection • Direct Bank Deposits • Facilitate Maintenance • Online Statement Access 24/7/365 • Friendly Service & More…

872160382

TINY HOUSE/OFFICE: MUST SELL BY 7/31. Cute, new, 8x16, insulated, electr ic. MAKE OFFER YOU CANNOT REFUSE! $12,000/obo. Call Frost: 360-379-5573

WE LOOK FORWARD TO WORKING WITH YOU

Real Estate for Rent Clallam County

VISIT US AT

SEQ: 2 Br. 1Ba. plus bonus room, near Carrie Blake Park, avail. 8/1. $1050 mo. plus deposit. Nice!! (360)808-8188 (360)808-9878

PORTANGELESRENTALS.COM OR

360-683-3311

Garage Sales & Auctions

2013 HYUNDAI

VELOSTER Turbo Coupe

$11,981

Garage/Moving Sales Sequim

Garage/Moving Sales Sequim

#1

#5

VINTAGE BARN SALE. Fri. Sat. 9-4 p.m., 300 Thornton, Sequim. (Off Cays by Anderson). Antiques collectibles farmy rustic retro On Lavender route. Back this weekend and next weekend for lavender fest! lots of new treasures, finds, v i n t a g e g o o d i e s, a n tiques, tables, chairs, patio and gardening, trunks, cabinets, cupb o a r d s, a d i r o n d a ck s, carts, industrial, military cots, old stove, cool metal hutch, old suitcases, birdhouses, wood doors a n d w i n d ow s, s c r e e n doors, bed frames, mid c e n t u r y f u n k y, f u n , unique, and one of a kind pieces.

STK#P5295 1 only, subject to prior sale. Sale Price plus tax and license. A negotiable $150 documentation fee may be added. See Wilder Auto for details. Ad expires 1 week from date of publication.

WILDER AUTO

1-888-813-8545 101 and Deer Park Rd, Port Angeles • You Can Count On Us! www.wilderauto.com

PLEASE ADOPT ME

Welfare for Animals Guild

Garage/Moving Sales Sequim

#10

HUGE GARAGE SALE: July 21 st and 22 nd, 11-5 p.m., 6201 O l d O l y m p i c H w y. Come and check it out! We have lots of outdoor items including camping and fishing gear, kitchen appliances including a microwave, ice cream maker, rice cooker, blender etc, nice kitchen table and four chairs as well as lots of free stuff. Too much to list.

PARKWOOD Community Yard Sale: Fr i. Sat. July 20th and 21st 8-3 p.m., 261520 Hwy 101, south side of 101 by Sears. Over 20 homes participating!

“Nobody does it better.”

FOR MORE INFORMATION PLEASE CALL

683-3311

#6

#11

GARAGE Sale: Fri. Sat. 8-3pm. 541 Parkwood Blvd. Follow the signs. Come on come all! Ginor mous sale. Something for everyone. Uni“I FOUND IT IN FREEBIES!” c o r n s , m i n i a t u r e s , antique linens, fabric, ta“Nobody does it better.” blecloths, furniture, original Fiesta ware, Bauer and Weller, tools, new gas engine.

(360) 460-6258 www.petfinder.com welfare4animals@hotmail.com Sponsored by caring pet lovers. ARLO is a very sweet Chihuahua mix. He is 3-years-old and has a beautiful chestnut coat. Arlo needs a human companion that understands Chihuahua’s and can help him overcome his fear and insecurities. Arlo needs a quiet, focused home where he and his human companion can bond and he can begin to trust the world again. At this time, Arlo is in a foster home and is beginning to overcome his fear and reactivity. With love, patience and commitment, Arlo is going make someone an amazing companion.

E S TAT E S A L E : S a t . 9-1pm. 91 S Solmar Dr. Furniture, kitchenware, garden and tools, home d e c o r, l i n e n s, k aya k , camping gear. Too many items to list.

#7

G A R AG E S A L E : S a t . 7/21 9-3pm. 811 E Willow St. Antique Singer sewing machine, Noritake Rouen china set serves 12 (approx. 100 pieces) Seth Thomas antique mantle clock, stereo speakers, records.

#2

PUMPKIN PATCH FLEA MARKET Sat., 8-3 p.m., 64 Kitchen Dick Rd. No reservations needed. $20 per space, gates open at 6:30 a.m. for vendors. More info:(360)461-0940

ABBY & ANDY are sweet, gentle, shy, mixed breed seniors Schnauzers (12 yrs). Abby and Andy are brother and sister and must be adopted together. Andy is nearly blind, but very quick to navigate his environment. He does rely on Abby to guide him. Abby is full of personality and just loves to be in your lap and snuggle. Both of these precious dogs need a quiet, peaceful and safe home with no stairs or major obstacles so Andy can navigate without fear and anxiety. Give this lovely pair a chance at having a loving and forever home.

“I FOUND IT IN FREEBIES!”

#8

LITTLE RED BARN SALE! Antiques, vintage g o o d s, c o l l e c t i bl e s, books and much more! Fri. Sat. 8-5pm. 120 Forrest Rd. Sequim, (across from the Blackberr y Lavender far m, off W Sequim Bay Rd).

#3

B A C K YA R D S A L E : July 27 & July 28, 8-2pm, 211 Robbins Rd., off Old Olympic H w y. P l a n t s , k i t c h e n items, furniture, garden art & much more! Proceeds benefit Pioneer Memorial Park.

Express Yourself in Print!

CARPORT SALE: Fr i. Sat. 8-3pm. 1540 W Hendrickson Rd. Misc. tools, rototiller, gas blower, weed eater, lots of crafts, books. No Early Birds Please.

We buy estates!

Low Rate of

#9

$9.95 Per Column/Inch

Jewelry, gold, silver, platinum, diamonds, costume jewelry & silver flatware. Free estimates By appointment only

Ad Deadline Friday at 12 p.m.

Call today! 683-3311

360-417-1344

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W.L. Benedict, SHERIFF Clallam County, Washington BY ___________________ Kaylene Zellar, Civil Deputy 223 E. 4th Street, Suite 12, Port Angeles, WA 98362 TEL: 360.417.2266 FAX: 360.417.2498 Pub: June 27, 4, 11, 18 2018 Legal No. 812060

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DATED June 7, 2018 LEGAL DESCRIPTION: LOT 2, LOMA VISTA, ACCORDING TO PLAT THEREOF RECORDED IN VOLUME 8 OF PLATS, PAGE 1, RECORDS OF CLALLAM COUNTY, WASHINGTON. SITUATE IN THE COUNTY OF CLALLAM, STATE OF WASHINGTON. Parcel#: 0430255202000000

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OSA is a incredibly sweet, shy Rottweiler/Doberman mix. He is a soft soul and is a bit unsure about this big world. He is often timid with meeting new people and new situations, but bonds quickly to his human companion. Osa will thrive in a quiet, calm household with a companion that will make him the center of their routine. He likes female dogs and is learning to play and socialize. Children would be too much for Osa at this time. We don’t know what he has endured, but we do know he is loving, willing, kind and desperate for a human companion.

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CIT BANK, N.A., Plaintiff VS ESTATE OF VIOLET L. DOCKENS, an estate; LINDA ANN DOCKENS, an heir; JIM DOCKENS, an heir; CITIBANK USA N.A., a corporation; STATE OF WASHINGTON, a government entity; AMERICAN EXPRESS BANK, FSB, a corporation; EVERGREEN COLLISION CENTER, INC., a corporation; UNKNOWN HEIRS OF VIOLET L. DOCKENS, heirs; and all other persons or parties unknown claiming any legal or equitable right, title, estate, lien or interest in the real property described in the complaint herein, adverse to Plaintiff’s title, or any cloud on Plaintiff’s title to the Property, collectively designated as DOES 1 through 50, inclusive., Defendants

THE JUDGMENT DEBTOR CAN AVOID THE SALE BY PAYING THE JUDGMENT AMOUNT OF $ 1 9 1 , 2 4 1 . 8 9 TO G E T H E R W I T H I N T E R E S T, COSTS AND FEES BEFORE THE SALE DATE. FOR THE EXACT AMOUNT, CONTACT THE SHERIFF’S OFFICE AT THE ADDRESS STATED BELOW.

Self-Service Dog Wash & Hourly Rate Kennel

360-477-2883

Cause No. 15-2-01036-3 Sheriff’s No. 18000354

THE SALE OF THE DESCRIBED PROPERTY IS TO TAKE PLACE AT 10:00 A.M. ON FRIDAY, 7/27/2018 IN THE MAIN LOBBY OF THE CLALLAM COUNTY COURTHOUSE, ENTRANCE LOCATED AT 223 E. 4th STREET, PORT ANGELES, WASHINGTON.

1279044

www.stinkydogubathe.com

SHERIFF’S NOTICE TO JUDGMENT DEBTOR FOR SALE OF REAL PROPERTY BY PUBLICATION

122 VALLEY VIEW DRIVE SEQUIM, WA 98382

255410 Hwy. 101, Port Angeles

COMMUNITY NEWS ONLY A CLICK AWAY!

IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON IN AND FOR CLALLAM COUNTY IN THE MATTER OF THE ESTATE OF MAXINE SECOR, Deceased. No. 18-4-00233-05 NOTICE TO CREDITORS The personal representative named below has been appointed and has qualified as personal representative of this estate. Persons having claims against the decedent must, prior to the time such claims would be barred by any otherwise applicable statute of limitations, serve their claims on the personal representative or the attorneys of record at the address stated below and file an executed copy of the claim with the Clerk of this Court within four months after the date of first publication of this notice or within four months after the date of the filing of the copy of this Notice with the Clerk of the Court, whichever is later or, except under those p r ov i s i o n s i n c l u d e d i n R C W 1 1 . 4 0 . 0 1 1 a n d 11.40.013, the claim will be forever barred. This bar is effective as to the claims against both the probate assets and nonprobate assets of the decedent. Date of filing copy of notice to creditors, July 11, 2018. Date of first publication, July 18, 2018. Randy Floyd Personal Representative Judith H. Peace Attorney for the Personal Representative 720 E. Washington, Suite 109 P.O. Box 2315 Sequim, WA 98382 (360) 683-6984 Pub: SG. July 18, 25, August 1, 2018 Legal: 816891 SUPERIOR COURT OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON in and for the County of Clallam

TO: ESTATE OF VIOLET L. DOCKENS, LINDA ANN DOCKENS, JIM DOCKENS, CITIBANK USA N.A., STATE OF WASHINGTON, AMERICAN EXPRESS BANK, FSB, EVERGREEN COLLISION CENTER, INC. UNKNOWN HEIRS OF VIOLET L. DOCKENS, and ALL PERSONS, PARTIES OR OCCUPANTS UNKNOWN

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Michael D. Smith’s

Announce your special occasions in the Sequim Gazette

M OV I N G S A L E : Ju l y 20th and 21st 9-3pm. 20 Stone Farm Rd. Furniture, hospital bed, office equipment, kitchen. Fishing boat, motor, and trailer, fishing gear, ‘93 Dodge 4WD, Craftsman 2000 48” mower, bow and arrows, tools.

#4

“I FOUND IT IN FREEBIES!”

FOUND: Wallet, 7/10, Walmart parking lot, call to identify. (360)477-5521

FOUND: Dog, Rott/Lab mix, black & tan, no collar. Found at Swains in PA. (360)775-5154

L O C A L S U RV E Y I N G Co. accepting applicaMARK YOUR tions for Party Chief and CALENDAR Chainman. Lil and Lin’s Send resume to: Flea Market/Antique/Vininfo@clarkland.com or tage finds. July 27th and send to PO Box 2199, 28th 9-4pm. Sequim Sequim WA 98382 SUNNY FARMS: ImmePrairie Grange. Multiple diate seasonal produce POMEROY GRAIN Vendors. help. Pick up application GROWERS at 261461 Hwy 101 or Pomeroy, Washington, Garage/Moving Sales online - sunnyfarms.com seeking qualified GM. Port Angeles-West Successful 3 location full ESTATE SALE: Huge s e r v i c e C o o p, g r a i n , Employment Wanted estate sale, Saturday, a g r o n o m y. S a l e s o f Father & Sons’ 9-4, 3826 S. Airport Rd. $80+ million. Job link: Landscape Service PA . S p o d e, a n t i q u e s, tinyurl.com/yd8mreyu household, tools. David.Lemon@chsinc.com since 1992. 1 time clean ups, pruning, lawn main320-219-0270. tenance, weeding, orP O R TA B L E T O I L E T ganic lawn renovations. service technician/pump(360)681-2611 er. F/T, must have good YOUR TRASH IS dr iving record. Bill’s SOMEBODY’S TREASURE. Plumbing. ADVERTISE IN (360)683-7996 GARAGE SALES

FOR MORE INFORMATION PLEASE CALL

683-3311

Frontier Title is now hiring for immediate full time positions in both our Title and Escrow Depar tments. Title Insurance and/or escrow experience preferred. Must be a motivated, team oriented professional individual for a small, fast paced office. Must be proficient in Microsoft Office and be able to l e a r n q u i ck l y. P l e a s e email resume to manager@ frontiertitle.biz Fax to (360)-457-0690 or Mail to 402 S. Lincoln Street, Por t Angeles, WA 98362.

FOUND: Ladies Jacket. Abbott Rd in P.A. by the Olympic Trail. (360)504-2433.

HOME SECURITY. Leading smar t home FOR MORE INFORMATION PLEASE CALL provider Vivint Smar t 683-3311 Home has an offer just for you. Call 866-3872013 to get a professionLost ally installed home security system with $0 activation. L O S T: C a t , 1 1 m o. male, black & white, half PROMOTE YOUR RE- a tail, no collar. 10th & L GIONAL EVENT state- Sts, PA (360)775-5154. wide with a $325 classified listing or $1,575 for LOST: Dog, 6 yr spay. a display ad. Call this fe m a l e m i x , t r i - c o l o r. newspaper or 360-344- Griffith Farm Rd/ Evans 2938 for details. Rd, (360)775-5154. WELFARE For Animals LOST: Phonak behind Guild (WAG) is looking the ear, silver, hearing for “shor t ter m” foster aid. Railroad parking trail h o m e s . P l e a s e c a l l : P.A. (360)452-8428 (360)460-6258. L O S T YO U R P E T ? Please call us, we may Found have it! Olympic PeninFOUND: Dog, Female sula Humane Society. Lab mix, black w/white 452-5226. 2105 High7/10, Craig St near col- way 101, Port Angeles. lege, PA. 360-775-5154

REPORTER - Reporter sought for Port Angeles staff opening with the Peninsula Dail y N e w s , a s i x - d ay a . m . n ew s p a p e r o n Washington’s beautiful North Olympic Peninsula, which includes the cities of Port Angeles, Sequim, Por t Townsend and Forks. Bring your experience from a weekly or small daily - from the first day, you’ll be able to show off the writing and photography skills you’ve already acquired while sharpening your talent with the help of veteran newsroom leaders. This is a general assignment reporter position with an emphasis on arts coverage in which being a self-starter is required. Compensation includes medical, vision, life insurance, 401(k) and paid vacation. The PDN, more than a century old, is a community-minded, family-focused local newspaper and Web enter pr ise that is the main news provider for the North O l y m p i c Pe n i n s u l a . Check us out at www.peninsuladaily news.com. The Peninsula Daily News is part of Washington state’s largest newspaper group, Sound Publishing Inc. If you meet the above qualifications, email your resume and cover letter addressing how yo u f i t o u r r e q u i r e ments to careers@ soundpublishing.com. No phone calls, please.

DRIVER/DELIVERY PERSON The Peninsula Daily News has an opening for a par t time driver/delivery person up to 20 hours per week, $11.50 per hour. Must be available to work nights and weekends as well as week days. Must have valid Washington state drivers license, a clean driving record, and be able to lift up to 40 pounds. P l e a s e s u b m i t yo u r letter of interest to: careers@ soundpublishing.com for immediate consideration.

CAREGIVERS NEEDED Summer Sizzles $300 sign on bonus. Competitive wages and benefits. N o ex p e r i e n c e . Fr e e training. Caregivers Home Care. (360)457-1644, (360)683-7377, or (360) 379-6659

HOMETOWN PAPER HOMETOWN PRIDE

KBB 9 $12,66

Get details and application forms from our website www.clallampud.net orcontact us at humanresources @clallampud.net Phone 360-565-3276 We also have answers to Frequently Asked Questions and Employee Benefits information on our website. EOE.

Employment General

Whatever you want in a new job, you’ll find your way to it in the Classifieds.

PORT ANGELES CARRIER ROUTES AVAILABLE Peninsula Daily News Circulation Dept. Is looking for individuals interested in a Port Angeles area routes. Currently we have 3 routes available. Interested parties must be reliable, 18 yrs. of age, have a valid Wa s h i n g t o n S t a t e Drivers License, proof of insurance and a reliable vehicle. Ear ly m o r n i n g d e l i v e r y, deadline for delivery: 6:30 a.m. Call (360)452-4507 or email Circulation@ peninsuladailynews.com

Engineering Mapping Technician

YOUR TRASH IS SOMEBODY’S TREASURE. ADVERTISE IN GARAGE SALES

1111 CAROLINE ST. PORT ANGELES

WANTED: MORE RESPECT

UNDER $12 ,000

Clallam PUD is looking for exceptional people committed to public service to join our utility.

Found

ERROR AND CORRECTION NOTICE Adver tisers please check your ad on the first date of publication. While we are happy to m a ke a n y n e c e s s a r y changes or corrections, we can not be responsible for errors appearing after the first publication.

ond Poi nt

417-2810

Announcements

Diam

(360)

YOUR TRASH IS SOMEBODY’S TREASURE. ADVERTISE IN GARAGE SALES

PUBLISHER’S NOTICE All rental and real estate for sale adver tising in this newspaper is subject to the Fair Housing Act which makes it illegal to advertise any preference, limitation or discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status or national origin, or an intention, to make any such preference, limitation or discrimination Familial status includes children under the age of 18 living with parents or legal custodians, pregnant women and people securing custody of children under 18. This newspaper will not knowingly accept any advertising for the rental or sale of real estate which is in violation of the law. Our readers are hereby informed that all dwellings advertising in this newspaper are available on an equal o p p o r t u n i t y b a s i s. To complain of discrimination call HUD at (206)220-5170.

Employment General

en C ick

Knapp

FSBO: 5 Acre view lot, upper Mt. Pleasant, Black Bear Trail. $175K, info request, email. ncrepair@aol.com (801) 367-8960

Employment General

Real Estate for Rent Clallam County

Guiles

Real Estate for Rent Clallam County

Ch

Real Estate for Sale Lots/Acreage

. o o p Rd

683-3311


C-3

CountyWide Classifieds D Serving Clallam County D July 18, 2018 Home Services Windows/Glass

Legal Notices Clallam County SUPERIOR COURT OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON in and for the County of Clallam SHERIFF’S NOTICE TO JUDGMENT DEBTOR FOR SALE OF REAL PROPERTY BY PUBLICATION Cause No. 15-2-01036-3 Sheriff’s No. 18000354 CIT BANK, N.A., Plaintiff VS ESTATE OF VIOLET L. DOCKENS, an estate; LINDA ANN DOCKENS, an heir; JIM DOCKENS, an heir; CITIBANK USA N.A., a corporation; STATE OF WASHINGTON, a government entity; AMERICAN EXPRESS BANK, FSB, a corporation; EVERGREEN COLLISION CENTER, INC., a corporation; UNKNOWN HEIRS OF VIOLET L. DOCKENS, heirs; and all other persons or parties unknown claiming any legal or equitable right, title, estate, lien or interest in the real property described in the complaint herein, adverse to Plaintiff’s title, or any cloud on Plaintiff’s title to the Property, collectively designated as DOES 1 through 50, inclusive., Defendants

PUBLISHER’S NOTICE Businesses promoting home improvement, including but not limited to, electrical services, insulation, hardwood floors, roofing, carpentry, painting/wallpapering, plaster/drywall, construction, tile, masonry, cement work or landscaping are required to operate with a contracting license if advertising in this section. If you have questions or concerns regarding h o m e s e r v i c e a d ve r t i s i n g , please contact the Washington State Department of Labor and Industry, toll free 1-800-6470982 Domestic Services Adult/Elder Care

Tents & Travel Trailers

NOW, THEREFORE, in the name of the STATE OF Wanted/Trade WASHINGTON you are hereby commanded to proceed to seize and sell forthwith and without apCOVERED STORAGE: praisement, the Property, in the manner provided by law, or so much thereof as may be necessary to For small boat, 1 car satisfy the judgment amount plus interest to the garage. (360)928-9494 date of sale. The redemption period is 8 MONTHS. The Sheriff’s notice of sale shall be published in a Motorhomes publication of general circulation. MOTOR HOME: Class B DATED this 7th day of May, 2018” ‘99 Dodge Coachouse. Generator, awning, low The sale date has been set for 10:00 A.M. on Fri- m i l e s , r e a d y t o g o . day, 07/27/2018 in the main lobby of the Clallam $17,500. (360)808-5651 County courthouse, entrance located at 223 E. 4th Street, Por t Angeles, Washington. YOU MAY Tents & HAVE A RIGHT TO EXEMPT PROPERTY from the Travel Trailers sale under statutes of this state, including sections 6.13.010, 6.13.030, 6.13.040, 6.15.010, and 6.15.060 of the Revised Code of Washington, in the manner described in those statutes. W.L. Benedict, SHERIFF Clallam County, Washington BY ___________________ Kaylene Zellar, Civil Deputy 223 E. 4th Street, Suite 12, Port Angeles, WA 98362 TEL: 360.417.2266 FAX: 360.417.2498 Pub: June 13, 20, 27, July 4, 11, 18, 2018 Legal No. 812035

Legal Notices - General

FIND ME A HOME! For LESS THAN

$1.50 A Day

FISH & SPORT 15: By Hotwoods.com. 4 pontoon, 9.9 Johnson, 55 Minn Kota, Honda 1000, deck 5’X13.5’. $4500. (509)885-0999

RARE ‘77 Trident 21’ fiberglass boat. Beautifully restored, newly rebuilt 1 5 0 M e r c u r y, 1 5 H P kicker with duel tanks, duel axle galv. trailer, all electronics, including electric down riggers, ever ything needed to fish for halibut, salmon, rock fish?, includes rods, reels, and tackle, $6,000. (360)928-9436.

TAB: ‘15, New condition, awning with door, A/C and heat, 3 way fridge, stove top, TV, radio, solar panel, bike rack, LED lighting, etc. Four years left on extended warranty. Aprox., 1700lbs, 15’, t o w w i t h s m a l l S U V. $18,400. (360)582-0911 YOUR TRASH IS SOMEBODY’S TREASURE. ADVERTISE IN GARAGE SALES

B O S TO N W H A L E R : Classic, 11’, short shaft model, on trailer, all registered/current, used as yacht tender, leave ph.# slowly, 2x. $3,750/obo. (360)582-1292

2018 FOREST RIVER RPOD LOOK NO FURTHER, BEST SELLING TRAILER IN ITS CLASS.

COME IN AND SEE WHY LAST CHANCE FOR SPECIAL PRICING

19,995

Marine

$

WILDER RV You Can Count On Us! 1536 FRONT ST., PORT ANGELES

MSRP $24,225 R1472 Add tax and license. A negotiable $150 documentation fee may be added to sale price. See Wilder RV for complete details. Subject to prior sale. Photos for illustrative purposes only. Ad expires 1 week from date of publication.

(360) 457-7715

www.wilderrvs.com • Open 7 Days 9am-6pm (800) 927-9395

and enjoy life…let

work for you!

HOMETOWN PAPER HOMETOWN PRIDE

RUN A FREE AD FOR ITEMS PRICED $100 AND UNDER! DEADLINE: FRIDAY 3PM

FREEBIES

• 1 ad per household per week • Private parties only • 4 lines, 1 Wednesday • Run as space permits • No pets or livestock • No garage sales • No firewood, lumber, or construction materials

NO PHONE CALLS! Bring your ads to: Sequim Gazette, 147 W. Washington, Sequim Peninsula Daily News, 305 West 1st St., Port Angeles

Mail to: PO Box 1330, Port Angeles WA 98362 or FAX to: (360) 417-3507 Email: lclenard@sequimgazette.com

ANCHOR: 25 lbs with EXTENSION LADDER: KING BED: With sheets, bl a n ke t s, b e d s p r e a d . chain and line, like new. (2) 8’ sections. $25. Exc. condition. $100. (360)460-6720 $60. (360)796-4502 Sequim. (406)253-1149 BED FRAME: Cal-King FLOOR SHIFTER: After MIRROR: 3-piece vanity market, automatic. $40. platform, solid oak, like or hanging mirror, 46”h, (360)504-2518 new. Cost $340, Sell for fine condition. $15. $25. (360)457-6861 FOOTBALLS: (4) Joe (360)457-6431 B O B B L E H E A D S : ( 3 ) Namath, K. Stabler, M. M I S C : ( 2 ) Pa i n t g u n Vick, S. Young. $15/ea. M a r i n e r s H O F, b ra n d sprayers. $10 ea. Mold$35/all. 360-452-6842 new. $20/each. ing cutter head, in box. (360) 457-5790 FREE: HP Printer. $10. (360)683-9295 (360)929-8650 CHINA SET: Noritake MISC: Doghouse, $35. 12-piece, 6605 Blueber- F R E E : L a v e n d e r Tyco Trainset, $25. Skil ry. silver trim, pristine. cuttings, you cut. Lo- Reciprocating Sawzall, $65. (360)808-2563 cated in Sequim, call $15. (949)241-0370 360-681-2297 C O F F E E TA B L E : MISC: Double bed 3 2 X 1 6 , s h a b by c h i c , J U I C E R : B r e v i l l e frame. $15. 2 Cockatiel glass top, casters. $50. J E 9 8 X L , 8 5 0 w a t t , bird cages. $10/ea. (360)452-8428 Christmas gift. $60. 360-460-6003 (360)460-7228 COWBOY HAT: TexasMISC: Naval Flight Jackmade Resistol, size 7.5, KAYAK: Intex K2 Ex- et, $40. Sickle/Saw from silver belly long oval. plorer 10’ inflatable, 2 Japan, $10. $20. (360)681-7579 person. $100. Lv msg. (360)683-2589 (360)797-1622 D AY B E D : Tr u n d l e , PRINTER: Canon Maxiwhite metal, good condi- MISC: “Craftsman” rout- fy MB2720 for office, like tion. $100 firm.(360)457- ing table, $20. RV Ext. n e w. $ 5 0 . ( 3 6 0 ) 4 5 2 4636 Cord, 30 Amp, $25. 7052

RUG: Wool, 6.5’ x 10’, beige, brown and gold. $20. (360)457-6549 STROLLER: Double, u s e d 3 t i m e s , n e w. $100. (360)683-1660 TABLE: dark wood, for computer or sewing machine. 66”x29.5”. $60. 360-460-3151. TRAILER HITCH: strong, fits 1986 Toyota Tacoma, $50.00. (360)683-7435 T V: 3 2 ” A q u o s f l a t s c r e e n c o l o r. $ 8 0 . (360)301-9167 “I FOUND IT IN FREEBIES!”

WHEEL COVERS: (4) new “ADCO RV” covers in carrying bag. XL. $35. (360)452-7855 WHEELS: (4) 16” wheels off a Honda. $50. (360)808-2068

INTERNET SPECIAL

2013 Hyundai

VELOSTER

KBB 9 $12,66

11,981

$

Turbo Coupe

CALL TODAY!

WILDER AUTO You Can Count On Us!

Sale Price

OVER

120

Used Vehicles to Choose From!

(360) 633-2036 www.wilderauto.com

101 and Deer Park Rd, Port Angeles STK#P5295 1 only, subject to prior sale. Sale Price plus tax and license. A negotiable $150 documentation fee may be added. See Wilder Auto for details. Ad expires 1 week from date of publication.

ext. 1550

crossword answers from last week

PFOA NEEDS VOLUNTEERS FOR OUTDOOR JOBS – WEEDING, MOWING AND OTHER FUN STUFF!

safehavenpfoa.org ◆ 360-452-0414 A donor-supported, non-profit, no-kill organization

BIG T is a solid 18 pounds of affection. This gentle giant was sadly given up by his people due to an illness in the family. He loves everyone, gets along with other cats, but prefers no dogs. THOMAS is a gentle, one yearold brown tabby with white trim. This indoor only boy came to us when his family adopted a puppy. He would love a home with lots of attention and play time.

Feline Fun Resort Purr Parties View Window Suites Cat Gym Doreen Emerson, Owner

ACROSS

1. Owns 4. Beef intestine 9. Expression of contempt 14. Expression of horror 15. Famed architecture couple 16. Escape 17. “The Raven” author 18. Chiefs’ tight end 20. Removes 22. Pesto dish 23. One who roots against 24. Type of writer 28. Old woman 29. Early multimedia 30. This (Spanish) 31. Part of a play 33. Elephant’s name

“We’re all about mew”

1076 Towne Road, Sequim

(360) 681-4770 www.uptowncats.net

PEEKA and Boo are bonded sisters who were originally semi-feral. Adopted by a loving person, they returned when their person died. Peeka needs time to blossom again at her own speed.

you can sponsor 2 pets & help them find their forever home!

CALL 683-3311

REAL ESTATE RENTALS AUTOMOTIVE EMPLOYMENT MERCHANDISE COUPONS To subscribe or place an ad, call 360-683-3311

Puzzle answers in next week’s issue.

crossword Compliments of Wilder Auto

No. 18-4-00226-05 NOTICE TO CREDITORS SUPERIOR COURT OF WASHINGTON FOR CLALLAM COUNTY Estate of Eugenia Patton Deceased. The personal representative named below has been appointed and has qualified 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 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. 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: July 4, 2018 Alan E. Millet Personal Representative P.O. Box 1029 Sequim, Washington 98382 Pub.: SG July 4, 11, 18, 2018 Legal No. 814239

FOREST RIVER: ‘17 Wildwood Heritage Glen 24RKHL Hyperlyte. Never used. 7 year service contract. Fully loaded. G2 satellite dish. Asking $28,500. Contact Dave at (360)301-3045 or (360)504-3885.

Marine Miscellaneous

822051847

“I FOUND IT IN FREEBIES!”

Marine Miscellaneous

BOAT: Cris Craft, 17’, Runabout, 1954 spor t c ra f t , bu i l t by H a r o l d Marquadt in PA, fully res t o r e d w i t h t r a i l e r. $14,000. 360-928-9494

WA S H I N G TO N D I Miscellaneous VORCE -SEPARATION, $155. $175 with children. NO COURT APPEARANCES. Includes property, bills, custody, support. Complete preparation of documents. TO: ESTATE OF VIOLET L. DOCKENS, LINDA Legal Alternatives, 503ANN DOCKENS, JIM DOCKENS, CITIBANK USA 7 7 2 - 5 2 9 5 . w w w. p a ra ‘88 Skipjack 25 VolvoN.A., STATE OF WASHINGTON, AMERICAN EX- legalalternatives.com Penta inboard/outboard PRESS BANK, FSB, EVERGREEN COLLISION completely overhauled CENTER, INC. UNKNOWN HEIRS OF VIOLET L. Building Materials with 40 hours of running DOCKENS, and ALL PERSONS, PARTIES OR & Supplies time. Major components OCCUPANTS UNKNOWN S C A F F O L D I N G : 1 4 r e p l a c e d , a l t e r n a t o r, starter, distributor modframes, cross braces, A writ of execution has been issued in the abovecaptioned case, directed to the sheriff of Clallam and some free wooden ule, batteries, fuel filters, belts, fuel pump, spark planks. $650 for all. County, commanding the sheriff as follows: plugs, (cost $15,355.45), (360)683-3208 new 9.9 long shaft “WHEREAS, in the above-entitled court, Plaintiff, Ya m a h a w i t h m o u n t Firearms & secured a judgment and decree of foreclosure (cost $3,819.95), new Ammunition (“Judgement”) against Defendants ESTATE OF VIOLET L. DOCKENS, LINDA ANN DOCKENS, R E M M I N G T O N : 8 7 0 LoadRite trailer (cost JIM DOCKENS, CITIBANK USA N.A., STATE OF pump, tac-14, new in $7,821.58), new Bimini Top (cost $5,700), and WASHINGTON, AMERICAN EXPRESS BANK, box. $420.360-683-3208 m o r e . A s k i n g FSB, EVERGREEN COLLISION CENTER, INC. $24,900/OBO. UNKNOWN HEIRS OF VIOLET L. DOCKENS, and (360)681-7922 Sneak-a-Peek ALL PERSONS, PARTIES OR OCCUPANTS UNKNOWN in the amount of $190,189.13 together B E L L B OY : ‘ 7 4 , 1 7 ’ , with interest at the rate of 3.260% per annum, F R E E : ( 4 ) S t u d d e d $16.98 per diem from FEBRUARY 15, 2018, the tires, 5 hole, 14” GM Caulkin trailer. $450. (360)912-1783 day after interest good through on the Judgment, to wheels. (360)808-1559 APRIL 18, 2018, the date of Judgment entry, in the B O AT : 8 f t C u s t o m SUNNY FARMS: Immeamount of $1,052.76; diate seasonal produce made, Drift Pram, marine plywood, apoxy over WHEREAS, post-judgment interest is accruing on help. Pick up application glass plus, good cond. $191,241.89 from APRIL 19, 2018, until the date of at 261461 Hwy 101 or $275. (360)683-4781 online sunnyfarms.com sale at 12% per annum, $62.87 per diem; WHEREAS, the Judgment is a foreclosure against parties of a deed of trust mortgage on the real propSporting Goods erty (“Property”) at 122 Valley View Dr. Sequim, WA 98382 and described in Exhibit “1” attached C A N O E : O l d To w n , hereto; Camper model, 16’. WHEREAS, on APRIL 18, 2018, the court ordered $250. (360)775-9315 that all of the Property be sold and the proceeds applied to the payment of principal, interest, attorney’s fees, costs and disbursements and other recovery amounts with interest to date of the sale of the property.

Marine Miscellaneous

37. Home of the Flyers 38. Builder’s trough 39. Tell 41. Google certification 42. Electric current 43. Belonging to them 44. Nostrils 46. Arranges 49. Commercial 50. Skywalker’s mentor __-Wan 51. Single-reed instrument 55. Voodoo 58. World of Warcraft character 59. Paddling 60. Most agreeable 64.Chafed 65. A way to analyze

66. Remove 67. Metal-bearing mineral 68. Remains as is 69. Large predatory seabirds 70. The Science Guy

DOWN

1. Central Chinese province 2. The marketplace in ancient Greece 3. Covered the sword 4. Cleanser 5. Body parts 6. Returned material authorization (abbr.) 7. Mega-electronvolt 8. One from Asia 9. A superior grade of black tea

10. Thin 11. Circles of light around the head 12. General’s assistant (abbr.) 13. Tiny 19. Evildoing 21. __ Connery, 007 24. British sword 25. Type of cyst 26. Musical composition 27. Advises 31. Herring-like fish 32. Chocolate powder 34. Somalian district El __ 35. Indicates position 36. Refurbishes 40. Exclamation of surprise 41. Football field

45. Hilly region in India near China 47. Come to an end 48. Most mad 52 Sheets of glass 53. Department of Housing and Urban Development 54. Stares lecherously 56. Consisting of a single element or component 57. Monetary unit of Zambia 59. Bones (Latin) 60. Frames-per-second 61. Tell on 62. Gall 63. Cologne

BOO has turned out to be a lovely, social cat who is the rock that anchors her sister, Peeka. We would love to see these originally semi-feral bonded sisters find that purrfect home together.

Your business ad can sponsor 2 kitties for only $10/week.

Call 683-3311.


C-4

CountyWide Classifieds D Serving Clallam County D July 18, 2018 Motorcycles

BMW: ‘94, K75S, 35,500 miles, BMW hard cases, ready to ride, newer tires $2700. (360)683-2861

Finalist Best Rehabilitation Facility Clallam Co

HARLEY: ‘02 Dyna Low Rider. Low miles, exc. cond., $6,500. (360)301-0213 HARLEY DAVIDSON: “I FOUND IT IN FREEBIES!” ‘00 FXSTB Night Train. 13.5k miles, 88 ci, $5,000. 360-457-4198

We offer Competitive Wages with a Higher Starting Pay Attention New Grads: Looking to Gain Experience With a Better Starting Pay ?

Automobiles Classics & Collectibles

5 STAR QUALITY MEASURES 2 QUALITY SURVEYS BACK TO BACK 2017 & 2018

CHEV: ‘57, Pro-street, 210, with Dyno sheet. $35,000/obo. (360)477-3695

MDS Specialist

OPPORTUNITIES IN THE REHABILITATION UNIT

Automobiles Cadillac

Motorcycles

HARLEY: ‘04 FLHRCI Road King Classic. 34k FORD: ‘70 F250 Classic, miles, 95 ci, $8,000. built 390, new transmis360-457-4198 sion, custom paint and interior, have all paperHONDA: ‘89 CBR 600 work. $9,000 or trade. Hurricane. White, and (360)457-6540 silver, 20k miles. $2,500 “I FOUND IT IN FREEBIES!” obo. (360)452-1519

Must have a valid WA RN Certification 1-3 years experience as an MDS Coordinator Experience using a MDS software computer system Proficiency in Microsoft Office Word/Outlook Strong organizational & project management skills Working knowledge of the MDS and RAI process with strong interest in Medicare & Medicaid

Associate Director of Nursing

Automobiles Others

Pickup Trucks Others

FORD: ‘92 Taurus. Runs FORD: ‘79 F150 Custom, V-8, 4WD, parked well, automatic, $850. for years, as is. $600 (360)460-1726 obo.(360)670-9975 NISSAN: ‘12 Cube, 22K miles, excellent cond., M I S C : C h ev, ‘ 7 5 , 3 / 4 ton, dump bed. $1200. Sequim. $11,000. G M C , ‘ 7 4 Va n d u r a . (406)491-6974 $700. (360)683-8173 SUBARU: ‘08 Outback Automobiles 2.5i. Ver y good condi- TOYOTA: ‘85 4X4 with a Others t i o n . M a i n t e n a n c e tool box. $4,500. (360)928-0128 B U I C K : ‘ 0 0 C e n t u r y, r e c o r d s. 1 3 1 , 6 0 0 m i . very clean, 130K miles, $8,250. (360)477-5628. Sport Utility Vehicles runs great. $2500. Others (360)683-2861 VO L K S WAG E N : ‘ 7 0 K a r m a n G h i a . G a r - CHEVY: ‘90 Suburban, BUICK: ‘97 Le Sabre, aged/project. $3,100. runs great, no rust, 4X4. good cond., runs great. (360)775-7959 $3900. (360)452-5803 $1500. (360)683-6051 SUZUKI: ‘98 & ‘96 SidePickup Trucks CHEVY: ‘10 Aveo. 56k kicks, 1.6 and 1.8L, Others miles, silver, runs great. n e e d w o r k , y o u t o w. $3,500/obo. CHEVY: ‘09 Silverado $1000. (360)374-2414 or (907)987-2486 LT 4X4, extended cab 4 (503)939-1616 Forks door, canopy with ladder FORD: ‘01 Taurus, su- rack, 6’ bed, 92K miles. TOYOTA : ‘ 1 2 , R a v 4 per clean, needs trans- $16,995. (360)461-0527 Spor t utility, 4x4, 90k mission. $500. miles, $13,500. with (360)683-6051 “I FOUND IT IN FREEBIES!” h i t c h . $ 1 4 , 0 0 0 , e x c cond. (360)460-3274 CADILLAC: ‘97 DeVille Brougham. 71K mi., white, 4-door, dark leather interior, clean VIN report, good tires, recent tune, immaculate inside and out, true luxury car. $5,500. (360)461-4813

Vans & Minivans Others

MUST HAVE A VALID WA RN CERTIFICATION

ISUZU: ‘98 Oasis, 4Dr, SUV/Minvan, automatic, power window/locks/mirrors, cruise control, AC, A M / F M / C D C a s s e t t e, sunroof, excellent tires, new alter nator, tinted windows, 3rd row seats, very clean. $4000 obo. (360)477-4538

NOC RN Staff Nurse

Must have a valid WA RN Certification Day & Evening shifts available

NEW OPPORTUNITIES AVAILABLE IN ACUTE CARE NURSING

Licensed Practical Nurse Must have a valid WA LPN Certification Day & Evening shifts available

Vehicles Wanted

D O N AT E YO U R C A R TO CHARITY. Receive maximum value of write off for your taxes. Runn i n g o r n o t ! All conditions accepted. Free pickup. Call for details, 855-635-4229.

Licensed Registered Nurse Must have a valid WA RN Certification Day & Evening shifts available

Certified Nursing Assistants

Must have a valid professional WA Certification. Starting wage $14.50 hr. Also hiring new graduates. Options for 12/16 hour shifts! 3 days on 4 days off! Weekend doubles! **Your shift and schedules as you desire

Admissions Coordinator

Express Yourself in Print!

Must excel in Multi-tasking, Have strong Listening & Verbal Communication skills, Possess a High Energy Level, Work well in teams, Documentation Skills, PC Proficient , Strong Organizational Skills, Good Bedside Manner, Able to Create a Safe & Effective Environment

Announce your special occasions in the Sequim Gazette

Interested candidates send their resume to: jsegar@chr.cssnf.com

“Personal Expression Ads” Low Rate of

Call today! 683-3311

862151320

1116 E Lauridsen Blvd | Port Angeles, WA 98362 | 360 452 9206 www.crestwoodskillednursing.com | jsegar@chr.cssnf.com

$9.95 Per Column/Inch Ad Deadline Friday at 12 p.m.

Call today! 683-3311

MAKE YOUR BUSINESS EVERYONE’S BUSINESS!

SERVICES DIRECTORY GREEN MONSTER SERVICES

Hytinen Landscaping

681-6656

Put a little Heaven in your Haven

683-1677

Licensed & Insured

683-3058 HytinL*977JA

ADVERTISE HERE

1767306

KEN REED

1767304

Free Estimates for: Bi-Monthly Monthly

Husband & wife ready to serve all your landscaping needs.

1767307

25 YEARS EXPERIENCE

Yard Service • Trimming/Pruning Moss Removal • Gutter Cleaning Hauling/Moving • Handy Man Brush Removal

360-582-0384

FREE Estimates - No Job Too Small! Meet or Beat Any Licensed Bid Licensed-Insured #601517410

AMERICA’S HANDYMAN

CONSTRUCTION, INC.

Advertise it in the

SERVICES DIRECTORY Call 683-3311 Today!

Cell: 670-3187 Office: 417-0344

Licensed • Bonded • Insured • AMERIHC882JW

Advertise it in the

1750381

SERVICES DIRECTORY Call 683-3311 Today!

PLUMBING & PUMPS

Water Heaters • Faucets • Toilets • Pumps & Repair Pipe Replacement • Disposals • Leak Repairs • Remodeling Water Purification • Pipe Thawing • Sewer Camera & Locator

Mention this ad for a $5 discount! Port Angeles - 360-452-3259 • Sequim - 360-683-9191 Brother’s Plumbing Inc. State Cont. Reg. No. CC0190BROTHP1914RG

360-681-7632

hydrangearangers.com • hydrangearangers.etsy.com

NEW DUNGENESS NURSERY

“HOT Summer nights NEED HOT blooming plants from our Garden” Free Landscape Consultation New plants are coming in weekly!

360-681-0132

Open 7 days! 9 - 5

NEW SUNDAY HOURS 10AM-4PM facebook.com/newdungenessnursery/

4911 Sequim Dungeness Way (in Dungeness, just past Nash’s)

REAL ESTATE

ADVERTISE HERE

Buying or Selling?

Make your Business Everyone’s Business!

Advertise it in the

SERVICES DIRECTORY Call 683-3311 Today!

DOL#73802

360.681.8879

1856460

1750380

1767257 2073989

Lic# JAMIEPP880NN • Bonded • Insured

July through October

2033760

NO TRAVEL CHARGE

(360) 504-2347 www.jamieparrishplumbing.com

Call 360-775-5248

“Cheerful, Professional Results”

NURSERY

Make your Business Everyone’s Business!

PLUMBING & PUMPS 24 HOUR SERVICE 7 DAYS A WEEK

Open 7 days a week, 24 hours a day for all services. Over 20 Years Experience Serving Clallam County Call now for fast & reliable service!

195 DEER RIDGE LANE

SEQUIM, WA 98382 (360) 681-2442

Wedding Flowers Available

State & Federal Certified Renovator

ADVERTISE HERE

PAINTING

WE DO REPAIR!

INSURED

FREE QUOTES

Plants & Flowers

Serving the area since 1999

Expect more from your 360-683-3901 (Sequim) 360-385-5354 ( Port Townsend) independent Trane dealer.

PLUMBING Water Heater Repair & Installation • Toilets • Sinks • Faucets Drain Cleaning • Garbage Disposals • Water Filtration Systems

LIC#PENIN*961CF ROOFM**035P2

220 RALPH Carlsborg Rd. W. CLOSE (360) 683-2272 Sequim, WA

Gutter & Window Cleaning Squirrel & Bird Problems Roof Cleaning & Moss

LANDSCI966RW

The revolutionary new Trane CleanEffects™ is the first central air system that removes up to 99.98% of the allergens from all the air that it heats or cools. Isn’t it time you expected more from your system?

SCREENS

TLOOK U O Window Cleaning

2156930

Get up to 99.98% more out of your air.

New & Re-Roof Maintenance & Repair Certifications Inspections

GENERAL CONTRACTOR Excellent Homeowner Service

• Remodels • Decks • Home Additions • Doors & Windows • Outbuildings • Wheel Chair Ramps

HEATING If you knew what was in the air, you’d reconsider breathing.

ROOF MANAGEMENT

FLOWER FARM

CONSTRUCTION

Make your Business Everyone’s Business!

WINDOW CLEANING

2086877

For a Healthy & Beautiful yard this spring, now is the time for clean-ups!

2028716

A STEP ABOVE THE BEST Quality Cleaning

SCREENS ROOFING

1767309 1767308

PROPERTY MAINTENANCE

LANDSCAPING

LAWN SERVICE

1773466

Housecleaning


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