Sequim Gazette - July 25, 2018

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Grinnell’s greatness

oday families t

All in the family

July 2018 issue 3

volume 8,

PENINSUL

Jamestown S’Klallam Tribe storyteller gets First Peoples Fund’s Community Spirit Award

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produced supplement

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Daily News

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Gazette

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Fitness business expands from PA to Sequim

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SEQUIM GAZETTE www

Wednesday, July 25, 2018

Sequim’s Hometown Newspaper

com

75 CENTS

Vol. 45, Number 30

City council picks salon owner for newest member Six-year city resident says affordable housing is priority BY MATTHEW NASH Sequim Gazette

For the second time this year, Sequim City Councilors appointed a new member. William Armacost, 63, was selected at Monday’s City Council meeting from four candidates, including Ron Fairclough, Tom Ferrell and Richard Fleck, to fill the vacant city council position left by Pam Leonard-Ray. Leonard-Ray resigned in May to move to Carson City, Nev., to help her parents. Armacost will serve Leonard-Ray’s term through Dec. 31, 2019.

See COUNCIL, A-13

Julia Gallant from Seattle smells lavender at Olympic Lavender Heritage Farm on July 21. Sequim Gazette photos by Erin Hawkins

Bloom rewind: A lavender recap Farms look to build on successes Sequim City Clerk Karen Kuznek-Reese swears in new city councilor William Armacost, 63, on July 23, after he was appointed by Sequim City Councilors to fill the vacant seat of Pam Leonard-Ray. Sequim Gazette photo by Matthew Nash

OPA’s portables on schedule School District receives six of eight units to house students BY ERIN HAWKINS Sequim Gazette

Olympic Peninsula Academy’s new home has landed. Sequim School District received six portables it purchased from the Central Kitsap School District to be used by Olympic Peninsula Academy (OPA) students when the Sequim Community School is demolished between late August and September and the district’s new Central Kitchen is built. Sequim Schools Superintendent Gary Neal said the portables arrived July 14 and 15, and should be ready by the time school starts in the fall. There are five double-classroom portables that will be used for classroom space and one single-classroom portable that will be used as an office.

See SCHOOLS, A-6

BY MATTHEW NASH Sequim Gazette

Following traffic delays, minor collisions, and an estimated 3,000 extra vehicles on US Highway 101, two friends put Sequim Lavender Weekend in perspective. “It was worth it for the ice cream,” said Caroline Hamilton of Gig Harbor and Michelle Huffmaster of Tacoma. The pair along with lavender firsttimer Kim Baltadonis of Tacoma visited Purple Haze Lavender Farm to take in its Purple Haze Daze festival and its relaxed atmosphere, they said. “It feels like visiting someone’s house,” Huffmaster said. Purple Haze was one of 19 farms participating in Sequim Lavender Weekend from July 20-22 with some farms hosting festivals of their own, such as Jardin du Soleil, Olympic Lavender Farm and Washington Lavender Farm, while others only opened for the weekend, like Blackberry Forest and Troll Haven. The weekend continues to grow, even last minute, after 22 years of events including the Sequim Lavender Festival. One farm, Purple Path Farm, opened just days before the weekend south of Purple Haze after 10 years of being farmed for Purple Haze products. Jake and Chelsea Reichner opted to open up their farm to the public for the first time

without much notice or affiliation and offer U-Pick lavender and U-Paint, where you could purchase a canvas and capture their fields in paint. Other farms encourage people to come earlier, during, and/or whenever it fits their summer schedule inside or outside Loretta Spencer from Hoodsport chats of Lavender Weekend. with Juan Gonzalez of Meli’s Lavender

See LAVENDER, A-8

Sequim Lavender Festival kicked off at the opening ceremony at Carrie Blake Park on July 20, where Sequim City Clerk Karen Kuznek-Reese, left, Sequim-Dungeness Valley Chamber of Commerce representatives Melanie and Kelsey Sands, Sequim Mayor Dennis Smith, Festival Executive Director Debbie Madden, City Councilor Brandon Janisse, County Commissioner Mark Ozias and other Festival ambassadors performed a ribbon cutting ceremony.

County commissioners seek compromise on proposed fireworks ban after hearing BY JESSE MAJOR Olympic Peninsula News Group

Clallam County’s three count y commissioners said after a public hearing they want to strike a compromise on a proposed

fireworks ordinance. Commissioners heard from 17 people during the public hearing on July 17, with opinions ranging from

Farm about lavender at the Sequim Lavender Festival Street Fair at Carrie Blake Park.

banning fireworks to doing nothing. Many who were opposed to an outright ban told commissioners they would prefer to limit the days people

can light off fireworks. Commissioner Mark Ozias said the county has received about 200 comments on the issue and that letters both for and against a fireworks ban contain the similar language. “One letter might be ‘don’t consider any sort of a ban on fireworks because if you do

you will be impinging upon my freedom and my liberties and my rights,’ ” Ozias said. “Then we’ll read the next letter and it will say ‘dear commissioners, please ban fireworks across the county because every year I feel like my freedom, my liberty and

See FIREWORKS, A-10

Sports B-5 • Schools B-7 • Arts & Entertainment B-1 • Opinion A-8 • Obituaries A-10 • Classifieds C-1 • Crossword Section C

weather outlook: THURSDAY, JULY 26

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A2 • Wednesday, July 25, 2018

SEQUIM GAZETTE

Annual salmon bake slated for Aug. 12

Rotarians Chris Coolures and Lang Hadley preparing salmon for cooking at last year’s Salmon Bake. Submitted photos

SEQUIM GAZETTE STAFF Summertime in Sequim brings back the town’s annual salmon feast. The Rotary Club of Sequim’s 50thannual Salmon Bake is set for Sunday, Aug. 12, at the Carroll C. Kendall Unit of The Boys & Girls Club, 400 West Fir St., Sequim. All club members, spouses, friends and family as well as with several Sequim Sunrise Rotarians and other community volunteers cooperate to put on the bake, a major fundraiser for the Rotary Club of Sequim’s community projects.

The Weather is Always Nice...

Date High Low Date 72 67 65 68 71 78 78

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SUNRISE/SUNSET

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Salmon is cooked over a hot cedar and alder fire over an open barbecue pit constructed just for the event that kicks off at noon and lasts to 4 p.m.

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Salmon is prepared for cooking at last year’s Salmon Bake.

The event also features live music and vendor booths. Before the event, tickets can be purchased for $16 at The Boys & Girls Club, Sequim-Dungeness Chamber of Commerce, Beal Carpet & Drapery, Thomas Building Center and from noon Rotarians. Tickets will be available at the door for $18 on the day of the event. Hot dog plates for children younger than 12 are $5 each. For more information, call Club President Bob MacCaulay at 360-683-8981, see www.sequimrotary.org or www. Facebook.com/SequimNoonRotary.

July 25 July 26 July 27 July 28 July 29 July 30 July 31

56 55 55 52 49 54 57

Sunrise Sunset 5:39 a.m. 5:41 a.m. 5:42 a.m. 5:43 a.m. 5:44 a.m. 5:46 a.m. 5:47 a.m.

8:57 p.m. 8:56 p.m. 8:54 p.m. 8:53 p.m. 8:52 p.m. 8:50 p.m. 8:49 p.m.

TIDE CHARTS These tides are corrected for Dungeness Bay.

July 25

1:06 a.m. 6.7

8:43 a.m. -0.7

4:46 p.m. 7.3

9:30 p.m. 5.6

July 26

1:44 a.m. 6.6

9:18 a.m. -0.9

5:17 p.m. 7.4

10:12 p.m. 5.5

July 27

2:25 a.m. 6.4

9:52 a.m. -1.1

5:46 p.m. 7.4

10:49 p.m. 5.2

July 28

3:07 a.m. 6.3

10:27 a.m. -1.1

6:12 p.m. 7.4

11:25 p.m. 4.9

July 29

3:51 a.m. 6.2

11:02 a.m. -0.9

6:39 p.m. 7.4

NA

July 30

NA

12:04 a.m. 4.6

4:37 a.m. 5.9 11:38 p.m. -0.6

July 31

NA

12:45 a.m. 4.2

5:26 a.m. 5.6

RAINFALL

Contributor Joanie Schmoll captured this image of a dragonfly near Woodcock Road in June.

Primary Election is underway, ballots out in Clallam County

12:13 p.m. -0.1

MOON

Rainfall for Week of July 17-23, 2018 No precipitation recorded. Rainfall recorded and reported at www.weather.com.

July 27 Aug. 4 Aug. 11

Full moon Third quarter New moon

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Voting in Washington state’s 2018 Primary Election is underway with more than 51,000 ballots being mailed July 18 to all registered Clallam County voters. The state’s Primary is Tuesday, Aug. 7, with voters narrowing candidate races to two candidates for the General Election in November. Ballots must be postmarked by Election Day, Aug. 7, or returned to a ballot drop box by 8 p.m. that day. Ballot drop-off options include 24-hour drive-up ballot boxes at the Clallam County Courthouse in Port Angeles and Sequim Village Shopping Center in Sequim, as well as a drop box at Forks City Hall. Additional drop boxes are

planned for installation in Carlsborg, Clallam Bay, Neah Bay and Sekiu (more details to be announced soon). Beginning in this election, no postage is required to return ballots by mail, as every ballot mailed out to voters across Washington State will include a Business Reply Mail return envelope with prepaid postage. An accessible voting unit is also available at the Auditor’s Office in the Clallam County Courthouse, 223 E. Fourth St., Port Angeles, to assist voters with disabilities in voting independently; regular business hours are 8 a.m.-4:30 p.m. Monday through Friday, with extended Election Day hours of 8 a.m.-8 p.m. Those not registered to vote in Washington state

have until July 30 to register in person at the Auditor’s Office to participate in the Primary Election. Those needing a replacement ballot may also access a printable ballot via MyVote or obtain one by contacting Clallam County Elections at 360-417-2221 or elections@co.clallam. wa.us. Election information and an Online Voters’ Guide featuring all candidate races are available on the Clallam County Elections website at www.clallam.net/elections. Printed voting guides are not produced for Primaries. Registered voters may access their registration details, returned ballot status, and other voter information online through MyVote at www. myvote.wa.gov.

Hurricane Ridge Road under construction SEQUIM GAZETTE STAFF Because of a major construction project, bicycle and pedestrian traffic will not be permitted on the first five miles of Hurricane Ridge Road from the intersection with Mount Angeles Road to the Heart O’ the Hills entrance station during weekday work hours. Bicyclists and pedestrians who want to travel Hurricane Ridge Road are encouraged to drive to the Heart O’ the Hills campground picnic area to start their trip and avoid the work zone. Heavy machinery with limited visibility, uneven and unpaved road surfaces, loose gravel, one-lane sections of road, pilot car zones and lack of guardrails all pose risks during the upcoming construction season.

Combined with the road’s typical mountain characteristics (steep grade, curves, and limited sight distance), these factors led to the park’s decision to restrict bicyclists from using the lower five-mile section of road during the construction project. The scheduled five-month construction project will not likely affect the Ride the Hurricane cycling event set for Aug. 5, park officials said. The road work includes utility work, pavement rehabilitation, culvert installation, guardrail installation, and paving. Drivers should expect delays of up to 20 minutes in both directions during weekday work hours. Flaggers and pilot cars guide drivers through the active construction areas and temporary traffic signs and devices will be installed for weekend and evening travel as needed.

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Wednesday, July 25, 2018 • A3

SEQUIM GAZETTE

SEF teacher grants give local teachers a boost SEQUIM GAZETTE STAFF

Sequim’s Elise Beuke, second from left, is rowing for Team USA at the U-23 World Championships in Poland Wednesday through Sunday. She and her teammates are raising funds to cover expenses. Submitted photo

Sequim rower Beuke raising funds for Team USA’s trip to World Championships OLYMPIC PENINSULA NEWS GROUP Sequim’s Elise Beuke and her Women’s 8+ rowing team will represent Team USA at the the 2018 Under 23 World Championship in Poznan, Poland, July 25-29. Beuke is a senior-to-be on the University of Washington rowing team’s Varsity 8+. She was a member of the Huskies’ NCAA Championship winning team in 2017 and the UW’s runner-up finisher at the 2018 NCAA Championship in late May.

While representing the U.S., Beuke won the silver in the U.S. Women’s eight at the 2017 World Rowing Under-23 BEUKE Championships in Plovdiv, Bulgaria, and finished seventh in the double sculls at the 2015 Junior World Rowing Championships in Rio de Janiero. As a self-funded boat, she and her teammates are raising funds to cover expenses for the Poland trip. “The estimated cost of travel,

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Despite uncertainty in school funding at federal and state levels, local education advocates are helping fill in the gaps to spur special school projects. The Sequim Education Foundation’s latest round of teaching grants — totaling $31,575 to 14 educators across the Sequim School District — helps provide funding for science projects, supplies such as headphones and chairs, fields trips and more. Since the grants started in the 2001-2002 school year, the foundation has awarded 159 grants worth $148,501.85 — a figure that does not include mini-grants and funds for individual schools. This year’s grants also received a boost from Community Partners such as the HVK Foundation, King’s Way Foursquare Church, the Rawlins Foundation, Sequim Sunrise Rotary and Soroptimist Club of Sequim. Those interested in be a Community Partner of Sequim Education Foundation’s teaching grants, contact Katie Gilles at 360-683-2668 or gilles@ olypen.com.

Grant totals

equipment, and food for each athlete is estimated at $4,250 per person,” a post on the team’s fundraising page said. “Any contributions to our boat are immensely appreciated, and would help us towards our larger goal of going for gold in Poland.” To donate by debit or credit card, or for more information, visit tinyurl.com/ PDN-BeukeRows. The team, comprised of rowers from the UW, Stanford, Princeton and Yale, has an Instagram page at www.instagram. com/usa.u23.8.

Get Back to the Wild

This year’s grants include (by school, teacher): Sequim High School • Laura Gould, $1,529 — Knowledge Bowl Expansion; encourages wide knowledge of both academic and popular facts for students in grades 9-12 • Laura Gould, $2,610 — Project Lead the Way Technology; a biomedical science program that includes biology and STEM (science, technology, engineering and mathematics) curriculum Helen Haller Elementary School • Gwen Rudzinski, $2,000 — Science on Wheels; astronomy lessons for students in first grade and kindergarten • Robin Forrest, $1,582 — Point Defiance Zoo Field Trip; transports as many as 130 third-grade students Olympic Peninsula Academy • Kim Glasser, $303 — Operation Headphones; 24 sets of headphones for testing and daily use for as many as 100

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students in grades 1-12 (current equipment fraying) • Lilli Hardesty, $6,347 — Chairs; provides adequate seating for for as many as 100 students in grades 1-12 (current seating in poor condition) • Lilli Hardesty, $567 — Future City; a STEM-based engineering project utilizing computer-aided design, mathematics, science as students in grades 6-8 research, design, build cities of the future. Funds would purchase dedicated computer Greywolf Elementary School • Kim Knudson, $1,291 — Tech Protect; Protect and support Sphero Robot and Kindle Fire Technology currently in use for students in second grade; also to be used for K-5 students during Engineering Day; funding made possible by Rawlins Foundation • Jennifer Lopez, $3,200 — Greywolf Kids at Hope Week; a one-week event emphasizing opportunities for educational success, goal setting and quality of life for students in grades kindergarten-fifth grade; funding made possible by King’s Way Foursquare Church • Gretta Rich, $ 736 — Read Naturally subscription for 32 second-grade students Sequim Options School • Michelle Mahitka, $5,024 — Technology and equipment; grant replaces old laptops, computer chairs and charging stations for students in grades 10-12 Sequim Middle School Caleb Gentry, $1,386 — Xbox One Controllers; a STEM-based game design program for students in grades 7-8 Multiple schools • Linsay Rapelje — Family Reading Night; promotes literacy at all grade levels (last year’s event served 650 students, adults) • Jorn van de Wege — Lego WeDO 2.0 Kits; the advanced-placement computer science students from Sequim High School mentor elementary students in grades 2-4 to create a pathway for computer science, coding, math and science for students at all grade levels.

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A4 • Wednesday, July 25, 2018

SEQUIM GAZETTE

MILESTONES

McFarlands to celebrate 90th birthdays Don and Barbara McFarland are celebrating their 90th birthdays. A family birthday party is being planned for Aug. 4. Don and Barb have made their home in Sequim for many years: Don graduated from Sequim High School in 1946 and was born July 13, 1928. Barbara was born Aug. 6, 1928 in Idaho and moved to Sequim in 1960. Don has children living in Port Angeles — Mike (Lynn) McFarland, Bill McFarland, Karen (Bernie) Flores and Sue McFarland. He also has eight grandchildren and 17 great-grandchildren. Barbara has five children — George (Barbara) Sparks in Moses Lake, Jerry (Doris) Sparks in Port Angeles, Don Sparks in Sequim, Bob (Gwen) Sparks in Wenatchee and Sarah Louise Sparks in Sequim. She also has 11 grandchildren, 21 great-grandchildren and five great-great-grandchildren.

Submitted photo

Award-winning journalists at The Buccaneer include, from left, Abigail Vidals, Maddie Hunt and Ryan Fournier. Submitted photo

Peninsula College’s The Buccaneer brings home seven awards

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The Buccaneer, Peninsula College’s award-winning student newspaper, earned seven honors in the Pacific Northwest Association of Journalism Educators 2018 Contest, a fourstate competition for colleges across Washington, Oregon, Montana and Idaho. Ryan Fournier was awarded first place in sports news reporting for localizing the national controversy surrounding pro and amateur athletes’ protests during the national anthem for “Athletes, Coaches, Department not Jumping into Controversy,” and third place in the comprehensive coverage category for a series of news articles about a student returning to school titled, “Sex-Offender Postings and Notifications Living Beyond the Label.” “This is where the paper shines; it tackles hard subjects, subjects that a lot of papers shy from,” contest judges noted in their comments. “An interview with a Level 3 sex offender, a first person account of mental illness, seeing the many sides of the gun debate, rights for student journalists, homelessness.” Brenna Sinding received a second place award in the news photography category for “Fist Rising in Fall,” about a protest against racist graffiti at Boston College. Sinding was also named a finalist in the 2017 Mark of Excellence SINDING Nationals in the breaking news photography category-small schools division, for the photo. National Mark of Excellence award judges can select one national winner and up to two national finalists (runners-up) in each category. In the photo essay competition, Sinding won an honorable mention for “Fat Smitty’s Diner” that showcased the personality of a unique roadside diner in Discovery Bay. Maddie Hunt won two awards for her photography. Her cover photo titled “Zombie Hordes Hunt Humans” won second place, while “Throwdown in the PUB,” documenting an arm wrestling match, won third place in the feature photo category. Fournier and Abigail Vidals won an honorable mention for their photo essay of an international student celebration titled, “PUB Global: A Festival for the Senses.” One Pacific Northwest Association of Journalism Educators contest judge noted of The Buccaneer staff’s work: “With work on presentation, this paper would have it all … and really, presentation is the easiest part … the hardest part is the bravery to tackle hard subjects and the ability to write and report well … considering the size of the staff, this paper over-achieves.” View The Buccaneer online at www.passthebuc.com.

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Wednesday, July 25, 2018 • A5

SEQUIM GAZETTE

COMMUNITY NEWS BRIEFS Have coffee with the Sequim mayor The City of Sequim’s “Coffee with the Mayor” program continues in July. Mayor Dennis Smith and Communications and Marketing Director Barbara Hanna invite the community to meet at 8:30 a.m. Thursday, July 26, at the Black Bear Diner, 1471 E. Washington St. The mayor will be at a published location each month to listen to anyone who wants to chat, ask questions, express a concern or make a comment about the City or the community. Contact Smith at dsmith@sequimwa.gov for more information.

Permit office closure The City of Sequim announced that its Department of Community Development will be closed for permit processing Wednesday, Aug. 8. The closure is planned to allow staff members to attend a meeting. Scheduled inspections will still occur, according to a news release. The department is in City Hall at 152 W. Cedar St. For more information, call the department at 360-683-4908.

‘Level the Field’ golf tourney set for July 27

ment services and specialized workshops on living alone for no charge. The Port Angeles office has open volunteer positions in equipment maintenance. Both Sequim and Port Angeles offices need weekday morning delivery team drivers and assistants. See www.vhocc.org or call 360-452-1511.

Learn ‘By the Light of the Moon’ in Sequim

The Dungeness River Audubon Center’s next “Learn by the Light of the Moon” speaker series is slated for 7 p.m. Friday, July 27, at the center’s amphitheater, 2151 W. Hendrickson Road. Kim Sager-Fradkin, a wildlife biologist from the Lower Elwha Tribe, presents research on the Columbian black-tailed deer, mountain lions “and other furry or feathered wildlife.” SagerFradkin has studied marbled murrelets off the coast of California as well as coyotes in Yellowstone National Park, and now focuses her research efforts on river otters, American dippers, Columbian black-tailed deer, Roosevelt elk and restoration of the Elwha River. These free talks happen once a month and speakers will range from biologists to professors and authors. There is seating in the amphitheater but attendees are encouraged to bring lawn chairs and blankets. Email to rceducation@ olympus.net or call 360-6814076 for more information.

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boosters say. The concert features the Stardust Big Band and professional swing dancer Guy Caridi, who will be on hand to demonstrate swing dance moves. Guest musicians include SHS band director Vern Fosket on trombone and recent SHS graduate Astrid Martin on tenor sax.

Chastain selected for county emergency staff With the retirement of Penny Linterman, the Clallam Count y Sheriff’s Office has added Anne Chastain as the county’s CHASTAIN Clallam County Emergency Management staff. A Joyce resident, Chastain has lived in Clallam County since 1990. She has been a volunteer for her community for several years, including roles with Clallam County Search and Rescue, Clallam County Fire District 4 and as a Community Emergency Response Team volunteer. Her background includes first response emergency medicine and other aspects of

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donors taking vacations and Social and Health Services schools being out of session, and the Washington State event organizers say. Health Care Authority. Clallam County Juvenile Juvenile, family services and Family Services is progets $1.1M grant posing a renovation of the old Jody Jacobsen, new Clallam Juvenile Services building County Juvenile and Family located on the adjacent lot Services’ director, announced for expansion of the True Star last week that the department Behavioral Health treatment is a recipient of a Department programs and services. The of Commerce capital grant renovated facility will provide award totaling $1.1 million, a larger, separate and more to increase behavioral health private facility for outpatient facilities and capacity for chil- treatment services, youth dren and minor youth. focused recreation, activities The grants were awarded and outreach, drop-in and through a competitive pro- recovery support services. cess conducted by ComFor more information, Blood drive set merce, the Department of contact Jacobsen at 360-565The Rotary Clubs of Se- Health, the Department of 2639. quim are hosting a blood drive scheduled for 10 a.m.noon and 1-4 p.m. Friday, AROLD UFF Aug. 3, in the clubhouse at B OARD C ERTIFIED S URGERY Sunland Golf & Country M EMBER P ODIATRIC S PORTS A CADEMY Club, 109 Hilltop Dr. Go to bloodworksnw.org/ • Treatment of sport or non-sport injuries of foot drives or call 1-800-398-7888 and ankle to make an appointment. All • Orthotic prescription and evaluation who are able are encouraged • Diabetic foot care to donate. For more infor• Surgical treatment of foot conditions mation about eligibility, call 1-800-398-7888. Summer is always a challenging time for blood centers to ensure an adequate 360 582 2651 blood supply because of 777 N F IFTH A VE • S EQUIM M EDICAL P LAZA emergency response as well. She is has been working as a control technician in the Clallam County Corrections Facility for the past six years. Clallam County Emergency Management is a section of the Clallam County Sheriff’s Office and has two full time positions as permanent staff, who are tasked with coordination of grants, preparation plans, volunteer management, public awareness and preparation, emergency operation center coordination and emergency communications.

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The Sequim Association of Realtors hosts the “Level the Field Project” Golf Tournament on Friday, July 27, at The Cedars at Dungeness, 1965 Woodcock Road. The four-person scramble raises funds for Sequim-area students in need of financial assistance to participate in Concert a fundraiser extra-curricular activities. Cost is $85 per person and for SHS band uniforms includes green fees, carts and Complete with a pair of dinner. special guests, The Stardust Call 360-460-2839 for Big Band’s upcoming show at more information. Olympic Cellars Winery is for a fundraiser for the Sequim Hospice orientations High School Band Boosters. set in Sequim, PA “Dance Hall Days – An Volunteer Hospice of Clal- Evening of Swing Dancing” lam County will offer a is set for 7 p.m. Friday, July volunteer orientation from 27, at the winery, 255410 US 11 a.m.-noon Thursday, Aug. Highway 101; doors open at 2, in Carlsborg; call 360-775- 6 p.m. The cover charge is $10, 7806 for directions. Another orientation is set with funds raised going to pay for 10-11 a.m. Friday, Aug. 3, for new SHS band uniforms. All ages are welcome; tickat the Port Angeles headquarets are required for attendees ters, 540 E. Eighth St. Volunteer Hospice pro- 13 years or older. (Get tickets vides end-of-life nursing care, at www.brownpapertickets. lends medical equipment and com/event/3459384.) The band’s current unisupplies, and offers education programs, grief support forms have been in use for groups, one-on-one bereave- more than 15 years, band

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A6 • Wednesday, July 25, 2018

SEQUIM GAZETTE

Sequim all-school reunion set for August Deadline for registration is July 31 SEQUIM GAZETTE STAFF The 103rd Sequim All-Class Reunion — set for Aug. 10-12 — has a variety of activities for returning Wolves, from community gatherings and meals, a tour of the Old Dungeness Schoolhouse, high school and museum, a golf tourney and several class mini-reunions. Registration is $25 per person and includes breakfast on Aug. 11, membership in the Sequim Alumni Association, mailings, printing and other expenditures. Download and print a copy of a reunion registration form at www. sequimschools.org. Click on Our District, then “Resources,” “Community” and “Sequim Schools

Schools

From page A-1 “The biggest goal was trying to keep the group (OPA) together as much as possible,” Neal said. “Now we just need to get everything up and running in September.” The portables were placed near Fir Street across from Sequim High’s tennis courts and next to the high school’s choir and band room and on the corner of Alder Street across from the Sequim Community School. Neal said the portables have been placed in the spots they most likely will remain. The Sequim Community School’s rennovation is slated for late August or early September. Neal said the sites where the portables will go have been surveyed and marked and will be up to codes and

Alumni Association.” Or, contact Sally Heun at 360-457-5713 or heunsal.01@gmail.com. Send checks (payable to Sequim Alumni Association) to: Sequim Alumni Association, PO Box 1758, Sequim, WA 98382. Registrations are due by July 31; for possible late registration (after July 31), contact Terri Lillquist 360681-4075 or tands@olypen.com. Registrations will be confirmed; those who don’t receive confirmation within 15 days are asked to contact Hazel Lowe at 360-683-5315 or granny@wavecable.com.

Reunion events • Friday, Aug. 10 Participants in the reunion golf

regulations before they are put together. He also said there will be ADA-compliant ramps put in for each portable and permits from the City of Sequim are pending. In June, Neal said it cost $800 total to buy eight portables with an estimated moving cost of $140,000. The other two portables still need to be moved over from Central Kitsap to Helen Haller and Greywolf Elementary Schools, and Neal said because of the moving company’s schedules a date has not been set to move the two remaining portables yet. The other two portables will be moved over as soon as possible, Neal said. “It’s been a daily project,” he said. “We’re not penciled in for a particular date but we’re penciled in.” The six portables for OPA

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tournament are asked to be at The Cedars at Dungeness, 1965 Woodcock Road, at 1 p.m. This nine-hole scramble tees off at 2 p.m. Cost is $27 per person, with awards and prizes on tap. For more information, call Jim Duncan at 360-460-7896. The Friday night gathering is at 7 p.m. at 7 Cedars Casino, 270756 Highway 101, in Blyn. A no-host gathering is slated on the west-side patio; all are welcome. • Saturday, Aug. 11 The second day of the reunion begins with breakfast at the Sequim Prairie Grange, 290 Macleay Road. Check in between 7-11 a.m. Reunion participants will receive an information packet with nametags and tickets for breakfast — all-youcan-eat pancakes, ham, egg and coffee or tea — that will be served during those hours. There will be three playing cards for the Alumni Poker Game. Those who purchased a buffet dinner will receive those tickets in the packet. On display are classic cars; those bringing cars for display are asked

are covered under the district’s capital project levy but the other two portables are not and the money to purchase and move those will come out of the district’s general fund. “We had a contingency plan for OPA knowing they were going to be out of their building and that was part of the capital project levy,” Neal said. “In our original planning, we had money set aside to accommodate OPA until they get something very permanent.” Neal said the portables for OPA are meant to be temporary housing for the school program and the district will go back to the community in the future to see what it will or will not approve for permanent housing. A bond or a levy to permanently house OPA could be on the table on the future. “To be on time and on budget is what we owe the community,” Neal said. “We want to allow the community to be with the practice of having the community listening sessions.”

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Clallam County Fire Protection District No. 3 recently adopted Resolution No. 2018-04 providing for the submission to the voters on November 6, 2018 a proposition authorizing the District to restore its 2018 regular property tax levy at $1.50 per $1,000.00 of assessed valuation for collection in 2019, and to establish a CPI based growth factor for the following five years. The District is accepting names of people interested in participating in voter pamphlet statement pro and con committees. Citizens interest in participating, please call Ben Andrews at (360) 683-4242 by Monday July 30, 2018 at 5:00 PM.

to be at the grange by 9 a.m. Tour some old school haunts: The old Sequim High School building (503 N. Sequim Ave.) will be open for a walk-about from 11 a.m.-1 p.m., while the Dungeness Schoolhouse will be open from noon-2 p.m. The Sequim Museum & Arts building will be open from 11 a.m.-3 p.m. The Saturday night buffet (optional) is $45 per person and takes place at the The Cedars at Dungeness, 1965 Woodcock Road. Dinner is set in the large event tent on the golf course near the banquet room, with a no-host bar. Social hour begins at 5 p.m., assembly at 5:45 p.m. and dinner at 6:30 p.m. The meal consists of chicken and/or beef, roasted potatoes, seasonal veggies, Caesar salad, rolls with butter, and lemon bars and brownies for dessert. Dinner reservations are limited to the first 350 received; attendees must have a dinner ticket to enter. The alumni poker game is set at this time. To go with three cards distributed earlier in the day, players get one more card at breakfast and the last one at dinner. Prizes are awarded

to the best poker hand, person who traveled the farthest and three prizes for the golf tournament. • Sunday, Aug. 12 The pioneer picnic, a free potluck meal, is set for noon at the Sequim Prairie Grange. All pioneers are welcome. Local attendees are asked to bring extra food; hot dogs and drinks are provided.

Mini-reunions A number of Sequim High classes are scheduling some extra get-togethers during the All-School Reunion: • Class of 1962, Friday, Aug. 10; contact Dick Cays at mercays@ hotmail.com • Class of 1970, Sunday, Aug. 12; contact Lonnie Percival at Inp5255@msn.com • Class of 1988, Saturday, Aug. 11; Contact Kathy Lowe McRae at kathylowemcrae@gmail.com • Class of 1997, Saturday, Aug. 11; Contact Jodie Beall at Jodie. beall8233@gmail.com.

Sequim schools hire two administrators BY ERIN HAWKINS Sequim Gazette

Sequim School District will see two new faces in its administration as of July 1. The District’s board of directors approved hiring one principal at Helen Haller Elementary and another at Sequim High School at the July 16 board meeting. The board approved Shelley Jefferson of Bellingham Public Schools as the new assistant principal at Helen Haller and Kristi Queen of Mukilteo Schools as the assistant principal at Sequim High School. Jefferson will fill the assistant principal position vacated by Allyson Cundiff and Queen will replace Tom Anderson and Mary Ann Unger who split the position as interim assistant principals. Jefferson has one year of administrative experience and six years of teaching experience. Her compensation will range between $91,396 to $95,107, district officials said in an email. Queen has 11 years of administrative experience and five years of teaching and her pay will range from $101,567 to $105,691.

and goals of the district’s five year strategic plan from 2018-2023. These approvals cover phase I of the strategic plan and school officials are still working on establishing phase II, which covers the objectives and strategies of the plan and phase III, which outlines the implementation of the plan. The district’s vision of the plan states, “our community inspires and prepares each student to thrive” and the mission says, “In connection with our community, the Sequim School District empowers staff to inspire hope and provide flexible, innovative learning opportunities in a safe and respectful environment, so each student thrives.” The district is entering into the third phase of the plan’s timeline from the 2018-2019 school year through the 2022-2023 school year.

Other topics

The board also discussed at first reading a policy that establishes a minimum fund balance for the district each year. Board directors discussed the language of the policy and agreed to make Strategic Plan changes to the policy as some Board directors also ap- of the wording was confusing. proved the vision, mission Board directors discussed

where the range of the fund balance should fall, with the policy originally stating the fund balance should “target a goal of no less than five percent and no less than 10 percent or higher of the current year’s expenditures to address potential general fund needs and to continue to maintain an acceptable and adequate minimum fund balance for district operations.” Director Robin Henrikson said “10 percent or higher” leaves room for interpretation and she suggested to have the wording provide a more definitive value. The board agreed to amend the policy to make the wording and values more clear and it will go to a second reading at the next board meeting.

Acknowledgments The board gave Sequim School District approval to designate Clallam County as a “Coast Guard Community.” The district also received an “outstanding” on its annual Washington State Patrol inspection of its school buses for the second year in a row. State Superintendent Chris Reykdal sent a letter of congratulations to Sequim Schools Superintendent Gary Neal.

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Wednesday, July 25, 2018 • A7

SEQUIM GAZETTE

Business

SEQUIM GAZETTE

A-7

It’s Kid’s Day at the Sequim Farmers Market on July 28. Here, youths enjoys local delicacies at a Kid’s Day in late June. Photo courtesy of Sequim Farmers Market

‘Kids’ get their days at the market

Jenny and Cody Houston (with their daughter Waylen), owners of Poser Yoga and 5th Element Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu and Kickboxing Fitness, sit in their new space in Sequim at 145 E. Washington St. where they’ve expanded their two businesses. Sequim Gazette photo by Erin Hawkins

Couple shares passion, business space Owners of Poser Yoga and 5th Element martial arts expand to Sequim BY ERIN HAWKINS

Poser Yoga and 5th Element Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu & Kickboxing

Sequim Gazette

Cody and Jenny Houston are following their passions side by side … literally. The married couple are expanding both of their fitness businesses Poser Yoga and 5th Element Brazilian JiuJitsu and Kickboxing Fitness from Port Angeles to 145 E. Washington St. in Sequim. The Houstons provide a variety of yoga, Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu and kickboxing fitness classes for both youths and adults. While they share the same space for their classes in Port Angeles and now in Sequim, Jenny operates Poser Yoga separately from Cody, who operates 5th Element. “He’s doing his thing and I’m doing mine,” Jenny said. “Both of us do what we do because of the people.” The Houstons said they both have a large client base out of Sequim and saw the space previously used by Sequim Gym up for lease. They saw the opportunity as a chance to expand their businesses and serve their clients in Sequim. Both Cody and Jenny say they are excited to meet new clients in Sequim and learn what community members are looking for. The Houstons said they are sharing the same unit on East Washington Street until they decide to further expand. Owners said this is hopefully the first phase of expansion, and are hoping phases two and three will allow them to also move into the two other units adjoining their current space. The couple have been operating their business in Port Angeles at 502

Sequim location (new): 145 E. Washington St. Port Angeles location: 502 W. 8th St. Contact: 360-452-6121

than 18 in Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu (BJJ). He is a black belt first degree in BJJ and is close to a black belt in Muay Thai. He describes Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu as submission wrestling and believes it is the best martial art for self-defense. “There’s a laundry lists of benefits,” Cody says of BJJ. “It’s something you can do your whole life and still learn from it.” Through 5th Element, Cody offers beginning and regular Brazilian JiuJitsu classes for adults and youths and fitness kickboxing classes that focus more on strength and conditioning circuits. “We have a very good product,” Cody said.

W. Eighth St. and will continue to keep classes there with the opening of the new Sequim location. Poser Yoga and 5th Element held a soft opening of their new Sequim space several weeks ago and transformed the old space into a space suitable for both businesses with the help of friend and Brazilian Jiu-Jitsu instructor Daniel Robbins. The owners plan to hold a grand Class times, more Poser Yoga will offer a Slow Flow opening of their space in September Yoga class from 10- 11 a.m. on Tuesdays and are still determining a set date. and Thursdays, and on Wednesdays a A passion for people Yoga Basics class from 4-5 p.m. and a Both Jenny and Cody say they are Strong Flow Yoga class from 5:30-6:30 passionate about their individual prac- p.m. 5th Element is offering a Beginner tices and supportive in each others’ work, but especially enjoy watching BJJ class from 6-7 p.m. on Mondays, Tuesdays and Thursdays, a youth Bratheir clients’ grow. “We want to support people in their zilian Jiu-Jitsu class (ages 5-14) from 4-4:45 p.m. on Tuesdays and Thursjourneys,” Jenny said. Jenny has experience as a competi- days, and fitness kickboxing from 5-6 tive dancer and transitioned into a yoga p.m. on Tuesdays and Thursdays. The businesses are offering separate instructor later in life. She has taught memberships for each program but yoga for about 11 years. Her Poser Yoga studio offers several will offer clients a reduced price for a different yoga classes, from basic yoga membership when a client purchases classes for all levels to more advanced a membership from the other program. They also offer two-week trial passes classes. “Yoga is for everyone,” Jenny said. and a variety of membership or class “I’m really inspired by the people who options. For more information about memare rediscovering themselves.” Cody also shares the same senti- bership pricing or scheduling, call 360ments. He has more than 20 years of 452-6121 or visit https://poserstudios. experience in martial arts and more com/ or www.5thelementmma.com.

5210 … five (5) or more servings of fruits and vegetables, two (2) hours or less of recreational screen time, one (1) hour or more of physical activity, zero (0) sugary beverages. Every day. This is the message that the Olympic Peninsula Healthy Community Coalition has been infusing into the local communities throughout What’s Clallam County since it began as a New grassroots project in 2015. at the Their mission is to form partnerMarket? ships and networks that establish healthy choices as the standard Elli Rose in our community. The coalition launched the 5210 initiative in Clallam County, which encourages a healthy lifestyle based on the choices we make every day. Since the inception of the Sequim Farmers Market in 1995, it has served as a local gathering place and market place, with the vision of becoming a major factor in Sequim lifestyle, and boosting community spirit. The 5210 initiative falls right in line with what the market has to offer, and we are proud to be collaborating with the efforts of the Olympic Peninsula Healthy Community Coalition. This Saturday is Kid’s Day at the Sequim Farmers Market, and there will be many opportuniSequim Farmers Market ties for youths to When: 9 a.m.-3 p.m. Saturday, July 28 explore and make Location: Sequim Civic Center Plaza, their own healthy downtown Sequim lifestyle choices. More information: manager@sequiVisit the activity mmarket.com or 360-582-6218 booth to receive a $2 coupon which On the web: www.sequimmarket.com kids can use to purchase fresh fruits and vegetables from local farm vendors. Coupons are available on a first-come, first-served basis, while supplies last. This month the activity booth will feature a Farmers Market Scavenger Hunt! At 10:30 a.m., join local momma/yoga teacher Julia Buggy for some fun kids yoga at the Sequim Farmers Market. Come to the market with your little ones of all ages for 30 minutes of family friendly movement. Julia Buggy is a yoga teacher based in Sequim, offering classes four days a week at local studios. To learn more about her classes and seasonal specials, contact her at 360-809-0717 or visit her website at juliabuggy.com. Immediately following the Kid’s Yoga Class, enjoy our summer live music series with The Old Sidekicks performing from 11 a.m.-2 p.m. Kid’s Days are made possible with support from the Olympic View Community Foundation and the WSU Clallam County Extension. A special thanks to Bell & Davis Law, Brokers Group Real Estate, and First Federal Savings & Loan. Elli Rose is the Sequim Farmers Market manager. Contact her at manager@sequimmarket.com or 360-5826218, or see www.sequimmarket.com.

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A8 • Wednesday, July 25, 2018

SEQUIM GAZETTE

Lavender From page A-1

Owners of Washington Lavender Farm expanded their offerings to a 10-day festival. “It was fantastic,” said Janet Abbott, co-owner of the farm and George Washington Inn. “We have a lot of people who want to beat the traffic and crowds. That first weekend (of our festival), we probably had two-thirds as many people as this weekend for Sequim Lavender Weekend.” Their vendor total remained the same both weekends, she said, and some stayed all week long and want to return for next year’s likely 10day Washington Lavender Festival. The prompt for expanding their festival followed traffic issues in 2017, including the closure of the McDonald Creek Bridge. “We had people telling us it took five hours to get to us from the Hood Canal Bridge,” Abbott said. “We have people who love our farm but couldn’t get here.” So the Abbotts advertised heavily on social media and added several signs directing drivers in the area to their festival. “We wanted to make sure people knew we more than just open. We Debbie Ferreria of Bellevue takes a selfie in the barn of Kitty B’s Lavender Farm on July 22. It was her first time visiting a Sequim lavender farm. were having a festival,” Abbott Sequim Gazette photos by Matthew Nash said. That led to successes, such as sellruns to the park for routine calls ing out their Lavender Afternoon such as dehydration. Tea events the first weekend and The fire district operated the feshappy vendors. tival’s first aid booth and brought a fire truck for children to sit in. Sequim Lavender Experience “I like this venue a lot better,” Orr Washington Lavender Farm joins said. “Our hope is we keep it there.” nine other farms to promote the Madden said she was grateful to “Sequim Lavender Experience” all all volunteers, and first responders summer. for their help at the Street Fair, Bruce McCloskey, co-owner of including the fire district, Clallam B&B Family Farm, said they invited County Sheriff’s Office, and the US all lavender farms/businesses in Coast Guard who did a fly-by. the area to participate in the conOn the highway, Trooper Chelsea cept with the goal to promote the Hodgson with Washington State idea that “you can enjoy lavender Patrol said they had extra patrols all summer, not just in Lavender out July 20-22. Weekend.” That led to 389 traffic stops from “There are activities going on at Sequim to Discovery Bay from noon the farms from early July to early on Friday-10 p.m. Sunday. September,” he said. In that span, there were 10 colli“We’re trying to make people sions, too, she said. aware. You don’t have to fight the crowds that weekend. Not Going forward that we’re against it. We love that The City of Sequim continues weekend.” Kunju Mehta of Seattle shows colleague Eswar Naidu a photo from the lavender fields of the Purple Path Farm. to coordinate Sequim Lavender Sequim Lavender Experience Weekend with an official map of all isn’t a formal group with dues or of the lavender farms on tour, combylaws, McCloskey said. said this makes sense.” allows us to grow our whole sum- Sequim Lavender Festival munity events, shuttle information “It’s just a group of us with a lot of mer here.” The festival also featured nine and more. On the eastside of Sequim, the things in common looking to help Some of those many events at Sequim Lavender Festival changed farms/nurseries open to the public “From our perspective, everyall of us,” he said. farms include Jungible Music Ses- its venue for its annual Street Fair with some of them remaining open thing seemed to go really well,” said Rick Olson, co-owner of Laven- sions with The True Loves at 6 p.m. from Fir Street to Carrie Blake through the summer. Barbara Hanna, Sequim commuder Connection, said they hope to Friday, July 27, at Jardin du Soleil; Community Park due to anticipated nications and marketing director. spread out business over the sum- Hymn Sing by the Sea from 2-4 construction. First responders That included two days of the mer, too, through the effort. p.m. Sunday, July 28, at WashingWith big smiles in the lavender Sequim Farmers Market on the “Based on opinions from visitors “It’s a positive, not a negative,” ton Lavender Farm; and the sixth and vendors it was a huge success,” fields, first responders said Se- Civic Center plaza, an in-city shuttle he said. annual Tour de Lavender bicycle said Debbie Madden, executive quim’s crime and collisions went offered by the Sequim Boys & “If we can spread it all out, it’s tour on Saturday, Aug. 4 at several director of the Sequim Lavender about as expected. Girls Club, and the many lavendermore beneficial for all of us and lavender farms. Sequim Police Chief Sheri Crain related events. Since the city started Festival. “We got a lot of positive comments between the venue and said lavender events in the city coordinating Sequim Lavender Tasha Witherspoon went fine. Weekend’s offerings, Hanna said park layout.” of Seattle “Seems like there was heavy at- it’s become easier to streamline the This year the Street Fair featured its smells the LavenderStock music on the James tendance but there were no more information to locals and visitors. lavender at “With some of the tools the city Center for Performing Arts’ stage, and issues than normal,” she said. Purple Haze At the Street Fair, there were four has put together, such as the official about 180 vendors including artists, Lavender Sequim Lavender Growers Associa- reported incidents: one for a hot map and website, from what I hear Farm. animal in a vehicle, one unattended they see the value in that,” she said. tion farms, and nonprofits. For more information on Sequim “More people came and stayed child, one parking complaint, one longer than usual,” Madden said of lost property but no thefts or colli- Lavender Weekend, visit sequimlavsions by the park. enderweekend.com. the park. “From our perspective, the event For more information on Sequim While no formal decision has Lavender Experience, visit sequimbeen made, she hopes the festival was great,” she said. Assistant Fire Chief Dan Orr lavender.org. returns to the park in 2019. For more information on the “My desire, and many visitors and with Clallam County Fire District 3 Sequim Lavender Festival, visit vendors hope we get to do this for- agreed with that sentiment. He said firefighters made five lavenderfestival.com. ever here,” Madden said. “Everyone


Wednesday, July 25, 2018 • A9

SEQUIM GAZETTE

Visiting from Michigan, fiancés Nathan and Olivia Mckay took advantage of a free photo opportunity at Jardin du Soleil Lavender Farm on July 21. The couple said they plan to use the photo for their save-the-date announcements. The Sequim Lavender Festival street fair featured about 180 vendors, such as 7 Cedars Casino, where bartender Jessica Kirby puts a lavender garnish into a cocktail at the business’ booth.

Sisters Goldie and Maisy Weeks from Poulsbo play with beach balls in one of Dream Cather Balloon’s at Olympic Lavender Heritage Farm during Sequim Lavender Weekend.

Images of

Lavender Art Jam artist and demonstrator Lynne Armstrong works on an acrylic painting in the barn at Rock Hollow Farm during Sequim Lavender Weekend.

Photos by Matthew Nash and Erin Hawkins

Mark Romero of the Olympic Driftwood Sculptors speaks with Sherry Voss, left, of Seabeck, and Brenda Watson of Port Orchard about his art process and his driftwood sculpture “Heart Throb.” Romero also sculpted a larger heart where people could pose for a photograph. Tien Trinh cuts lavender with his family, including his nephew Shin, sons Christopher and William and wife Trinh Nguyen at Martha Lane Lavender on July 22. Tien said they love their ice cream and come every year especially for it.

Quilt show winners Etta Allen, 5, of Edmonds runs through the lavender fields at Purple Haze Lavender Farm while her family relaxes nearby in the shade.

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A10 • Wednesday, July 25, 2018

SEQUIM GAZETTE

FROM THE POLICE BLOTTER

Kilmer: Bill aims to expand broadband access By ROB OLLIKAINEN Olympic Peninsula Daily Group

The weekly police blotter includes incidents that occurred in the City of Sequim and in unincorporated Clallam County in the Sequim-Dungeness Valley area. July 17-18 Reports unavailable July 19 12:17 p.m — Burglary, near 100 block of Eberle Lane 4:13 p.m — Theft, 261000 block of US Highway 101 6:48 p.m — Theft, near 100 block of Christian Lane 8:12 p.m — Theft, 600 block of North Fifth Avenue July 20 5:59 a.m. — Vehicle fire, 200 block of Industrial Parkway 6:41 a.m. — Sex offender registration violation, 100 block of Pierson Road 10:17 a.m. — Theft, 400 block of East Washington Street 10:26 a.m. — Vehicle accident, Old Olympic Highway/Carlsborg Road 1:12 p.m — Vehicle accident, East Maple Street/ South Sequim Avenue 3:31 p.m — Theft, 1200 block of West Washington Street 4:50 p.m — Burglary, 500 block of Hogback Road July 21 1:20 a.m. — Prowler, 100 block of Applegate Lane 1:32 p.m — Warrant arrest, North Seventh Avenue/West Fir Street 4:19 p.m — Vehicle accident, 270000 block of US Highway 101 July 22 2:19 a.m. — Prowler, near 100 block of Stratus Loop 3:35 a.m. — Prowler, 1100 block of Haven Heights Drive 9:19 a.m. — Warrant arrest, 2500 block of West Sequim Bay Road 3:37 p.m — Theft, 500 block of Keeler Road 4:56 p.m — Theft, 200 block of West Washington Street 4:57 p.m — Vehicle accident, 700 block of Taylor Cutoff Road 5:13 p.m — Vehicle accident, US Highway 101/ River Road 8:38 p.m — Burglary, 3000 block of West Sequim Bay Road July 23 11:10 a.m — Vehicle accident, River Road/West Washington Street 1:18 p.m — Theft, 1200 block of West Washington Street 3:30 p.m — Vehicle accident, 2100 block of Happy Valley Road 4:59 p.m — Vehicle accident, 400 block of West Washington Street 6:40 p.m — Vehicle accident, West Hendrickson Road/North Seventh Avenue 7:10 p.m — Vehicle accident, 300 block of McComb Road

U.S. Rep. Derek Kilmer plans to introduce a bill this month that would help expand broadband access to rural areas such as the West End of Clallam County, he said. The legislation would provide a 75 percent tax credit for groups of qualifying individuals or businesses that form a limited broadband district and build a local network. Kilmer, D-Gig Harbor, said the bipartisan bill would help address the “last mile” issue for off-the-grid or under-served areas that do not have access to broadband. “You can envision if there’s a neighborhood full of people, or a business park that’s unserved, the capacity to kind of pool together and extend this and get some tax relief from the investment could really mean the difference between having access to internet or not having access to internet,” Kilmer said in an interview on July 6. “And increasingly, your ability to learn is tied to this. Your ability to have a successful business is tied to this.” Kilmer said he planned to introduce the bill with at least one Republican colleague later this month. “These challenges aren’t unique to red districts or blue districts,” Kilmer said after a roundtable discussion with community leaders at the North Olympic Peninsula Skills Center. “They’re affecting everybody.”

Fireworks From page A-1

my rights has been infringed upon.’ ” The ordinance as drafted would ban consumer fireworks across the county. It would allow for permits for private displays, but would require the display to be organized, planned and discharged by a state-licensed pyrotechnician. Jan Butler, who said she helped campaign for the fireworks ban in Port Angeles, said she now lives outside town in the county and is positive people are using illegal fireworks. She said fireworks “turn cities and counties into war zones,” and recommended the county look at using LED drones instead of fireworks. “Using [fireworks] is not a constitutional right,” she said. Dennis Hagaman, who opposes an outright ban, brought

U.S. Rep Derek Kilmer responds to questions during his town hall at Peninsula College on in mid-July. Photo by Jesse Major/ Peninsula Daily New

Kilmer is a Port Angeles native who represents the 6th Congressional District, which covers the Olympic and Kitsap peninsulas and most of Tacoma. The roundtable included representatives of the Clallam County Economic Development Corp., Port of Port Angeles, Port Angeles School District and city of Port Angeles. Kilmer said he learned from Makah tribal officials that students in Neah Bay were bused to another community to take a statemandated exam on the internet because they did not have broadband in their school. The library at the Hoh Tribe is in a trailer that does not have internet, Kilmer said. “That presents challenges in terms of access to information and access to educational opportunity, and access to economic

with him a petition he said was signed by 653 other people who agree that fireworks should not be banned. He told commissioners that fireworks are among the reasons tourists visit Clallam County each Independence Day. “They go to stores, grocery stores,” he said. “They come and do this every year. They live in Seattle, Tacoma, Kent and they come here.” He said it’s not fair to look at other forest fires, such as the destructive Eagle Creek fire last year, as a reason for banning fireworks in Clallam County. The Eagle Creek fire, which was started Sept. 2 by a 15-yearold boy who was using fireworks during a burn ban, burned 50,000 acres over three months in the Columbia River Gorge. In Oregon most fireworks are illegal, but that fire happened anyway, he said. “You’re comparing a tinder box to a rain forest,” he said.

opportunity,” Kilmer said. Kilmer met with the owner of a struggling Grays Harbor County business Thursday that was just outside of a broadband service area, he said. “That presented a challenge in terms of their profitability and even safety concerns since their security systems were online,” Kilmer said. He added: “The notion here isn’t to solve all of the problems but to provide a tool that could contribute to solving that last mile problem.” Port Angeles School District web design and technical support staffer Christian Snow said 30 percent to 40 percent of students in the district do not have reliable internet at home. “A lot of our teachers are now starting to move to a flipped classroom, meaning that they’re doing lectures in the evening via video for the students, which means the students need to have the ability to get online,” Snow said. “We’re sending (Google Chromebook) devices home with students soon. That’s going to be a part of their life — digital connection and the internet — and reliable broadband is a major part of that.” Clallam County Economic Development Corp. Interim Director Julie Knott said the North Olympic Peninsula needs broadband for collaboration. “If we can’t talk to each other, we can’t collaborate and be better leaders,” Knott said. “If we don’t have access, we can’t be a team.”

The three commissioners each said that they would like to find some sort of compromise. Ozias asked staff to schedule a work session on the ordinance in late August or September so that commissioners can “amend the draft ordinance in a way that is reflective of the input we’ve received,” he said. “He should be able to come up with a compromise that we can be supportive of.” Ozias said there could be more public hearings once the ordinance is redrafted, giving people more opportunities to comment on the issue. Commissioner Bill Peach suggested that the ordinance might apply differently to different areas of the county “I agree the West End, the rain forest, has a different set of dangers and hazards,” than in the Sequim area, he said. “I’m very interested in what’s appropriate in regard to the East End. Commissioner Randy John-

son echoed Peach’s thoughts on finding a way to draft an ordinance that is appropriate for the various parts of the county. Johnson agreed with many who spoke at the hearing that the county should limit the number of days fireworks can be used. When there is risk of extreme fire danger, officials could declare a prohibition against all fireworks. Johnson said the ordinance should give the county fire marshal more power to ban fireworks when there is a high risk for fire. “All you need is dry weather, wind and time, and lo and behold you have issues,” he said, adding the fire marshal should have more discretion. “For me, that part of the ordinance needs to be looked at in more detail.” Any ordinance passed by the Board of County Commissioners would not be effective until a year after enacted.

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Wednesday, July 25, 2018 • A11

SEQUIM GAZETTE

Canoes welcomed at Hollywood Beach By ROB OLLIKAINEN Olympic Peninsula News Group

Weary pullers were greeted with smiles and warm Lower Elwha Klallam hospitality Friday, July 20, as the Tribal Canoe Journey arrived in Port Angeles. Twenty-two canoe teams landed on at Hollywood Beach for a two-day celebration of Native culture at the midway point in the 2018 Paddle to Puyallup. As part of the landing protocol, a representative of each visiting tribe or Canadian First Nation asked a member of the Lower Elwha Klallam Tribe for permission to come ashore. “Honored friends and relatives, we are glad you are here,” 11-year-old Malena Marquez said during one of the landings. “Come ashore! Come ashore!” More than half of the canoes that arrived were powered by pullers who had crossed the Strait of Juan de Fuca from Beecher Bay. “The conditions were great today,” said Thor Gauti of the T’Sou-Ke First Nation. “Sometimes they can be really, really bad out there. But the last few times we’ve crossed, it’s been really nice.” The Lower Elwha Klallam Tribe hosted the visiting tribes from the Washington coast

Members of the Mowachaht Tribe’s canoe family arrive in Jamestown during the Power Paddle to Puyallup on Sunday. They were one of 24 canoes to land in Jamestown, which is one of several stops as tribes make their way to Puyallup. Jesse Major/Peninsula Daily News and Vancouver Island for two days of singing, dancing and storytelling. “Come share supper with us at Elwha,” Harmony Awakawa said as another canoe family waited for permission to land. “We’ll sing and dance. Come ashore!” Two-dozen canoes arrived in Jamestown during the Power Paddle to Puyallup on Sunday, July 22 — one of several stops as tribes make their way to Puyallup.

A week-long celebration

A week-long protocol celebration for the 2018 Tribal Canoe Journey will be held in Puyallup beginning Saturday, July 28. More than 100 canoe teams from the Pacific Northwest and Canada were registered for the culminating event.

Norbert Sylvester of Cowichan crossed the Strait of Juan de Fuca on Friday with members of other first nations. He said there was a slight breeze on the Strait and manageable five-foot swells. “It was pretty well smooth sailing,” said Sylvester, who spotted otters during the crossing. “Wish we had a wind sail, though.” The Lower Elwha Klallam Tribe provided water and a first-aid tent for the exhausted pullers. Volunteers helped the teams lift the Native canoes stern-first above the high tide line. The Elwha’s own canoe, Beautiful Sister, is named in memory of Vanna Francis, a tribal member who died in 2007 at age 17.

Keltsmaht Thomas of Ahousaht First Nations on Vancouver Island, standing at rear, asks for permission to come ashore at Hollywood Beach in Port Angeles on Friday as a canoe belonging to Klahoose First Nation approaches behind him. Keith Thorpe/Peninsula Daily News Harry Moon of Wakeman Sound, B.C., carried a pink flag from the Lower Elwha Klallam Tribe to promote cancer awareness and support for cancer survivors. Moon, whose Quinaultcarved canoe was the first to arrive at Hollywood Beach, has been encouraging cancer survivors and cancer supporters at each stop on the way to Puyallup. “We sit down and share our story,” said Moon, who lost his father and grandfather to cancer.

“Since Nanaimo, we sat there every night talking to supporters, talking to cancer survivors. I’m a cancer survivor myself. That’s the reason I carry the flag.” The Tribal Canoe Journey travels to a different host tribe each year. The inter-tribal event began in 1989 as the “Paddle to Seattle” to mark the state’s centennial. Moon has participated in the canoe journey every year since 1992 and has attended celebrations at the Lower Elwha Klallam Tribe every year

since 2001. The Tribal Canoe Journey began as a way to promote drug- and alcohol-free lifestyles and expanded to a cultural celebration in 1999, Moon said. The canoe journey has reconnected long-lost relatives and teaches valuable life lessons to youth, Moon said. “It’s reconciliation,” Moon said. “It’s bringing back not just the family ties, but helping our children learn to respect each other as well as themselves.”

Northwest Maritime Center to receive totem pole from Jamestown S’Klallam BY JEANNIE MCMACKEN Olympic Peninsula News Group

The Northwest Maritime Center will be gifted two pieces of Native American art by the Jamestown S’Klallam Tribe, designed and carved for the center by Sequim artist Dale Faulstich. The pieces, a totem pole and a Nootka-style canoe, tell the Native story of the area’s waters and celebrate the people

who carved the canoes. The Jamestown S’Klallam tribe is donating the 27-foottall totem and a scaled-down version of the canoe to be displayed at the center. The totem will be placed in front of the Wooden Boat Chandlery on Water Street as a welcome to visitors. The canoe will be mounted between two of the buildings along with an interpretive panel. The work will be installed sometime in 2019. “I’m pretty off the charts excited about this,” Jake Beattie, Northwest Maritime Center executive director, said. “This area has such a rich Native history. It’s an honor to be asked to help steward and communicate that in such a significant way. “For the Maritime Center, it’s the opportunity to start engaging people in the full maritime culture of our region. “It has always been a maritime one, and for the thousands of years before the Europeans showed up, that

Townsend, the top figure on the totem is the Supernatural Carpenter. “He was sent to Earth to implement the wishes of Senx (the sun), ruler of the Land Above,” he explained. “Below the carpenter is the Spirit of the Cedar Tree. Western red cedar was called the ‘Tree of Life.’ The working properties of the cedar make it a choice wood for boat building. The cedars provided for shelter, clothing, tools and transportation.” The bottom figure represents T’Chit-a-ma-hum, or Chetzemoka, a high-ranking S’Klallam chief. “He was known as a peacemaker and friend to the early settlers,” he said.

Faulstich’s design depicts Chetzemoka with his raised hands in a traditional gesture, a welcome to visitors in Port Townsend. The small figure at the bottom of the pole represents Sentinel Rock, the place from where Chetzemoka signaled to the settlers that they were safe and would not be driven out of the area. Faulstich said the Nootkastyle canoe, also known as the Chinook canoe, had wide use among the tribes of the Northwest Coast. “These graceful vessels were vital to the lifeways of the region, as natural resource and food gathering were often only accessible by canoe,” he said.

“Eventually, the use of this style canoe spread over a large area, from the Columbia River all along the coast of Washington state and Vancouver Island, throughout the Strait of Juan de Fuca, Puget Sound and the Strait of Georgia.” Faulstich will begin carving the pieces in September at the Jamestown S’Klallam Tribal Center campus in Blyn. Jeannie McMacken is the Jefferson County Editor/ Reporter with the Olympic Peninsula News Group, which is composed of Sound Publishing newspapers Peninsula Daily News, Sequim Gazette and Forks Forum. She can be reached at 360-385-2335 or at jmcmacken@peninsuladailynews.com.

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A rendering of Dale Faulstich’s 28-foot totem pole for the Northwest Maritime Center on Water Street. The piece honors the carpenter, the cedar tree that was used for the carving and S’Klallam Chief Chetzemoka.

maritime heritage was comprised exclusively of canoes.” Faulstich said that the wood for the totem is from an old growth Western red cedar, about 900 years old, taken from the Olympic Peninsula. “Port Townsend is well known for finely crafted wooden boats and for the artisans who build them,” Faulstich said. “The totem pays homage to them both. The wooden boat building tradition began in this area long before white settlers arrived. The S’Klallam people carved canoes from cedar logs that well-served travelers, traders, fishermen, whalers and warriors.” Faulstich said to honor all the craftsmen of Port


A12 • Wednesday, July 25, 2018

SEQUIM GAZETTE

To submit a letter

LETTER TO THE EDITOR Fireworks restrictions make sense

Presently Clallam County has no restrictions on the possession and use of fireworks. The adoption of the draft ordinance would bring the county into compliance with state code generally, and promote safety and peace for residents specifically. We reside just outside the Sequim city limits in an area that is mainly inhabited by the elderly. Each Fourth of July and New Year’s Eve, we are blasted with all manner of outrageously loud and annoying fireworks without regard to the hour, especially during the nighttime. Pets are terrified, residents are unable to sleep and we have to clean up the detritus from our streets and yards. Fireworks that ”blow up or go up” are illegal in Washington state, except those that are purchased and used only on specified tribal reservations. Bottle rockets, mortar shells and similar fireworks are extremely dangerous and easily ignite dry brush and grass. This area has parcels that are undeveloped and overgrown and are susceptible to fire from flaming pyrotechnics. The Clallam County Sheriff does not have sufficient manpower to regulate the unincorporated areas in the county to ensure compliance with state code. Those that wish to celebrate the Fourth with fireworks can do so sanely at a permitted public display without annoying their neighbors. Adoption of the ordinance as drafted would subdue the illegal use of fireworks and promote safety and security for county residents. Michael Albrich Sequim

League’s videos from voter forums now available online

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

SEQUIM GAZETTE STAFF The League of Women Voters of Clallam County has released video recordings of each of its two recent candidate forums. They can be viewed on the League’s website at www.lwvcla.org. The first forum held at the Port Angeles City Hall on July 16 featured candidates for Judge-District Court

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 30 USPS 685-630 • ISSN: 1538-585X

PUBLISHER Terry Ward publisher@sequimgazette.com 360-683-3311, x15050

1, followed by candidates for Clallam County Commissioner District 3. The second forum, co-sponsored by the North Olympic Library System and held at the Forks Branch Library on July 18, presented candidates for Clallam County Commissioner District 3. Both forums were well attended, league members say, and members of the public posed ques-

tions to the candidates. The League of Women Voters is a nonpartisan organization whose purpose is to encourage local citizens to register to vote, become well-informed voters and participate in all levels of government. For more information about the League of Women Voters go to www. lwvcla.org or email info@lwvcla.org.

Dungeness River Management Team celebrates three decades of collaboration By BETTY OPPENHEIMER FOR THE SEQUIM GAZETTE Celebrating its 30th anniversary this year, the Dungeness River Management Team has been nationally-recognized for its work in cooperative resolution of watershed issues, and collaborating on projects to restore the watershed’s health. The most remarkable thing about the Team has been the willingness of representatives with very different missions to stay focused on the common ground that brought them together - the health of the river. Tremendously innovative and productive over the past 30 years, this local watershed council has been the subject of several case studies highlighting the successful partnerships that have formed through its watershed planning efforts. It is a local group that, from its inception, rose above individual demands in order to preserve the Dungeness River Watershed for the benefit of all. A celebration of the 30th anniversary will be held on Thursday evening, Sept. 27 – the first day of the Dungeness River Festival. Look for details in September.

A brief DRMT history

The Dungeness River Management Team (DRMT) was formed in May 1988 to improve communications regarding the long-term management of the river and its resources. The team consisted of representatives from diverse groups interested in the river, including federal, state, county and tribal governments, irrigators, landowners, sports fishers, farmers and conservationists. The DRMT was locally initiated, and did not originally result as a directive from any state-sponsored mandate. “I think that is part of its strength,” Ann Seiter, chair of the DRMT in the late 1990s, said. “The DRMT has never had any formal jurisdiction or power— these come from the authorities of the individual member government entities and organizations. Despite, or perhaps because of, this lack of formal jurisdiction over the River, the DRMT has managed to accomplish a great deal.” Early team efforts helped the County produce some of the first management plans in the watershed, including the first flood plan in 1990 (updated in 2009), and the Dungeness Area Watershed Management Plan (1993), which highlighted actions to improve water quality. In ensuing years, the team embraced an ecosystem approach to watershed management, recognizing that many of the watershed problems were linked. Issues such as floodplain and riparian development, logging practices, water quality, water conservation, loss of agricultural lands, and related natural resource topics were all woven into the team’s regular meetings and planning sessions. In 1994, the DRMT produced the DungenessQuilcene Water Resources Management Plan (the DQ Plan). A milestone of the DQ process was an agreement by the Dungeness River Agricultural Water Users Association (Water Users) that they would not take more than half the flow of the River during the irrigation season, despite adjudicated water rights from the state giving claim to more than 100 percent of the flow. The agreement resulted from negotiations between the Water Users, Jamestown S’Klallam Tribe and the Washington Department of Ecology, thereby ensuring that both farms and fish would be considered in water management of the River. The water use agreement from the DQ Plan

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EDITOR Michael Dashiell editor@sequimgazette.com 360-683-3311, x55049 NEWS & PRESS RELEASES news@sequimgazette.com REPORTERS Matthew Nash mnash@sequimgazette.com 360-683-3311, x55649 Erin Hawkins ehawkins@sequimgazette.com 360-683-3311, x55249 DISPLAY ADVERTISING Advertising Director Eran Kennedy ekennedy@soundpublishing.com 360-683-3311, x15049 Advertising Representatives Harmony Liebert hliebert@sequimgazette.com 360-683-3311, x35049 PRODUCTION production@sequimgazette.com Ad Designer, production Mary Field 360-683-3311, x45049 CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING 360-683-3311, 15549 Linda Clenard lclenard@soundpublishing.com CIRCULATION circulation@sequimgazette.com 6 months, $26 1 year, $36 2 years, $66 circulation@sequimgazette.com POSTMASTER: Send changes of address to: Sequim Gazette 147 W. Washington St., Sequim, WA 98382

The Dungeness River Management Team includes (back row, from left) Joe Holtrop, Clallam Conservation District; Matt Heins, estuary/tidelands property owner; Judy Larson, Protect Peninsula’s Future; Hansi Hals, Jamestown S’Klallam Tribe/DRMT Chair; Mary Ellen Winborn, Clallam County; Ann Soule, City of Sequim, and Lorenz Sollman, Dungeness Refuge, with (front row, from left) Gary Smith, Water Users Associationalternate; Jenna Ziogas, Dungeness River Audubon Center-alternate; Shawn Hines, Jamestown S’Klallam Tribe-alternate; Michelle Canale, North Olympic Land Trust, and Chad Theisman, Clallam County. Not pictured are representatives from Riverside property owners, sport fisheries, Olympic Peninsula Audubon Society, Washington Department of Ecology, Dungeness Beach Association, Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife, U.S. Forest Service and Clallam County PUD No 1. Submitted photo along with other significant recommendations were implemented in the years that followed, including a trust water rights agreement; improvements to the efficiency of the irrigation system; the development of a habitat restoration plan by a technical team; and continuation of a Watershed Council to provide more coordinated and integrated natural resource planning for the Dungeness River Watershed area. In response to the latter recommendation, the DRMT was redefined in the 1995 to: exchange information on technical studies, issues, and projects occurring in the Dungeness Watershed; pursue implementation of specific Dungeness planning documents, such as the DQ Plan; coordinate the use of staff, funding and other resources among agencies and representatives; and promote public education on watershed processes and activities. In the late 1990s, the DRMT established a technical subcommittee that has emphasized technical studies and made concerted efforts to plan for dike relocation, to protect lands and people and to enhance the fish population and other river functions. These studies were combined in 2004 as the Dungeness chapter of the regional Puget Sound Chinook Recovery Plan. Another subcommittee, the Dungeness Clean Water Work Group has worked on cleaning the water that goes from the Dungeness River into the bay to protect shellfish beds. Between 2000 and 2005, the planning unit participated in development of the Elwha-Dungeness Watershed Plan (WRIA 18 Plan) (2005), which includes strategies to address competing interests affecting water supplies, in-stream flows, water quality, stream habitat and salmon recovery. Recommendations from the WRIA 18 Plan formed the basis for what was included in the 2013 Dungeness In-Stream Flow and Water Management Rule, which was designed to protect existing water rights, manage new uses of water, protect fish resources, and protect stream flows in the Dungeness Watershed. The team continues these efforts today and func-

DRMT sets photo contest

In conjunction with the 30th anniversary of the Dungeness River Management Team, members of the community are challenged to portray their “ideal vision” of the Dungeness Watershed through captioned photographs. Photos could include scenery within the watershed, including mountain, forest, stream and beach areas; people recreating on the watershed; efficient irrigation, planting or harvesting of crops within the watershed; native fish, wildlife or plants; and friends working together in the watershed. Winners will be announced and prizes awarded at the DRMT’s 30th anniversary community celebration on Thursday, Sept. 27, at the Dungeness River Festival. The grand prize is a $250 dinner and gallery gift donated by the Jamestown S’Klallam Tribe. Two runner-up prizes will also be awarded. The deadline for submittals is Sept. 7. To enter, submit — via email to shines@jamestowntribe.org — up to three photos, each accompanied by one or two corresponding thoughts/inspirations/captions describing your vision for the Dungeness Watershed. Include the location where your photo was taken. Photo resolution must be high enough to reproduce 8.5-by-11-inch prints, and for use on websites. For more information, visit www.tinyurl.com/DRMTweb. tions as an important, ongoing forum for communication, coordination and information-sharing about critical watershed issues. The DRMT vision for the watershed is, “Farms, forests, fish and friends sharing a home together.” Learn more at www.tinyurl.com/DRMTweb. Betty Oppenheimer is Communications Specialist for the Jamestown S’Klallam Tribe. Reach her at boppenheimer@jamestowntribe.org or see www. jamestowntribe.org.

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 25, 2018 • A13

SEQUIM GAZETTE

Sequim assistant city manager takes job in California Irvin proud of efforts to build pickleball courts, community gardens By MATTHEW NASH

leaving a great organization and going to another great organization. Professionally, it’s an exciting opportunity.” Plus, Irvin said he and his wife return to California where they first met. In Healdsburg, Irvin said he’ll work with city staff there on the city’s strategic plan and learn new offices such as Healdsburg’s Fire Department and Community Services/ Parks & Recreation. In Sequim, Irvin oversaw the city’s Human Resources, Community Development, Economic Development, and Parks departments. “When I look at the list of projects Joe has worked on, it’s a really impressive list,” said City Manager Charlie Bush in a press release. “Joe has brought a positive energy to the organization. He has great people skills and knows how to engage people in a vision and lead them. He cares deeply about people and is a person of high integrity and Joe cares deeply about the profession of public service. I am excited for this new opportunity for Joe and his family and look forward to following his success in his new role.”

Sequim Gazette

A familiar face is once again leaving Sequim city hall. Sequim Assistant City Manager Joe Irvin recently accepted the same position in Healdsburg, Calif. with his last day with Sequim on July 24. This was his second stint with the city after first being hired in May 2005 as assistant city planner and eventually serving as Interim Planning Director for about seven months before moving to Florida so his wife could pursue a graduate degree. Irvin was rehired in March 2014 and quickly became Assistant to the City Manager and promoted to Assistant City Manager in January 2017. “I have loved my 10 years working for the City of Sequim,” Irvin said in a press release. “I am thankful that I had the opportunity to return four years ago, and I appreciate the organizations support of my professional growth. I am excited for this new opportunity, but I will miss working with my co-workers and the Sequim community.” Irvin said in an interview that he was offered the new position Sequim retrospect on June 15 in Healdsburg and his Coming back to Sequim seems contract was finalized the week of “highly unlikely,” Irvin said. July 9. “I’m excited to go to Healdsburg “It’s a great opportunity to con- and put some roots down there,” tinue to grow my professional expe- he said. riences,” Irvin said. “I feel like I’m Through his time in Sequim,

Sequim Assistant City Manager Joe Irvin holds maps of different regions in the City of Sequim in 2017 prior to a Neighborhood Visioning Meeting. Irvin plans to leave the city to work in Healdsburg, Calif. Sequim Gazette photo by Matthew Nash Irvin said he’s proud of a lot of projects and relationships, particularly with the Sequim Picklers and the partnership with the group and the city to bring new courts to Carrie Blake Community Park to fruition. He’s also proud of his time partnering with the Community Organic Gardens of Sequim and bringing the city into the partnership with the development of the June Robinson Memorial Park “Somehow I keep coming back to parks. It’s one of those community aspects that people really love and I love,” he said.

Council

Along with city accomplishments, he served as Market Manager for the Sequim Open Aire Market, now Sequim Farmers Market, president of the Sequim Noon Rotary, and was a board member of the Sequim Food Bank. As for Sequim’s Assistant City Manager vacancy, Bush said via email city staff will be considering options with the vacancy over the next few weeks. Bush returns to Sequim at the end of the month after completing the Harvard Senior Executive program. Irvin feels good about where

Sequim is going. “(It’s) doing a great job at becoming a leader in the region and it’ll continue efforts to build regional partners,” he said. City staff will continue to foster neighborhood development and partnerships, he said, and give more attention to code enforcement. Contact the City of Sequim, 152 W. Cedar St., at 360-683-4139 or visit www.sequimwa.gov. Reach Matthew Nash at mnash@ sequimgazette.com.

City chip sealing set for this week

From page A-1 “Quite frankly, I feel like it’s a time in my life that I need to give back,” Armacost, owner of Changes Salon & Spa, said in an interview. He’s lived in Sequim for 34 years, the past six in the City of Sequim. “I’ve been blessed to raise my family here and I’ve had multiple businesses that have been successful (in my career),” he said. Armacost is now the fourth current city councilor to start their service as appointees joining Mayor Dennis Smith (2012), Bob Lake (2016), and Jennifer States (2018). States replaced John Miller in January, after Miller died in November 2017. City Councilor Brandon Janisse nominated Armacost, who received four of five city councilors’ votes, with Ted Miller nominating and voting for Ferrell. Lake was excused from the meeting. Both Fairclough and Fleck applied for John Miller’s position in January, too. City councilors interviewed the candidates for about 30 minutes before going into

William Armacost, on left at table, interviews with fellow candidates Ron Fairclough, Tom Ferrell, and Richard Fleck on July 23 for the vacant Sequim City Council position. Armacost, a salon owner, was chosen and said affordable housing is a top priority for him. Sequim Gazette photo by Matthew Nash

executive session and return- taught karate at the club ing to the council chambers through the Olympic Peninsula Karate Association, and to make nominations. helped create a fundraiser for About the new councilor St. Luke’s Episcopal Church. Armacost said he also Armacost moved to Sequim from New York City provided low-cost hair cut where he served as a spokes- options for low-income famiperson for Revlon, worked lies. One issue Armacost said he at various hair shows for various companies, owned a feels city councilors should hair studio and worked and address is affordable houstraveled with the fashion ing, and that even some of his employees experienced industry. In Sequim, he served on difficulty in finding housing the Sequim Irrigation Fes- here, too. In his pre-interview sheet, tival’s Pageant Board and helped provide contestants a he said the city should “adspeech coach, organized the dress the lack of housing Boys & Girls Clubs Auction, choices from young adults to

City of Sequim staff report chip sealing projects began Tuesday, July 24, and tentatively finish Saturday, July 28. Sierra Santa Fe Corporation of Ridgefield will work in three areas: • Northeast Sequim between East Fir Street and East Washington Street, and North Brown Road and North Sunnyside Avenue. • East Silberhorn Road near its intersection with Quiet Place eastward to South Seventh Avenue, and northward on South Seventh Avenue to McCurdy Road by US Highway 101. • South River Road from US Highway 101 to Lorraine Drive. Sequim City Engineer Matt Klontz said South Seventh Avenue’s portion has a Pavement Condition Index, a quality algorithm used by engineers for roads, of 26 out of 100, one of the lowest in the city. Construction runs 7 a.m.-8 p.m. and drivers can expect temporary roadway closures, lane closures and pilot cars. The road will remain open to residents living adjacent to the project work zone. City staff said chip Seal work consists of street cleaning, asphalt oil application, a thin layer of aggregate, rolling, more sweeping and a “fog seal” coat of asphalt oil which results in a refurbished street with an extended life of seven-10 years. This roadwork is less expensive than full structural roadway rehabilitation, city staff said. They advise that roads are typically drivable within 24 hours of being chip sealed but drivers should refrain from sudden starts or stops, or speeding, within the first two weeks to allow the chip seal to set properly. The city’s Transportation Benefit District funded the projects with Sierra Santa Fe Corporation for $270,674 plus a 10 percent contingency to chip seal about 40,000 square yards of selected city streets. For more information on the project, contact the City of Sequim Public Works Department at (360) 683-4908. our retired members of the community.” The city has a housing study underway investigating housing options in Sequim. Armacost said change is inevitable in Sequim because the city brings in people of all walks of life and from all over the country but there’s a “movement in to the city to embrace, good positive change.”

He told city councilors one of his best attributes is that he’s a great listener, thanks to his line of work. In his pre-interview sheet, he said he’d like to nurture people being heard and helping them become engaged. Among his other talking points, Armacost said he’d like to expand Sequim’s small-town feel while preserving its natural assets, help find a way to diminish

crime and vagrancy, and encourage business growth with higher paying jobs. When asked, Armacost said he did not have any conflict of interests in serving on city council, and he can change his schedule when needed for special meetings and events if needed. “The opportunity for being a team player is something I look forward to,” Armacost said.

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A14 • Wednesday, July 25, 2018

SEQUIM GAZETTE

OBITUARIES

FCCF, Lions boost foundation’s donations SEQUIM GAZETTE STAFF

Dennis Carl Heier Dennis Carl Heier died at age 79 at his Sequim home on July 11, 2018. Heier was born Nov. 27, 1938. A private family service has been scheduled.

FAITH NEWS ‘Sea of Miracles’ comes to church “Sea of Miracles,” a vacation bible school for youths of ages 5-12, is set for 6-8:30 p.m. Monday, July 30, through Friday, Aug. 3 — with special graduation on Saturday, Aug. 4 — at Sequim Adventist Church, 30 Sanford Lane. The sessions include free snacks, games, stories and songs. Explore the “Sea of Miracles” where organizers say youths will “get caught by Jesus’ love.” Pre-registration is requested; call 360-683-7373.

The Olympic Medical Center Foundation presented $46,000 to Olympic Medical Center at its board of commissioner’s meeting on July 18, including gifts from the First Federal Community Foundation (FCCF) and the Port Angeles Lion’s Club. The FCCF donation will go towards the expansion of the Sequim Cancer Center, while $21,000 of the OMC Foundation gift will be for the purchase of a new ultrasound unit for the new OMC Medical Office Building in Port Angeles. OMC only has two units for three locations, so the donation enables the women’s health department to have an additional machine that will help

expand care, OMC officials said. Through sales at Safeway for the foundation’s duck race, the Lions raised $6,016 toward the ultrasound purchase. The OMC Foundation has given over $1.3 million to or on behalf of OMC in the last 20 months, including $802,000 towards the cancer center expansion. “Counting pledges from donors, we have now raised over $1,000,000 towards the expansion,” OMC Foundation Executive Director Bruce Skinner said. The foundation now plans to generate additional money for the purchase of equipment for the cancer center, Skinner said. “It is imperative that we expand the

space to treat cancer,” he said. “As we near the completion of our capital campaign, we are pleased that we have been able to take advantage of several generous gifts so that we will have the capabilities to treat this dreadful disease locally.” Persons who are interested in more information or in making a donation can call the OMC Foundation office at 360-417-7144, or by emailing them at bruce@omhf.org. “We hope that many local people will become a part of this fundraising effort,” said Skinner. “It’s an opportunity for people to leave a lasting legacy, and 100 percent of the monies raised will go towards the project. There are also naming rights opportunities.”

OMC Auxiliary donates equipment to hospital SEQUIM GAZETTE STAFF The OMC Auxiliary presented five Olympic Medical Center departments with medical equipment as part of its annual “Wish List” ceremony on June 20 at Olympic Memorial Hospital. Presented to department directors by Auxiliary President Leif Olson, the donated items included a Draeger jaundice meter for the Olympic Medical Physicians Peninsula Children’s Clinic, a Welch Allyn vital signs monitor for Olympic Medical Cancer Center, an Olympus blanket warmer for the Diagnostic Imaging department, gliders for the obstetrics unit and Lifeline subscriptions for Olympic Medical Home Health. Auxiliary members have raised and donated to the hospital more

than $600,000 worth of equipment since 1980. The auxiliary also announced four $1,500 scholarships to medical students: • Emily Boyd and Claire Henninger, who plan to study kinesiology • Aliyah Johnston, who is pursuing pre-med • Michael Lee, who will graduate in 2020 with a doctorate degree in pharmacy. All four students will attend Western Washington University. “The scholarship process is very competitive and it was challenging to narrow down the selections,” scholarship committee chair Patty Glennon said. The auxiliary has awarded a total of $40,000 in scholarships since 2009. The OMC Auxiliary raises funds for equipment and scholarships through

Winson Jones

November 5, 1925 - July 9, 2018

the auxiliary-run hospital gift shop, seasonal sales events and other fundraisers throughout the year. “Olympic Medical Center volunteers make a significant impact

by giving their time and expertise to work with patients, visitors and staff throughout Olympic Medical,” volunteer coordinator Kathy Coombes said.

For more information about the OMC Auxiliary or information on how to become a volunteer, contact Coombes at 360-565-9110 or kcoombes@olympicmedical.org.

Helpful facts: Social Security disability benefits By KIRK LARSON Social Security Washington Public Affairs Specialist

When the unexpected happens and you can no longer work due to a serious medical condition, Social Security is there with a lifeline to help you and your family. Most American workers contribute to Social Security through federal payroll taxes and benefit through monthly retirement payments later in life. For others whose working years are cut short by severe and last-

ing illness or injury, Social Security provides financial assistance to help them through the critical times. Here are six facts you should know about Social Security’s disability program: Social Security disability insurance is coverage that workers earn. The program provides a safety net to disabled workers who’ve paid enough Social Security taxes on their earnings. Social Security disability benefits replace some of their income if their medical condition leaves them unable to work.

The Socia l Secur it y Act defines disability very strictly. A person is considered disabled under the Social Security Act if they can’t work due to a serious medical condition that has lasted, or is expected to last, at least one year or result in death. Social Security does not offer temporary or partial disability benefits. Disability can happen to anyone at any age. Serious medical conditions, such as cancer and mental illness, affect the young and elderly alike. One in four 20-yearolds will become disabled before retirement age and may need Social Security disability benefits’ critical support. Social Security disability payments help disabled workers to meet their basic needs. The average monthly Social Security disability benefit is $1,197, as of January 2018.

This amount helps disabled workers to meet their basic needs when they need that help the most. Social Security works aggressively to prevent, detect and help prosecute fraud. Social Security is committed to protecting your investment. Along with the Office of Inspector General, Social Security takes a zero tolerance approach to fraud. The result is a fraud incidence rate of a fraction of one percent. Social Security helps people retur n to work without losing benefits. Often, people would like to re-enter the workforce, but worry they’ll lose disability benefits. We connect them to free employment support services and help them maintain benefits such as health care. Learn about our Ticket to Work program at choosework.ssa.gov. We’re with you through life’s journey, offering disability benefits to 10 million people. Learn more about our disability insurance program at www.ssa.gov/disability. 872159736

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Winson Jones, a prominent Northwest real estate investment broker, died July 9, 2018, due to cancer. Winson was born November 5, 1925 at Chalmers, Indiana. In 1943 he enlisted in the United States Army Air Force and served as a top-turret gunner on a B-24 Liberator Bomber during World War II. Following training, mostly at the age of 18, he flew 35 missions over Europe with the 451st Bomb Group (15th Air Force) operating from a base in Southern Italy. On his very first mission his Bomb Group encountered heavy opposition from German fighter planes, resulting in the loss of 9 of the 27 bombers participating. His Bomb Group received the Presidential Unit Citation for this mission. During his war service, his Bomb Crew survived a forced landing off Yugoslavia and hundreds of flak holes in its plane. While there were two casualties, all crew members survived. Winson always considered this experience to be the most difficult challenge of his lifetime, coupled with the feeling that he subsequently was more or less living on borrowed time. He served as Manager for four National Reunions of the 451st Bomb Group. Following World War II, Winson attended Indiana University where he was a member of the Delta Tau Delta Fraternity and played on the Ernie Pyle American Legion Post basketball team. He graduated with high distinction in the upper one percent of his class in 1949 and commenced his business career as a Certified Public Accountant in Chicago. He became a General Partner with Alexander Grant & Company and served as a consultant for several years during the Eisenhower Administration in Washington, D. C. His assignments included coordinating the development and installation of an electronic data payment system for processing the Post Office Department’s payroll of 500,000 employees. During this period, he attended functions in the White House and met three U.S. presidents and their wives. In 1961, Winson was transferred to Seattle as managing partner of his firm’s Northwest office. He subsequently served as Chief Financial Officer for the Isaacson Corporation and before retiring in 2005 had been President of Jones & Murphy Incorporated for many years. He was primarily involved with investing in large apartment and condominium complexes in the West Coast area. Winson was an avid golfer and was a former member of the Sunland Golf & Country Club at Sequim, where he and his wife maintained a second home. He was also the coordinator of twenty-five golfers known as the Jones Group at the Willows Run Golf Club at Redmond. He is survived by his wife Diane of Sequim, a daughter Marsha of Kirkland, a son Michael (Kathy) of Champaign, Illinois, a son Craig (Jennine) of Lynnwood and two step children, Susan (Sandy) Gordon of Sequim and David Fisher of San Diego, California, along with several grandchildren, great grandchildren, nieces, and nephews. Internment is at Sequim View Cemetery. Memorials are suggested for Seattle Millionaires Club, the Union Gospel Mission, or Project Hope.

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Wednesday, July 25, 2018 • A15

SEQUIM GAZETTE

Sunbonnet Sue Quilt Club announces show winners BY MATTHEW NASH Sequim Gazette

One staple of Sequim Lavender Weekend included the Sunbonnet Sue Quilt Club’s annual show. This year, the event on July 20-22 in Sequim Middle School hosted hundreds of quilts, and featured quilter Loretta Bilow and a raffle for the quilt “In Bloom!” This year, Barb Flavin of Sequim won the raffle quilt with proceeds from ticket sales supporting the club’s educational programs. The club’s Viewer’s Choice Awards for this year include: • Best of Show: Ilse Osier’s “Red Quilted Jacket” • Challenge quilts: Wendy Whitlemore’s “The Chronicles of Narnia” • Garments: first place: Eunice Kappmeyer’s “All Rolled Up” • Large quilts: First Place: “Glacial Star” by Trish Kicklighter and Brianne Moores Second: “My Dr. Seuss Flowers” by Nancy Wilcox and Brianne Moores Third: “Where it stops nobody knows” by Mary Ann Clayton • Medium Quilts: First: “Enchanted Village” by Martha Scott and Brianne Moores Second: “German Chocolate” by Linda Wesseler and Brianne Moores Third: “Bouquets” by Jaydee Price and “Happy Valley Roots” by Brianne Moores • Small Quilts First: “Garden of my dreams” by Irene Cyr Second: “Jacobian Fantasy” by Linda Adler

Mary Pat Minor of Sequim admires a quilt at the Sunbonnet Sue Quilt Club’s annual show on July 21 inside Sequim Middle School. Minor said she’s come to the show every year since 2011. Sequim Gazette photos by Matthew Nash

Barbara McArthur, left, and Nancy Davison of the Sunbonnet Sue Quilt Club turn a quilt made by Laura Hutzler’s grandmother. The quilt was one of many quilts displayed during the club’s annual show July 20-22. Loretta Bilow, Series I-IV” by Liisa Fagerfeatured lund quilter of Third: “Bookcase” by Marithe Sunlyn Hiestand, Art Quilt Sues bonnet and Pepai Whipple Sue Quilt The Sunbonnet Sue Quilt Club’s Club meets at 8:30 a.m.-2:30 annual show, p.m. each Wednesday at the speaks Sequim Masonic Temple, with visi700 S. Fifth Ave. tors on For more information July 21. about the club, visit https://

Third: “Garden of Dreams” First: “Red Poppy” by Art www.sunbonnetsuequiltby Serena Mylchreest Quilt Sues • Art Quilts: Second: “Fort Worden club.org.

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Sports • Arts & Entertainment • Schools • Calendar

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SEQUIM GAZETTE STAFF

• July 26

Above: Sequim Wheelers board member and volunteer Paul Muncey helps Courtney Brown onto the wheelchair bike at Railroad Bridge Park. The nonprofit started providing free rides to the community this month.

Sequim Wheelers hit the trail Nonprofit up and running with wheelchair bike service By ERIN HAWKINS Sequim Gazette

The Sequim Wheelers are getting its wheels rolling. The nonprofit organization started giving free wheelchair bike rides to Sequim community members along Olympic Discovery Trail at the beginning of the month and board president and founder Nicole Lepping said volunteers are providing about 15 rides each week. “Everyone is enjoying it: the (clients) and the pilots,” Lepping said. “Besides providing a free wheelchair bike ride, we’re building an inclusive community where cycling is for all.” The Wheelers purchased its first wheelchair bike in April along with insurance

and have trained volunteers over the last several months. The nonprofit is working regularly with several facilities in town, such as Dungeness Courte Memory Care, Sequim Health & Rehabilitation Center and Fifth Avenue Senior Living. It also has provided rides for individuals and other interested groups, such as Clallam Mosaic. As part of its annual field trip to Railroad Bridge Park and the Dungeness River Audubon Center, five participants from Clallam Mosaic received rides from Sequim Wheelers’ volunteers on July 13. The wheelchair bike is stored at the Dungeness River Audubon Center where clients meet the Wheelers and free rides start.

Left: Piloted by Sequim Wheelers volunteer Elaine Cates, center, Courtney Brown, foreground, enjoyed a ride on a duet wheelchair bicycle during a Clallam Mosaic sponsored field trip to Railroad Bridge Park on July 13. Riding as a safety was Sequim Wheelers volunteer Michele Fraker. Submitted photo

Catherine McKinney, Clallam Mosaic program coordinator, said the five members who received rides from Wheelers’ volunteers enjoyed the opportunity. “It was incredible,” McKinney said. “Three volunteers showed up in two-days notice for our participants.” McKinney said a few of the participants were nervous about trying out the adaptive bike but by the end of the ride McKinney said she witnessed a lot of enthusiasm among riders. One of the participants was McKinney’s sister, Beth Walker, who is not able to ride a bicycle alone. “She has an uneven gait and uses a small leg brace so she wouldn’t be able to balance on a bicycle,” McKinney said. “She would never be able to ride by herself.” McKinney said its been

decades since her sister has been on a bike and has tried three-wheeler bikes before which also were difficult for her to use. McKinney and her family are avid cyclists, she said, and it was a fun opportunity to see her sister also share this experience. She said her sister really enjoyed the bike ride and wants to do it again. “Within the community of Clallam Mosaic, most of our participants have not had the experience of cycling, nor even the opportunity to try modified, adaptive bicycles,” McKinney said. “The Sequim Wheelers have created a broader life experience, an inclusive outdoor experience, which is a very visible activity in this area. And they do so without charging a fee.” She said she hopes to incorporate the Wheelers’ rides

as a part of Clallam Mosaic’s annual field trip every year, if not sooner.

How the rides work McKinney said there were three Wheelers’ volunteers who participated in each ride: one person that was the pilot pedaling the wheelchair bike and two safety persons riding in the front and the back of the bike. Lepping said each ride will consist of at least one pilot and one safety riding ahead to scout out any difficult terrain. It was an easy transition for Clallam Mosaic participants to get in and out of the bike, McKinney said, as the wheelchair part of the bike is able to be removed off the bicycle and put back on. McKinney said the volunteers were well trained in helping clients get onto and off the bike.

See WHEELERS, B-8

Grinnell grounded in comminity

• July 28 Do you feel the need … the need for speed? Sprint boats are back in action in Port Angeles at the Extreme Sports Park, 2917 W. Edgewood Dr. Part of the ASB Pro Racing Series, the day-long July 28 event brings some of the top American Sprint Boat Racing competitors, including several local entries, along with entertainment, food and more. Tickets are $25 (adults 16 and older), $20 (military, senior 55 and older) and $15 (youths 6-15), with youngsters under 5 getting in for free. (www. extremesportspark.net)

• July 30

Peninsula Daily News

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.

There are two more dates left in the 2018 Jungible Summer Music Series! Starting at 6 p.m. on July 27, check out the “modern soul” stylings of The True Loves, among the fields of lavender and poppies at Jardin du Soleil Lavender Farm. The venue offers up food, beer, wine, cider and ice cream from local eateries. Tickets are $15; youths 12 and younger are free. If you can’t make it in July, check out Crushwater (original rock) and Luau Cinder (jam, funk) on Aug. 3. (www.facebook. com/JungibleFestival/)

Summer is for the dogs, too. Check out the Four AKC Scent Work Trials in conjunction with the Hurricane Ridge Kennel Club All-Breed Show, set for July 28-29 at the Sequim High School fields off of Fir Street. (www.hrkc.org)

By JESSE MAJOR

New deadlines:

• July 27

• July 29

Famed storyteller given national award Elaine Grinnell’s talent for sharing the stories of the Jamestown S’Klallam Tribe has not gone unnoticed. She was one of four people across the nation to earn the First Peoples Fund’s Community Spirit Award for 2018, because of her dedication to passing down the tribe’s traditions through storytelling, drum making, basketry and cooking. “Elaine is one of those unique personalities who is highly regarded not just in our community, but throughout Indian Country and — frankly — internationally,” said Ron Allen, chairman of the Jamestown S’Klallam Tribal Council. “She was given an award that really recognizes her unique stature and standing in Indian Country.” She was honored in Blyn on June 30, where more than 100 friends and family from tribes across North America attended to celebrate Grinnell. She received several gifts, including a blanket honoring her achievements.

Just west of Port Angeles, the Salt Creek Recreation Area is a fine place to spend a summer’s day. Check out the tidepools or play on a number of sports fields (softball, volleyball, basketball, horseshoe), go for a hike around World War II-era Camp Hayden, or spend a night. Camping fees are $22 for county residents, $25 for non-residents. (www.clallam.net/Parks/SaltCreek. html, 360-928-3441)

The First Peoples Fund recognized Elaine Grinnell, a prominent Jamestown S’Klallam storyteller, basketmaker and drum maker, for its 2018 Community Spirit Award. Jesse Major/Peninsula Daily News

The stories she tells have been passed down through generations and not only share the tribe’s history and values, but also bring smiles to people’s faces. Grinnell, who is also Lummi, tells stories weekly at NatureBridge at Lake Crescent, where she sees young people from across the country and sometimes from around the world. She said she loves to see the smiles on kids faces when she tells stories, one of the top reasons she has told stories at NatureBridge for nearly three decades. “I retired three times from storytelling and then decided I couldn’t live without it,” Grinnell said. “I just keep jumping back in every year. I just love the smiles on those faces, that brightness, the expectations and the fear when I tell stories.” Grinnell, 81, said she can’t make art like she used to. Sewing has become difficult and, because of her eyesight, she relies on others to drive her to where she can tell stories. She said she won’t give up storytelling. “It’s so important to me culturally that I’d hate

to give it up because there isn’t anyone right now who is interested enough and in a place in their lives where they can go freely in the evening and tell these stories,” she said.

Nomination Grinnell was nominated by her granddaughter, Khia Grinnell. She has shared stories with her for her whole life. Elaine Grinnell said her granddaughter first started telling stories when she was 6 and recalled when they went to their first festival together. Khia Grinnell volunteered to tell the first story. When she started speaking, Elaine Grinnell realized her granddaughter was telling her favorite story. “It took all the wind out of my sails and I just loved it,” Elaine Grinnell said. Khia Grinnell, now 32, said she first heard of the award when representatives of the First Peoples Fund told about the Community Spirit Award at a meeting she attended.

See GRINNEL, B-8

Record rainfall may be your cup of tea. Check out the Hoh Rainforest, about a two-hour drive from Port Angeles. Throughout the winter season, rain falls frequently in the Hoh Rain Forest, contributing to the yearly total of 140 to 170 inches (or 12 to 14 feet) of precipitation each year. The result? A lush, green canopy of both coniferous and deciduous species, mosses and ferns that blanket the surfaces and a perfect spot of a day hike — rain or no. (www. nps.gov/olym/planyourvisit/ visiting-the-hoh.htm)

• July 31 While you’re out here … it’s easy to forget about this peninsula treasure, but Lake Ozette makes a great day trip or an over-nighter. Check out coastal sea stacks, the crystal waters of Lake Ozette or heralded old growth

See SUMMER, B-8


B2 • Wednesday, July 25, 2018

SEQUIM GAZETTE

Gardening for the birds What could be more delightful than sitting in your garden and enjoying the hard-earned fruits of your gardening labor? Perhaps sharing your garden with the local wildlife, especially birds. Birds work in tandem with predatory insects such as parasitic wasps, native bees, predaGet It tory flies, and spi- Growing ders to keep the voby Sara racious insect herFaranelli bivores that damage your plants in check. Many beneficial insects offer the bonus of cross pollinating your vegetables, fruit trees and shrubs. Birds do not discriminate and will eat both herbivorous and predatory insects, keeping populations at manageable levels. In fact, Northwest songbirds such as bluebirds, chickadees, grosbeaks, sparrows, swallows, nuthatches, woodpeckers and hummingbirds, to name a few, depend on insects for the protein boost they and their chicks need during breeding season. Consequently, the birds’ demanding appetites help remove woodborers, grasshoppers, grubs, aphids and whiteflies among other pests from your garden during the peak growing season. There are three basic components necessary to make a garden attractive to feathered gardening companions (and their predatory insect

Photo by Sandy Cortez

partners): food, water and shelter. For food, planting nutrient-rich native plants is a sure way to attract insects and birds. Once established, native plants are hardy, easy to care for, and offer a varied food source. Mix them with those lovely ornamentals that are bred largely for their good looks not necessarily their nectar, seeds or fruit. The showy ornamentals may attract insects and birds, but it’s the nutritious native plants that will keep them coming back for more. A palette of flowering herbaceous perennials, evergreen and deciduous shrubs and trees that will bloom from spring to early summer might include such hardy natives as bigleaf lupine, camas, checkermallow, Oregon grape, vine maple, mock orange,

and red flowering currant. Goldenrod, aster, evergreen huckleberry, Nootka rose, Pacific ninebark, and Douglas spirea will bloom and fruit from mid-summer through fall. This list of plants is just a sampling of the possibilities. Check the Xerces Society website at or the Washington Native Plant Society at for suggestions on more native plants that will grow well in your home garden. A bird bath is a suitable water source for both insects and birds. Toss in a few rocks for the insects and hummingbirds to keep them above water. A bird bath can be as simple as a shallow saucer placed on the ground or atop an overturned pot. Change the water once or twice a week to keep it clean of bird drop-

Tours bloom at local garden SEQUIM GAZETTE STAFF The Clallam County Master Gardeners are offering a guided tour of the Woodcock Demonstration Garden at 10 a.m. on Thursday, July 26. The tour will be given by a veteran Master Gardener and the walk will focus on the perennial and seasonal flowers in bloom throughout the garden. The garden is a 2.74-acre site at 2711 Woodcock Road and has displays showcasing sustainable gardening techniques covering a broad range of ornamentals, edible and native plants, composting and garden design. Master Gardeners tend the gardens on Thursday mornings and are available to answer questions on his or her respective areas. The tour is open to the public with free admission daily. pings and algae. Finally, plant trees and shrubs that will provide year-round shelter from the sun, wind, and predators. If you have a dead tree in your yard, consider keeping it. As needed, have an arborist trim it of potentially hazardous falling branches and reduce it to a height that will keep it from toppling over and causing damage. The woodpeckers will love you for it. The holes they drill in pursuit of woodboring beetles may serve as nesting cavities for them and other

Master Gardener Sally Shunn demonstrates pruning and offers tips on caring for roses during a recent guided garden walk at the Woodcock Demonstration Garden. Submitted photo

For more information or to learn more, contact Sara Farinelli at 360-460-5774. small birds and animals. Be tolerant of a little mess in the yard and create slash piles of broken twigs and branches for the birds to shelter, play and nest in. With little effort, your reward will be a garden filled with life. Surely there is nothing as delightful as getting dive-bombed by an amorous rufous hummingbird on a warm summer day. Sara Faranelli is a Clallam County Master Gardener.

Second Art Blastapalooza set July 27 in Port Angeles SEQUIM GAZETTE STAFF On Friday, July 27, the Port Angeles Library takes the quarterly “Art Blast” in a new direction for the second Art Blastapalooza, showcasing live music from Neon Brass Party, a Seattle-based street band, and the ceremonial “grand illumination” of the giant Reading Person sculpture. Visit the “Books Rock” Village to enjoy fun, handson book-art activities, and

win prizes. In addition, the Best Sellers Book domino race returns to the 2018 Art Blastapalooza, along with DIY musical-instruments, the Happily Irreverent Book Toss, Whimsical/Wearable Art and the Colorful Characters photo booth. A live auction conducted by the North Olympic Library Foundation offers opportunities to take home enchanting children’s chairs artistically enhanced by local artists. The newest Art in the Library exhibit,

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“Summer Fun and Fantasy” will be available for viewing throughout the evening. The doors open and fun and games begin at 7 p.m. at the library, 2210 S. Peabody St. The street show — including music, auction, domino race, and ceremonial illumination of the Reading Person — begins at about 7:30 p.m. Limited library services will be available during this extra-special after-hours event. For more information about the Art Blastapalooza, contact Library Director Margaret Jakubcin at 360417-8500, email to director@nols.org or visit www. nols.org and select “Events.”

Above, Brian Phillips works on the “Reading Person,” which will be showcased during a ceremony at Art Blastapalooza. Photo courtesy of North Olympic Library System Right, The Seattle-based Neon Brass Party will play at the Port Angeles Library on July 27. Submitted photo

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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.

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Wednesday, July 25, 2018 • B3

SEQUIM GAZETTE

Bonne Smith, director of “The Phantom Booth” for Olympic Theatre Arts’ Children’s Troupe, speaks with Ava Fuller and Emily Loucks about their scripts for the upcoming play Aug. 31-Sept. 9. Photo by Pete Griffin

OTA Children’s Troupe prepares for ‘Phantom Tollbooth’ run

Andy Furgeson, aka Red Yarn, chats with Percy the pig during his live show at the Sequim Library on July 19. Furgeson performed at at Sequim, Port Angeles and Clallam Bay libraries with the North Olympic Library System. Sequim Gazette photo by Matthew Nash

Library hosts puppet barn dance BY MATTHEW NASH Sequim Gazette

Sequim children got to sing, dance and kick up some dirt with Andy Furgeson of Red Yarn at his barn dance on July 19 at the Sequim Library for the North Olympic Library System’s Summer Reading Program. He performed with puppets encouraging children to sing and dance and

later in the day he led participants in making their own puppets at a special workshop. The Summer Reading Program has several more programs lined up at the Sequim Library, 630 N. Sequim Ave., through Aug. 18, including Summer Science with hands-on experiments from 10:30 a.m.-noon Friday, July 27, and Friday, Aug. 10; Sequim Irrigation Festival’s royalty hosts another

SEQUIM GAZETTE STAFF

Princess Storytime at 10:30 a.m. Thursday, Aug. 2, and the Escape Snape: Harry Potter Escape Room Challenge at 4 p.m. Friday, Aug. 3. The Summer Reading Program is supported in Sequim by the Friends of Sequim Library. 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.

A&E BRIEFS SEQUIM GAZETTE STAFF

‘The Forgetting Time’ up for discussion The Novel Conversations Book Discussion Group meets at 4 p.m. Wednesday, July 25, to discuss “The Forgetting Time” by Sharon Guskin, at the Sequim Library, 630 N. Sequim Ave. The group meets every fourth Wednesday of the month. Copies of “The Forgetting Time” are available in various formats including regular print, large print, audiobook, and downloadable eBook, which may be requested online by visiting the library catalog at www.nols.org. A limited number of copies of each book discussion selection are available at the Library the month prior to each meeting. To participate, simply read the book and attend the discussion; no reservations are needed, and drop-ins are always welcome. To view a complete list of the 2018 selections, visit www.nols.org/ book-discussion-groups.

Fourth Friday Readings hosts open mic Writers on the Spit host an evening of Open Mic Readings at 6:15 p.m., Friday, July 27 at The Lodge, 660 Evergreen Farm Way, (off Fifth Avenue) in Sequim. The 5-Minute Open-Mic Readings showcases diverse writing talent – poetry, short-short

stories, and memoir excerpts. Whether you’re “becoming” a writer or are a seasoned pro, you are welcome to sign in. Five-minute readings are timed, so please rehearse in advance. Published writers are welcome to bring their books to sell before and after the event. The Media Room is wheelchair-accessible. Fourth Friday is a free event with free parking. For more information/guidelines contact myerslindab@gmail. com.

Rock the trivia at NOLS Sequim Library, 630 N. Sequim Ave., hosts a Motown and vintage pop trivia night at 6:30 p.m. Tuesday, July 31. Music Trivia Nights feature rockin’ prizes, snacks, and lots of fun. Bring a team of four-six people or join one at the event. The competition will consist of four rounds of trivia, plus bonus questions. Prizes are awarded to first and second place teams, and for best costume. Visit www.nols. org/srp, call 360-417-8500 or email discover@nols.org for more information.

Guild hosts progressive sale The 11th Annual Garage & Plant Sale sponsored by the Sequim Guild of Seattle Children’s Hospital runs 8 a.m.-3 p.m. Saturday, July 28, at three locations. Shoppers can join in at 81 Timothy Lane, 921 E. Oak St., or the Barn at 712 Happy Valley Road all in Sequim. Maps available at all three sites for plants, collectibles, furnish-

ings, books, clothes and much more. Visit all three sites and be entered in a drawing for a garden fountain. The Sequim Guild’s 95-plus members raise proceeds for uncompensated care at Seattle Children’s hospital where last year nearly one million dollars in uncompensated care was provided for more than 2,700 children visits in Clallam County.

Instrumental group at Methodist Church The Cascade View Quartet, an instrumental group, will be featured in the Sunday worship service July 29 at Trinity United Methodist Church, 100 S. Blake Ave. At 9:45 a.m. before the start of the 10 a.m. service, the quartet performs three numbers, including “Softly, As in a Morning Sunrise.” It will present the prelude “The Preacher,” and for the offertory Duke Ellington’s “Come Sunday.” The postlude will include “Just Friends” and “Corcovado.” The quartet consists of Andy Geiger on saxophone, Patrick Slattery on guitar, Hugh A. Starks on bass, and Josh Dylan Peters on drums.

Multicultural music event visits Sequim

Watch the stunning talents of a multicultural group of dancers and musicians come alive in traditional contemporary dance from West Africa when Gansango Music and Dance visits Sequim and Port Angeles Libraries on Tuesday, July 31. The first performance takes

place at 10:30 a.m. at the Sequim Branch Library, 630 N. Sequim Ave., followed by a show at the Port Angeles Main Library at 2 p.m. In the event of inclement weather, the Sequim Branch Library’s performance will take place in the Sequim Middle School Gym, 301 W. Hendrickson Road. Gansango Music and Dance is a multicultural group of international performers that present traditional and contemporary dance and music from West Africa.

Strait Turners talk Christmas Strait Turners, the woodturners group, meet at the Gardiner Community Center, 980 Old Gardiner Road, Sequim, from 12:30-3:30 p.m. Tuesday, July 31. The presenter is Tones Briggs speaking about “Christmas in July.” Turners of all levels and newcomers welcome. For more information, visit www. straitturners.org.

Princess story time set Sequim Irrigation Festival Royalty present Princess Storytime at 10:30am on Thursday, Aug. 2, at the Sequim Library outdoor stage, 630 N. Sequim Ave. Royal attire is encouraged for this special storytime featuring songs, stories, and games. Parents/ guardians can capture photos of their children with the royalty. In the event of inclement weather, this event will take place in the Sequim Middle School Gym, 301 W. Hendrickson Road. The event runs in conjunction with the Summer Reading Program.

More than 20 children ages 8-15 with Olympic Theatre Arts’ children’s troupe prepare for its fourth summer production and second season opener for OTA later this summer. With scripts in hand for the table read, organizers say actors eagerly consumed “The Phantom Tollbooth” by Susan Nanus, based on a book by Norton Juster. “I had to slow them down. They were stuffing themselves with the elegant language and conundrums,” said director Bonne Smith. “The excitement was palpable, voices soared as they tried on the sentences which gave way to laughter, surprise and them getting the inside out jokes.” “The Phantom Tollbooth” runs Aug. 31-Sept. 9, with showings at 7 p.m. Fridays/Saturdays, and 2 p.m. Sundays. Tickets are $12 for the public, $10 for OTA Members, and available online at OlympicTheatreArts.org or during the weekdays from 1-5 p.m. at 360-683-7326. Organizers say “The Phantom Tollbooth” is a fun, hysterical look at how we use words and how they’ve changed. For this show, the troupe brings experienced child actors to the stage for the season opener along with some first time stage acting explorers. Grayce Houle, who attended the OTA Summer weeklong Theater Skills class, embraced her character, the Horrible Dynne, with engaging sound effects. Sweet Rhyme, played by Emily Loucks, was swinging Rhyme’s lines into a rap. “Our youngest participant, Sage Moody, who also attended the OTA Summer class, signed up for ‘Phantom Tollbooth’ as a demon bringing his brother Leif, who wants to help backstage,” Smith said. Kenzi Camp, a troupe veteran, loves her character Humbug’s lines, especially saying words like “Balderdash,” “Bosh,” and “Pure Bosh!” Kenzi found Humbug’s personality interesting and she said it will push her to make choices in how to act Humbug’s story. Amelie Mantchev, another OTA Children’s Theatre veteran, plays Tock the dog, and is also the costume designer. Amelie’s mash-up vision - a Futuristic Victorian view endows the Land of Wisdom with a Sci-Fi fantasy twist. OTA’s Children’s’ Theatre program is committed to introducing community youth to the magic of live theater, helping foster self-esteem, self-confidence and teamwork.

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AVENDER CONNECTION WOULD LIKE to thank our family and friends for all their help, and the city of Sequim, Clallam County, lavender associations, lavender farms, and the Sequim Lavender Experience for putting together and hosting a fabulous Lavender Weekend. We would also like to thank our local businesses and the citizens of Sequim for their generosity and patience each year. We would especially like to thank our neighbors (especially along Cays Rd) for being gracious, and putting up with the traffic and noise during the festival. You guys rock! It takes a village to make this happen every year, and we are honored to count ourselves part of the Sequim Community alongside all of you. Thank you!

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B4 • Wednesday, July 25, 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.

Joyful Noise brings music to libraries Thanks to a donation and partnership with Joyful Noise Music in Sequim, the North Olympic Library System now has instruments available for checkout. All four NOLS branches host a ukulele and strumstick to check out. Forks and Port Angeles also have guitars available, and Port Angeles, Sequim and Clallam Bay host violins. Each instrument checks out for three weeks and must be returned to the customer service desk at the branch where it was checked out from. For those that are percussively-minded, NOLS’ Rhythm Buckets contain a variety of fun noise makers that can be checked out from any branch, too. For more information about this and other non-traditional items at your library, visit NOLS branches now offer various instruments www.nols.org/nols-gear, call the library at recently donated by Joyful Noise Music in 360.417.8500, or email Discover@nols.org. Sequim. Submitted photo

Music/Dance/Etc. 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 • Shantymen, Irish pub songs and sea shanties, 7-10 p.m. Disco Bay Detour, 282332 US Highway 101, Discovery Bay. • 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 Junc-

tion, 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,

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Events, exhibits • Fourth Friday Readings, 6:15 p.m. July 27, The Lodge (Media Room), 660 Evergreen Farm Way. An evening of 5-Minute OpenMic readings: poetry, shortshort stories and memoir excerpts. Rehearse in advance as readings are timed. Plenty of parking; no fee for this event. Reading guidelines, contact myerslindab@ gmail.com. • Art in the Library, featuring work by Clallam Mo-

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255410 US Highway 101. Sunday, Aug. 5 • Old Sidekicks & Side Chic, 6 p.m., $8,Sequim Elks Lodge, 143 Port Williams Road. Tuesday Aug. 7 • Stardust Big Band, big band to modern era, 6-8 p.m., James Center for the Performing Arts/Carrie Blake Community Park, 500 N. Blake Ave.

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saic 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 • 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 6:30 p.m. Monday evenings at 990 E. Washington St., Suite E-103. Sing with the group or watch members practice. Email to grandolympicschorus@gmail.com or call 360-775-1425.

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, 360-477-4240. 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.

Ongoing Events • Alcoholics Anonymous, 877-682-4143 or 360-7970259 or www.district55aa. com for meeting schedule, 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., 360-582-3143. • 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. • 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. • Sequim/Dungeness Kiwanis Club, noon-1 p.m., second/fourth Tuesday, Paradise Restaurant, 703 N. Sequim Ave. • 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. • 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 Casino, 270756 US Highway 101, Blyn, 360683-7777. • 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. • Sequim Duplicate Bridge Club games, 12:30 p.m., Masonic Lodge, 100 S. Fifth Ave., $5. 360-582-1289. Saturdays • Medit at ion 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.

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Wednesday, July 25, 2018 • B5

SEQUIM GAZETTE

Sports SEQUIM GAZETTE

Amelia, left, and Rashell Hermann compete in the team roping portion of the 2017 Clallam County Fair rodeo.

SPORTS BRIEFS Sprint boats competitions set for July 28-29 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.

Sequim man sinks hole-in-one at Cedars Scott Aughtry of Sequim sunk a hole-in-one on July 16 at The Cedars at Dungeness. Aughtry used a 9-iron to sink the 147-yard shot on the fourth hole. Aughtry witnessed Glenn Singer of Port Angeles sink a hole-in-one on July 10 on the 17th hole, too. For Aughtry’s shot, Glenn Songen of Port Angeles, Robin Read of Port Angeles and others witnessed the feat.

Plan ahead for Sunland ‘Drive for the Cure’

At home on horseback Amelia Hermann a state rodeo champ at 14

By MICHAEL DASHIELL Sequim Gazette

Few things in life seem to distract Amelia Hermann from her passion of riding horses — not after-school activities, not schoolwork, not sleep, not even some broken bones. “She’s up at 6:30 every morning, goes to school, comes home, she’s on a horse,” mom Rashell Hermann says, as her daughter works on her roping skills at the family farm on Blue Mountain Road. The work and dedication seems to be paying off for the Sequim teen: Earlier this year, the then eighth-grader at Sequim Middle School was Washington Junior High School Rodeo Association’s all-around state champion, breakaway state champion, reserve ribbon roping, reserve team roping and reserve goat tying in 2018. She earned a spot on the Washington state National Junior High rodeo team and, consequently, chance to compete with her teammates at the 14th-annual National Junior High Finals Rodeo in Huron, South Dakota, in late June. Competing against youths from across the nation and Canada, Mexico and Australia, Amelia competed in ribbon roping and team roping (with Nathan Clawson), goat-tying and what

she considers her best event, breakaway. Hermann and Clawson took 18th in ribbon roping. Not bad for someone who hasn’t yet had a high school class. The byproduct of a (young) life of horse riding, Amelia was on horseback by the age of 2, Rashell says, but had broken her clavicle and arm by age 4. “I thought I was going to ruin her,” Rashell says. “(But) she always liked to ride.” Rather than be put off by the injuries, Amelia flourished. She began competing by age 6 in events like cal stake, dummy roping and goat-tying. Now she’s putting in the hours in the arena in competitions — “Goldendale, Omak, all over,” Amelia says — and on the road, taking lessons with Brett Hale at Stick Horse Ranch in Tenino a couple of days per week. “That’s the only thing about living on the peninsula,” Rashell says. Still, Amelia hasn’t missed a day of school and earned just short of a perfect grade-point-average (3.83) in her most recent semester at SMS. The work ethic, Rashell, is what sets Amelia apart, with plenty of chasing calves and roping and keeping horses in shape — “which a lot of young people don’t do,” Rashell notes. The teenager even helps out with

Amelia Hermann, 14, pictured here on Buzz, qualified for the National Junior High Finals Rodeo in late June. Sequim Gazette photo by Michael Dashiell

local high school equestrians, youths several years her senior. “I think all the high school girls respect her pretty well,” Rashell said. “We’ve been doing this so long, our horsemanship skills are pretty decent.” Rashell and Mike, Amelia’s parents moved to the Hermann property about four years ago; Rashell grew up on her family’s land on O’Brien Road and went to Port Angeles schools; Mike grew up just east and went to Sequim schools. Now they call the Hermann Brothers Logging & Construction, Inc., home base off Blue Mountain road, where the Hermanns have lived for more than a century. And while other youngsters her age are interested in after-school things like dances and clubs, Amelia is content to be here with her horses and other teens with similar interests, Rashell says. “I had to put a curfew (at 9 p.m.),” she says, “because she’d stay down here forever.”

Sunland Golf and Country Club hosts its annual “Drive for the Cure” golf tournament and luncheon on Saturday, September 15th. The game is a modified scramble with a 9 a.m. shotgun start for 18 holes of play and an 11a.m. start time for those wishing to play nine holes. Men and women may sign up as a team of four or sign up individually and the pro shop will make up teams. Mixed teams of men and women are welcome. Costs include $65 for 18 holes and $50 for nine holes with lunch and a Mulligan/Magic Putt included. Cart rental is $16 per seat for 18 holes and $10 per seat for nine holes. Non-golfers are encouraged to attend the luncheon which starts at 1:30 p.m. for $20. Funds minus expenses go to the Olympic Medical Center Foundation to enable local women to receive mammograms when they do not have insurance or the means to pay for a mammogram. An anonymous Sunland donor will match funds raised $1 for every $3 up to last year’s total of $4,650, and $1 for every $1 raised over that amount. Additional fund raising avenues include: a putting contest; raffles for gift baskets. Make checks to OMC (Olympic Medical Center) Foundation. Cash and check donations can be brought to the Sunland Pro Shop the day of the event. Sign up by noon Monday, Sept. 10th. For additional information, call Cheryl Coulter at 360-681-2796.

Shifting Gears

Longstanding table tennis group finds home in Old Dungeness Schoolhouse

I’ve had a lot of conversations recently that went like this: “So, you’re a bike rider.” [The first clue was probably my outfit—the helmet, the fingerless gloves, the shoes, the bright colors of my jersey. But it could also have been the expression on my face since (more often than not at the time) I’d just a ride and was Cycling Around finished sporting what likely seemed an inexplicaKen Stringer ble, incongruous look that combined adult exhaustion and child-like glee.] “Yep! How about you? do you ride?” “Me? No. I haven’t been on a bike since I was a kid!” “You should try it again. “ “Nah. It’s been way too long, and I’m way too [here you can fill in the blank with “old,” or “out of shape,” or “uncoordinated,” etc.] for that! Besides, I wouldn’t know where to start.” That, of course, gets me to preaching about all the benefits of cycling. Sometimes the person will listen for a bit while slowly backing up and looking for the nearest escape route. But most of the time they listen, then start asking questions, then start talking about their bike that’s been “collecting dust for years in the garage,” and you can see the old memories of what it was like to ride a bike start to kick in. Sure enough, the next time you see them they’ll say, “Guess what? I started riding again!” I love it every time I hear that! At the same time, I know the decision isn’t always an easy one to make — or to stick with.

By MICHAEL DASHIELL

Memory

‘Serious’

play on the table

Sequim Gazette

There’s ping pong … and then there’s table tennis. For a group of avid players meeting twice a week at the Old Dungeness Schoolhouse on Towne Road, the sport/recreation of table tennis is a serious pasttime. “New Years, Christmas Day, Thanksgiving … we don’t miss a day,” player Sandy Boudrou said in between matches. Some people play four days a week, she said — here and with another group, or on home tables. After years of friendly competition at the Sequim Boys & Girls Club, this group made the switch to the schoolhouse about a year ago, player Mark McNabb said. There’s good light and high ceilings that make for prime table tennis conditions, he said. Set-up starts at about 8:30 a.m. and play lasts through noon each Monday and Thursday, come rain, shine or holiday. “We usually get enough to get two tables going,” McNabb said.

Sandy Boudrou and Mark McNabb pair up for some table tennis play at the Old Dungeness Schoolhouse earlier this summer. Sequim Gazette photo by Michael Dashiell

“They are fun people, and it’s great exercise.” While some “double dip” by also playing in regular games at the Shipley Center, some folks are tentative about trying their paddle with this advanced group, and for good reason. McNabb, who has played with the group since 2010, said usually wouldbe players stop by and watch, seeing if they’re up to the task. Boudrou said she’s been playing with the group for about 13 years. “For most years I was the only woman,” she said. “I didn’t know anything about spins or anything but I kept coming,” she said. She even went so far as to go to Seattle for table tennis lessons. That didn’t stop her from considering dropping the group.

“They probably wanted me to quit, too,” Boudrou joked. On this early summer day, players are taking up all eight spots (two doubles games) while four or five hang out, awaiting a turn. Boudrou said this crowd is predominantly retired folks, since play is during the morning. “Some are very serious (about the game),” McNabb said. “We do some running and diving and falling on the floor (but) it’s not a young crowd.” He added that while the play level is high here, there is still room for improvement. “It’s fun to watch people get better,” he said. Stop by the Old Dungeness Schoolhouse, 2741 Towne Road, to join in the play.

Let’s start with a key point about bicycling: if you’ve ever ridden a bike, you know how to ride a bike — it’s a skill that you never lose! You may be a bit rusty at first if you haven’t ridden in years (or decades), but you’ll find it comes back quick and easy. I can’t cite all the scientific studies out there, but I’m pretty sure they’ve proved what we all know intuitively: You never forget how to ride a bike because the unparalleled sense of joy and freedom you first experience when your ability to propel yourself down the road exponentially expanded your world and opened a whole new realm of adventure and exploration leaves a unique imprint on your brain cells. Just Google it. So “it’s been way too long” is not a legitimate reason or excuse for not getting back on a bike. In fact, it’s probably the best reason to actually get back on your bike! Second, there’s no such thing as being “too old” to ride a bike. The infirmities of age may be an obstacle, but citing age itself? Wrong! Just take a look around Sequim (ideally by riding your bike!). Yes, there are a lot of young kids tooling around on their BMX bikes — the low-riding single-speeds they do all kinds of wild stunts on, and you’ll see a bunch of families out riding in the evenings or on weekends. But, as you’d expect given our demographics, the vast majority of cyclists you’ll see on the roads and trails in our area are 60 or older.

See GEARS, B-6


B6 • Wednesday, July 25, 2018

SEQUIM GAZETTE

Gears

From page B-6

Being “out of shape” is actually one of the best reasons to get back on your bike. Cycling is a great form of exercise because it causes less strain and injury, is a time-efficient way to get a good workout that uses all the major muscle groups, it’s good for strength, stamina, and aerobic fitness, and it’s fun! Lack of coordination is also no good reason for not getting on a bike. Indeed, unlike many sports, cycling doesn’t require a high level of physical skill. And remember that like gravity and the speed of light, it’s a law of the universe that once you learn how to ride a bike, you never forget.

New you That brings us to the question of “Where to begin?” Start with a good bike. It doesn’t have to be brand new or terribly expensive. But do make sure it’s in good operating condition. If you’ve finally pulled your old bike out of storage, take it to a local bike shop to have them look it over. They may just replace some tubes, tires, and cables, lube your chain and other key parts, and do a general “tune up.” Or they may look at you and give you the bad news that, despite all their best efforts, there was nothing they could

Boys & Girls Club hiking, hooping and ‘green eggs and hamming’

do. The good news is that if you end up buying a new bike, you’ll be amazed at the improvements in the equipment and, oddly enough, at how much better a cyclist you are now than you ever were before! Strange, but true. Next, make sure you have the right gear. Wearing a properly fitting helmet is a must. Front and rear lights and a rear-view mirror are also essential safety equipment. Comfortable clothing makes for a more enjoyable time on the road or trail and you’ll find bike shorts — extra padding in the seat — are a necessity once you start ridingregularly or for longer distances. Finally, find a good group to ride with. There are lots to choose from in our area, with multiple options for riding dates and times, pace and distance, and so on. And each group consists of friendly, knowledgeable people, many starting out again just like you and many others who are happy to guide you through the process of becoming a “cyclist”—you know, one of those colorfully-clad folks who take to the roads and trails any time they can? Ken Stringer is President of the Olympic Peninsula Bicycle Alliance. For more information on cycling in the area, go to www.olympicpeninsulacycling.com, or contact the author at opcycling@gmail.com

SEQUIM GAZETTE STAFF This has been a very “STORM” themed summer so far. Fifteen of our finest girls were invited to participate in the Seattle Storm Leadership Academy at the Swedish Hospital in Seattle. Swedish Hospital is the Storm’s main partner and they facilitated a fun-filled day where the girls met several of the Swedish staff, including a pediatrician and rehab doctor. The Academy’s purpose was to instill into young girls that the medical field is a great career field to consider. The girls learned CPR and had a chance to hang out with Storm point guard Noelle Quinn, a 12-year veteran of the WNBA. The day truly sparked many of the girl’s interest in the medical field. Morning Camp’s theme this week was Dr. Seuss. The children read several of Dr. Seuss’ classics, including “One Fish, Two Fish, Red Fish, Blue Fish” and of course “Green Eggs and Ham.” The children made “Cat in the Hat” hats and “Oh the Places You Go” suitcases, which they used to store their itinerary for their favorite trips. On Thursday the children were treated to “Green Eggs and Ham” for breakfast. It tasted better than it looked. The week ended with the kids watching “The Lorax” movie. Dr. Seuss week

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

Faith

1-800-22-UNITE

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.

Holds Sunday Service 10:00 Pioneer Park

Nursery Available

Pastors: Mark & Collette Pekar sequimadventist@sequimsdachurch.org

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

No Matter Where You Are on Life’s Journey, You Are Welcome Here

OLYMPIC UNITARIAN UNIVERSALIST FELLOWSHIP

CHURCH OF GOD A Bible Based Church Services: Saturday at 1 p.m. Gardiner Community Center 980 Old Gardiner Road

1033 N. Barr Road, Agnew

(Between Hwy. 101 and Old Olympic on N. Barr Rd.)

10:30 Sunday Service & Children’s Program

2133477

360-417-2665 • www.olympicuuf.org 2152722

2027857

Visitors Welcome For more information 360-417-0826

683-6170 255 Medsker Rd.

Traditional Worship Services

Worldwide

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

PENINSULA

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

2027880

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

Faith Baptist Church

Sequim Center for Spiritual Living

2027884

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

WEDNESDAY

2027882

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

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

(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

337 West Spruce • 683-9174

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

Welcome Pastor Russ Britton July 29, 2018

Sunday Worship Services

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

2027887

Weekly study sessions

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

2027866

2027855

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

Dungeness Valley Lutheran Church

TriniTy UniTed MeThodisT ChUrCh

2027861

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

children are blindfolded and guided to a tree where thy used their hands to “feel” the tree and then they had to identify which tree was theirs. Our Rangers keep our children engaged with amazing lessons and fun activities. Next week it’s out to NatureBridge for more hiking and a special canoe ride in their Native America Salish canoe. The Boys & Girls Club of the Olympic Peninsula hosts sites in Sequim and Port Angeles. Contact it at 360-683-8095.

Dungeness Community Church

2027892

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

is always one of the highlights for our children during the summer!! Our Junior Rangers made the long trek out to the Hoh Rain Forest last week. The long journey was truly worth it. The weather was perfect and the children enjoyed picking wild huckleberries and hugging the huge Douglas Fir tree. The children hiked to the beautiful Hall of Moss and spent quiet time on the banks of the Hoh River writing in their journals. They also played a game of “Pick Your Tree” where the

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

Junior Rangers Turtles made the trek last week to the Hoh Rain Forest. Submitted photo


Wednesday, July 25, 2018 • B7

SEQUIM GAZETTE

Celebrating fives with high fives SEQUIM GAZETTE STAFF Many Sequim High School students were recognized for earning a score of a five on their advanced placement exams taken in May; the highest score that can be awarded on a one to five point scale. Joe van de Weghe, Sequim High’s AP calculus teacher, said 41 fives were earned by 28 students this year. To honor these students, teachers visited students at their homes during the summer break and congratulated them with a yard sign reading, “You scored a ‘5’ on your AP exam!” “How exciting it is to recognize these young individuals who are able to achieve success at the highest levels,” van de Weghe said. The number of AP courses offered has increased over the years, he said, from seven courses offered in the 2013-2014 school year to 13 offered in the 20182019 school year. Earning a three or higher on the AP exam allows students to earn advanced placement, college credit, or both at most universities, van de Weghe said. “Earning a five on an AP exam demands a significant amount of commitment and determination,” he said. “These students have not only elected to take some of the most rigorous courses available in high school, but have demonstrated mastery of the content, thereby earning them college placement and/or credit.” Other Sequim High AP teachers share van de Weghe’s sentiments. “I am so excited to be able to recognize these students at their homes and in their neighborhoods,” Saralyn Pozernick, Sequim High AP US history

Second semester, 2017-2018

Eighth grade

Sequim High School student Damon Little is one of many students who received a score of five on his AP exams this year and is rewarded with a visit and high five from AP language teacher Chelsea Reichner. Submitted photo

teacher, said. “Their success in this program reflects not only the work of their current teachers but also the hard work of teachers at all levels of our district.” Sequim Schools superintendent Gary Neal also congratulated AP students. “In order for a student to receive the highest score possible of 5 on an AP exam, the student must demonstrate an ability to be ‘extremely qualified’ in doing college level work in that particular subject matter,” Neal said. “Congratulations to these students for challenging their academic capacity and achieving the highest score possible on the exam!”

Schock earns master’s degree from Cal Poly P.E.O. Chapter HM announced last week the graduation of Samantha Schock, the organization’s first scholarship recipient of the chapter’s education foundation. Schock graduated cum laude from Cal Poly-San Luis Obispo on June 17 with a master’s degree in Biomedical Engineering after receiving her Bachelor of Science in the same degree in June 2017. After defense of her master’s thesis, “Building a sterilizable, microfluidic PDMS device capable of modeling human micro physiological conditions,” Schock will be working as an Associate Clinical Account Specialist for Biosense Webster (a subsidiary of Johnson and Johnson) in Irvine, Calif. Her job includes providing professional clinical support to health care providers regarding the BWI CARTO 3-D electro-anatomical mapping system, primarily working in the operating room alongside electrophysiology physicians performing advanced cardiac ablation procedures.

Sequim Middle School Honor Roll

Schock became interested in the cardiac side of biomedical engineering while working in the emergency room at Marian Hospital part-time as a scribe for ER doctors the last two years. “That work helped inspire my senior project which entailed building a sensory device to detect myocardial infarctions based off the patient’s EKG,” Schock said. “The goal of the project was to detect these before major damage occurs.” Schock is a 2013 Sequim High School graduate. “It’s been a fantastic five years at Cal Poly although it was an adjustment coming from Sequim when I first started,” she said. “I was a bit overwhelmed and struggled a little my first year. However, I knew what my final goal was, so I just kept going until I finally hit my stride. I’ve been so blessed to have so many people from Sequim support me and believe in me by means of giving me scholarships. I didn’t want to let them down, or my family or myself. “I remember when I was

Sequim High grad Samantha Schock (Class of 2013) recently earned a master’s degree in Biomedical Engineering from Cal Poly-San Luis Obispo. Submitted photo

initially turned down for the International P.E.O. scholarship the wonderful ladies at P.E.O. got together and created one for me. That kind of effort stays with you forever, and it really makes you want to succeed to make them proud. I feel like I had a whole lot of the Sequim community, including many other organizations, in my corner as I went through college. “When I graduated, I wanted to reach out, let them know what my future plans were and thank them for believing in me. What they all did for me made a big difference.”

Clean up with kids were more social and more confiWe want our children to grow up and be good workers. We want dent than their peers who did not. them to learn how to work hard and Another study found that we expect be good at the things they need to less chores today from our children accomplish. 6-12 years of age who spend an So how do you help your child average of 24 minutes a day helplearn about being a good worker? ing with chores. That is a drop of Actually, learning to be a good 12 percent from 1997 and a drop worker begins sometime around Parenting M atters of 25% since 1981. A Harvard study two years of age. It begins with found that children given chores Cynthia Martin little things. Once again, who is the became more independent adults. teacher? Parents are the teachers There is another good reason who begin this lesson. to encourage giving children chores. This poem Even when your child is very young, he watches encapsulate it. you. When he sees you pick up after he has left his “I like hugs and I like kisses, toys on the floor, he is learning. When he sees you But what I really love is help with the dishes!” clear the plates from the table, he is learning. -Author Unknown Around the age of 3 or 4 he can begin to actually So what chores are appropriate at certain ages? do work. Let him put the napkins out when you Here are some examples: set the table or help you pick up toys off the floor. Chores for Preschoolers: Keep the chores Let him help you put away clean clothes. When he simple. Any kind of picking up after themselves are begins to do these things for you, be excited and easy chores for this age. They can also pick up their certainly be complimentary. You are beginning to room or at least give you some help with it. Putting have a helper. Giving your child chores is an impor- their dishes away after they eat is a good beginning tant responsibility of parents. When your child does chore. These sorts of chores teach them that they chores he learns responsibility and life skills that are responsible for their own mess. Sticker charts for young children help them rewill serve him well throughout his life. When your child does his chores such as sweep- member to do a chore. Since preschoolers usually ing, picking up around the house, making his can’t read, a picture chart to help them remember lunch, or setting the table he feels a sense of ac- to do the chore or to help them see how much they complishment. He feels he is part of the family and are have done can be helpful. Bring out the stickers for their added pleasure when they have completed he is learning to do his share. Studies have supported the value of chores. a task. Stickers won’t work with teens but they can They have found that school-aged children who help with preschoolers. did chores around the house got better grades and See KIDS, B-8

Duke Anderson, 3.00; Maria AsselinOld Chief, 3.00; Jastin-Emmanuel Bailey, 3.32; Kristina Baker, 4.00; Sophia Baskett, 3.17; Connor Bear, 3.83; Emma Bell, 3.05; Harrison Bell, 3.83; Andres Benitez, 3.57; Abigail Benjamin, 3.86; Kelsi Bergesen, 4.00; Petra Bernsten, 3.95; Owen Bond, 3.18; Alyssa Bonheyo, 4.00; Eliza Brown, 3.55; Abigail Carlson, 3.62; Chelsea Carriveau, 3.00; Kaleb Cassidy, 3.33; Brandon Charters, 4.00; Alexander Church, 3.12; Jaxon Cogburn, 4.00; Justice Coleman, 3.40; Hailey Collier, 3.50; Myles Conroy, 3.45; Angelina Cooper, 3.78; Grace Cooper, 3.83; Sean Craig, 3.35; Cassidy Crecelius, 3.94; Eleanora Curtis, 3.83; James DeRosa, 3.68; Deirdre Dorrell, 3.60; Pippa Dressel, 3.88; Lilia Fili, 3.90; Madison Gabbert, 3.95; Marta Garcia Osorio, 3.60; Lillian Gaskill, 3.38; Bailey Geniesse, 3.88; Gavin Gille, 3.50; Pryce Glasser, 3.33; Cristian Gonzalez, 4.00; Samantha Gonzalez, 3.67; Ryan Gourley, 3.00; Lexi Grasseth, 3.55; Jaxson Gray, 3.94; Zackery Gufler, 3.95; Beau Halverson, 3.17; Hannah Hampton, 3.95; Brianna Hegge-Hill, 4.00; Jordan Hegtvedt, 3.90; Kaely Henning, 3.17; Cameron Hensiek, 3.67; Amelia Hermann, 3.83; Ella Hetzel, 3.74; Henry Hughes, 4.00; Ethan Hunnicutt, 3.17; Mallie Jackson, 3.90; Lilly Janis, 3.78; Andreana Johnson, 3.38; Kariya Johnson, 3.86; Kaiden Jones, 3.28; Ethan Knight, 3.78; Liam Kuh, 3.73; Tyler Lawson, 4.00; Ewen LeRest, 3.68; Caleb Liebert, 3.45; Charles Logan, 4.00; Gabriella Mattern-Hall, 3.73; Bailey McComas, 3.00; Joshua McCrossen, 3.78; Madison McKeown, 3.78; Lillian McNair, 3.88; Richard Meier, 4.00; Kristian Mingoy, 4.00; Alexandria Monear, 3.15; Brayden Money, 3.62; Tyler Mooney, 3.72; Zoe Moore, 3.50; Leighann Morefield, 3.15; Malory Morey, 4.00; Kendra Munger, 3.94; Jasmine Nash, 3.55; Owen Nestorek, 3.90; Heidy Nolasco, 3.55; Hailey Nordlie, 3.27; Tiernan O’Connor, 3.10; Olivia Owen, 3.78; Keena Paris, 3.00; Logan Phipps, 3.83; Madelyn Pickens, 3.88; Danica Pierson, 3.17; Joseph Pinell, 3.27; Sydnee Price, 4.00; Riley Pyeatt, 4.00; Leeann Raney, 4.00; Marley Reeder, 3.72; Richard Reynolds, 3.90; Dominic Riccobene, 3.78; Cody Richardson, 3.22; Kaylee Riley, 3.72; Ruby Romano, 4.00; Heidi Salgado, 3.68; Alexandria Schmadeke, 3.88; Ryan Schmitt, 3.62; Jack Seidl, 3.83; Gracie Sharp, 3.78; Piper Shields, 3.78; Aidyn Shingleton, 4.00; Kaden Sleeper, 3.12; Addie Smith, 3.50; Chloe Stanford, 3.50; Kevin Sumner Cigarruista, 3.33; Lauren Sundin, 3.95; Benjamin Sweet, 3.67; Christopher Tadlock, 3.17; Juliana Tamblyn, 3.45; Haydn Tamura, 4.00; Cole Tierney, 3.83; Ellie Turner, 3.83; Kieran Van Selus, 3.12; Jackson VanDeWege, 4.00; Brandon Wagner, 3.43; Hannah Wagner, 3.90; Jasmine Waldron, 3.10; Jack Walsh, 4.00; Ryan Weichler, 3.38; Kylee Weston Webb, 3.33; Melanie Wiggins, 3.52; Angel Williams, 3.00; Lauren Willis, 3.43; Kenneth Wolfley, 3.67; Kenia Zelada, 3.80.

Seventh grade Makayla Allen, 4.00; Jayke Apley, 3.43; Geraldine Johnna Arcelay, 4.00; Sergio Arreguin, 3.15; Mohamad Awawda, 3.52; Yareliana Ayala, 3.33; Sammie Bacon, 3.55; Garrett Barr, 3.62; Donovan Barrett, 3.73; Hannah Bates, 4.00; Walter Baze, 3.40; Alivia Bender, 3.83; Aaron Bess, 3.52; Kali Biddle, 3.67; Mila Bohling, 3.05; Jonathan Bowden, 4.00; Ava Bower, 4.00; Arthur Buhrer, 3.52; Brooklynn Castle, 3.28; Jesse Chavez, 3.28; Danika Chen, 4.00; Faas Christianson, 3.67; Berlyn Corley, 3.78; Dennis Corona-Guido, 3.40; Colton Cosio, 3.78; Ruby Coulson, 4.00; Temple Cummins, 3.83; Claire D’Amico, 3.78; Heidi Dail, 3.12; Ethan Doig, 3.43; Rae Douglas, 3.77; Nahayla Drennen, 3.78; Erin Drescher, 3.33; Olivia Duran, 3.55; Logan Endicott, 3.67; Sophia Ferro, 3.22; Jenna Finley, 3.90; Aurianna Francis, 3.06; Kayli Fukunaga, 3.78; Trinitylin Gaither, 3.60; Matthew Gluck, 3.22; Andrew Goldsbary, 3.72; Hayden Goodson, 3.88; Annaraye Gowdy, 3.72; Benjamin Gurney, 3.33; David Harris, 3.83; Kendall Hastings, 3.72; Burke Henderson, 3.07; Teagan Hough, 3.73; Ayden Humphries, 4.00; Jackson Imholt, 3.67; Julia Jack, 4.00; Julia Jeffers, 4.00; Ally Johnson, 3.67; Justice Johnson,

3.55; Zoe Jones, 3.63; Espn Judd, 3.62; Jelissa Julmist, 3.62; Davis Kanters, 3.78; Jordan Kidd, 3.17; Keaton King, 3.78; Samuel King, 3.90; Jobe Kirner, 3.50; Kade Kirsch, 3.73; Braiden Kitchen, 3.02; Calem Klinger, 4.00; Aidan Lara, 4.00; Allison Larsen, 3.06; Lacey Loewen, 3.83; Genesis Lopez, 3.62; Matilda Lundstrom, 3.95; Finnon Marlow, 3.50; Jael Marquette, 3.43; Hailey McDaniel, 3.72; Dylan McKeown, 3.28; Andrew Middleton-Sharpe, 3.52; Kyle Middleton-Sharpe, 3.88; Korinne Miller, 3.62; Savannah Minker, 3.57; Kellan Northaven, 3.67; Kari Olson, 4.00; Alana Plasch, 3.90; Kalem Powell, 4.00; Amelia Pozernick, 4.00; Trista Priest, 3.07; Owen Randall, 3.60; Addison Reynolds, 3.83; Tyler Reynolds, 3.48; Sedona Rogers, 3.83; Briauna Saghafi, 4.00; Phoebe Sampson, 3.28; Delaney Sisemore, 3.67; Jennifer Slater, 3.83; Cole Smithson, 3.88; Svea Sparks, 4.00; Kaila Spaulding, 3.60; Lauryn Stephens, 3.17; Lindsay Swanson, 3.27; Zackary Thompson, 3.73; Desmond Tippins, 3.88; Kayla Titgemeyer, 4.00; Aaron Tolberd, 3.78; Abraham Torres, 3.50; Juan Torres, 3.43; Alexandra Treece, 3.45; Anastasia Updike, 4.00; Karlie Viada, 4.00; Angel Wagner, 3.95; Alliyah Weber, 4.00; Paige Wessel, 3.57; Talon Wilhelm, 3.22; Isabella Williams, 4.00; Saul Williams, 3.17.

Sixth grade Hannah Albaugh, 3.62; Aiden Albers, 3.22; Dylan Allen, 3.12; Brody Andersen, 4.00; Anna Anderson, 3.83; Evan Anderson, 3.28; Dwight Anglin, 3.33; GabrielaAngeline Arcelay, 3.67; Allie Arnold, 3.17; Aiden Baylon, 3.00; Cayden Beauregard, 3.18; Madylin Bennett, 3.78; Isaac Blanton, 3.77; Kaitlyn Bloomenrader, 3.73; Clara Bonheyo, 4.00; Felicity Brown, 3.83; Brianne Bruch, 3.48; Roger Burwash, 3.33; Alex Carlson, 3.83; Krista Charters, 4.00; Rodrigo Chavez, 3.50; Aurora Cline, 3.62; Erin Cline, 4.00; Cash Coleman, 3.67; Natalie Cross, 3.95; Marina Curtis, 3.60; Luciano DeBello, 3.45; Erika Dickinson, 3.73; Korbyn Domning, 3.55; Ashton Drew, 3.90; Colby Ellefson, 4.00; Benjamin Elmenhurst-Jones, 3.27; Mason Eveland, 3.33; Sofie Feik, 4.00; Kimberly Flores, 3.22; Kathryn Folstrom, 3.90; Ava Fuller, 3.78; Marli Gagner, 3.55; Scout Gagnon, 3.22; Brian Gallegos Figueroa, 3.57; Rose Gigstead, 3.22; SaVannah Gragg, 3.22; Keenan Green, 3.50; Roslyn Guile, 3.50; Simon Hare, 3.78; Sydney Hegtvedt, 3.95; Destiny Henricksen, 3.22; Danielle Herman, 4.00; Marcus Hogan, 3.50; Ayden Holland, 3.17; William Hughes, 4.00; Peyton Humphries, 3.14; Colin Ingram, 3.77; Austin Jackson, 4.00; River Jensen, 3.28; Ava Johnson, 4.00; Darian Johnson, 3.12; Taryn Johnson, 4.00; Anna Jones, 3.22; Erwin Jones, 3.88; Alexander Kessler, 3.28; Graden Kubas, 3.45; Jessica Lack, 3.63; Kairi Larson, 3.12; Kaia Lestage, 3.37; Titus Liggins, 3.52; Garrett Little, 3.77; Ernesto Lopez Vazquez, 3.33; Clare Martin-Schwarze, 4.00; Anakin Mathis, 3.62; Emily McAliley, 3.88; Jonathon Meysenburg, 3.78; Lilianna Mitchell, 3.07; Breanna Mollinet, 3.67; Teagan Moore, 3.38; Joy Munyagi, 3.00; Akoda Newell, 3.05; Eli Noble, 3.50; Ashlynn Northaven, 3.17; Landon Northup, 3.67; Jacob Oliver, 3.77; Mamala Olson, 3.58; Haily Onofre, 3.83; Olivia Ostlund, 3.40; Andrew Pairadee, 3.67; Roselyn Partida, 3.17; Pearle Peterson, 3.83; Ava Pettett, 3.40; Vincent Rampp, 3.88; Auna Rich, 3.50; Iliana Rider, 3.40; Cohen Riley, 3.78; Cadence Rogers, 3.22; Taylee Rome, 3.45; Terceira Rosa, 3.95; Esperanza Salazar-Garibay, 3.43; Leesi Sauiluma, 3.17; Hannah Seimer, 3.08; Susannah Sharp, 3.12; Kyle Sjolin, 3.38; Ryan Sjolin, 3.00; Alden Smith, 3.38; James Smith, 3.43; Michael Soto, 3.00; Payge Sprague, 3.05; Brody Stanger, 3.67; Samuel Stewart, 3.88; Kaylee Straling, 3.62; Mic Stuber, 4.00; Charley Sturm, 3.68; Chance Swartz, 3.10; Riley Tadlock, 3.12; Kylle Tiaga, 3.48; Jolene Vaara, 3.88; Karen Walters, 3.77; Payton Weidman, 3.38; Ava Welch, 3.68; Bailey Wessel, 3.17; Ethan White, 3.78; Madison White, 3.40; Lars Wiker, 4.00; Circe Wilkinson, 3.12; Savanna Wolfe, 3.08; Sage Younger, 4.00; Trent Zeppa, 3.00. 7A1983054

Ollie the Otter’s

Kids Savings Club


B8 • Wednesday, July 25, 2018

SEQUIM GAZETTE

Grinnell From page B1

She felt it was perfect for her grandmother. “I thought it really embodied my grandmother in the way she has carried on the language, the stories and the basketry,” she said. “She has spent decades trying to make sure our culture survives, that we became educated and that we were able to walk in two worlds — because you have to be able to walk in your own tribal community and in the non-native world.” Elaine Grinnell is a champion for education, say members of her tribe. She was the first state-certified teacher of the S’Klallam language. She worked as a counselor to Native American students at the Port Angeles School District for 27 years as well and has always encouraged youth to become educated. “I loved my job,” she said. “If I had to start my life all over, I wouldn’t change a thing.” Elaine Grinnell said she takes pride in the fact that the University of Washington accepts the S’Klallam language, even as a “foreign language.” “We kind of laugh about ‘foreign language,’” she said, adding she doesn’t care what it’s called as long as it is accepted. Allen said if students missed school, they would often get a lecture from “grandma Elaine.” “Some called her grandma, some called her aunty,” he said. She is proud of the success she has seen from tribal youth on the North Olympic Peninsula, Elaine

Elaine Grinnell, a prominent Jamestown S’Klallam storyteller, basket maker and drum maker, holds one of her drums in her living room on Tuesday. She recently earned the 2018 Community Spirit Award from the First Peoples Fund Jesse Major/Peninsula Daily News

Grinnell said. “A lot of our students from our sister tribes and ours are going to college,” she said. “We have lawyers, accountants, firemen and vocational people in the fields too.” Khia Grinnell said she is thankful her grandmother was honored while she still has her health. She said a cousin who attended the event in Blyn said it best: “Most people don’t get honored until they die, but we were able to come together and have this honoring for my grandma and to hear some of the stories,” Khia Grinnell said, paraphrasing her cousin. “She knows how loved and re-

Kids

From page B-7 Chores for School Age Children: As your child grows older his responsibility with chores should also increase. Picking up after themselves should continue. Have him put up his backpack or school papers when he comes home. As chores become more complex, teach him in a step-by-step manner how to do each task. For example, if he is expected to put his own clothes away, show him where to put them and how to put them away. Be sure to include praise for what he does correctly.

spected she is and how much she has done.”

Remembrance Elaine Grinnell continues to live three blocks from where she grew up in the Jamestown/Dungeness area, she said, and recalls gun placements along the water and soldiers walking the roads during World War II when she was quite young. Over the years, Elaine Grinnell’s stories have earned her many awards, and she was even featured in a graphic novel, “Trickster,” and she produced DVDs/CDs of her storytelling, too. “They were suppposed to be for

Add tasks such as ways to help the family so he has a sense of belonging. He can now set the table for everyone. He can take out dishes for more than himself. He can make his bed or feed the dog daily. Chores for Tweens and Teens: By now it is clear there is no need to reward a child for every task he does. Picking up after himself and cleaning his room, for example, are part of pitching in and helping the family. But other new helpful chores should come into the picture. Yard work, folding clothes, picking up the dog messes, vacuuming the floor, doing the laundry and dusting the shelves all enter the picture. Some tasks will help your teen learn to live independently which is worth encouraging.

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my grandchildren because I didn’t want them to forget the stories, but then people so interested in them I started selling DVDs and CDs,” she said. Along with storytelling, she remains active in various committees, such as a housing improvement committee and in education helping select college scholarships for Native American students with Jamestown and Lower Elwha tribes. She’s also the former chairman of the Northwest Native American Basketweavers Association and now three of her granddaughters and two grandsons continue the basketweaving tradition. “There are more Jamestown making baskets than ever before,” she said. “I’m proud of them for keeping the things that happened a long time ago, alive.” For her storytelling, Elaine Grinnell has traveled the world — Africa, Thailand, Japan, Alaska, and Washington, D.C. — to name a few. Her next trip was to visit with paddlers for The Power Paddle to Puyallup 2018 Canoe Journey. “I want to be there to drum them in and let them know they have support from their community,” she said. Jesse Major is a reporter 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 360452-2345, ext. 56250, or at jmajor@ peninsuladailynews.com. Sequim Gazette staff contributed to this report.

Somewhere in here is a place for adding allowance or coming up with a token exchange for work done to pay for electronics or outing with friends. Giving your teen an allowance can motivate him to do chores. It can also serve as a way to teach your teen about how to manage money. Chores start out little but gets big as time goes by. It is well worth developing a strong beginning. 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.

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Wheelers From page B1

“The riders are loving it and it’s a pleasure to serve these see people and see the joy they get out of it,” Paul Muncey, Wheelers board vice president and volunteer, said. If anyone is interested in becoming a trained volunteer or signing up for a ride, email sequimwheelers@yahoo.com or call Paul Muncey at 206817-5634. The Wheelers also are trying to purchase a second wheelchair bike to give more rides in the future and those interested in supporting the nonprofit can donate at its gofundme page https://www. gofundme.com/pygm98-sequim-wheelers-wheelchairbikes or mail donations to P.O. Box 276, Carlsborg, 98324.

Summer From page B1

forests on this trek. Two threemile boardwalk trails lead to the coast, or take on longer coastal hiking trails, including the Ozette Loop. Stay overnight at one of 15 prime camping spots with top views of the lake. (www.nps.gov/ olym/planyourvisit/visitingozette.htm)

• Aug. 1 Are you in tune with tunes? The Sequim City Band is looking for members, too. Practices are Wednesday nights from 7-9 p.m. at Swisher Hall, the rehearsal room behind the James Center for the Performing Arts band shell, 350 N. Blake Ave. (www.sequimcityband.org/about/join-theband, 360-207-4722) The Olympic Peninsula has plenty going on for our 93 days of summer. Check out this week’s staff picks and look for more each Wednesday, along with video highlights of this summer’s festivities on the Gazette’s Facebook page.

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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.

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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.

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

OFFICE SUPERVISOR Needed. Duites include SEQ: Downtown com- office supervisor, manmercial space with 3 of- aging programs, and off i c e s . $ 1 0 9 9 / m o . fice support in Port HadML320725 Remax Prime lock. Must pass BGC. tourfactory.com/1231376 Please call 1-888-4938198 or 360-374-9340 “I FOUND IT IN FREEBIES!” ask for Linda. Or visit our website at concer Employment nedcitizenspnw.org for General an application. CAREGIVERS NEEDED Summer Sizzles $300 O F F I C E S U P P O R T sign on bonus. Competi- Needed. Office support tive wages and benefits. for busy office Duties: N o ex p e r i e n c e . Fr e e answering phones entert r a i n i n g . C a r e g i v e r s ing data, typing, learning Home Care. programs and contracts (360)457-1644, for compliance filing, and (360)683-7377, or other office duties as as(360) 379-6659 signed. Qualifications: DOMESTIC HELP: In- High school diploma, excludes room, board, light perience and or training grounds keeping, will do in Excel and Microsoft b a c k g r o u n d c h e c k . Word, must be proficient in both. Must be able to $2000/mo and up. w o r k i n d e p e n d e n t l y, (360)683-9394 must be able to pass a HOME CARE SUPER- background clearance, VISOR NEEDED: Full driver’s license, able to time, management expe- tolerate noise and interr i e n c e a m u s t , l a r g e ruptions, must be able to caseload for Por t An- work under stress, must geles and Sequim areas. have good problem solvCall 360-452-2396 ask ing skills, must be able f o r T h e r e s a o r v i s i t to be flexible, must have www.concernedcitizensp g o o d fo l l o w t h r o u g h . nw.org for an applica- Please call Janie at: tion. 360-379-1315 Commercial Rentals Office/Commercial

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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. “I FOUND IT IN FREEBIES!”

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CHURCH OF CHRIST (360)797-1536 or (360)417-6980 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. HOME SECURITY. Leading smar t home provider Vivint Smar t Home has an offer just for you. Call 866-3872013 to get a professionally installed home security system with $0 activation. WELFARE For Animals Guild (WAG) is looking for “shor t ter m” foster homes. Please call: (360)460-6258.

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Real Estate for Rent Clallam County

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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 DESIRABLE SEQUIM LOCATION B HOME! SHOP! RENTAL!

WELL CARED FOR 3BR/2BA IN TOWN. Spacious living room, large windows give abundant light. Multiple heat sources. Enclosed sunroom. Fully fenced back yard w/ cherry tree. 2 car attached garage off alley. Low maintenance landscaping. New roof in 2016. #321291/1319827 $298,500

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ASPEN CREEK

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SEMI-WOODED SETTING

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SUNLAND

GREAT 0.22 ACRE BUILDING LOT in Aspen Creek Subdivision. This mountain view parcel is located next to a greenbelt, is level and has power, water, phone, & sewer available to the parcel. Great location w/ easy access to shopping, restaurants, & all downtown. ML#321333 $62,500. BUILDING LOT IN DAY BREAK MEADOWS w/Johnson Creek frontage. Great location in the foothills east of the city of Sequim. Power, phone, and community water are available to the property. A septic system is needed. ML#320837 $69,000.

BUILDING LOT IN SUNLAND. This lot is mostly cleared with a fringe of trees around the perimeter. Power, water, phone & sewer are available to the property. Sunland offers golfing, swimming, tennis, & clubhouse. ML#320552 $79,500.

LOTS OF POTENTIAL. Home, rental, & huge 6-bay shop is on a private & pretty MTN view acre. Immaculate 2BR/2BA, 1507 SF 1991 Golden West. Heat pump, wood stove. Large kitchen, vaulted ceiling, large living & dining rooms. Lovely private garden. Included in the sale is a second home. #321154/1309099 $358,000

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DUNGENESS AREA

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CORNER LOT

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THE MEADOWS

GREAT GENTLY SLOPING PASTURELAND PARCEL with mountain and potential water view from a second level. This parcel has paved road access, power & phone are to the property. Access to a shared well is available. A septic system is needed. ML#320818 $80,000. LARGE CORNER ALREADY CLEARED BUILDING LOT is located in Sunland. Water, power, phone, & sewer are available to the lot. The Sunland community offers golfing, swimming, tennis, & a clubhouse. ML#320547 $86,500. GREAT BUILDING LOT in The Meadows subdivision. This flat & cleared 0.26 acre lot offers mountain views. Power, phone, plus city water & sewer are available to the property. There is a HOA plus CCR’s to protect the integrity of the development. ML#320553) $119,500.

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JUST LISTED!

SINGLE WIDE MANUFACTURED HOME. 1 BR, 1 BA on 2.35 acres, 1080 sq.ft. detached garage with attached carport, fenced and cross fencing including, Highland irrigation water district supplied to this property. Partial mountain view, minutes from Sequim and all the amenities. Call Mike Fuller (360) 477-9189. ML#321438 $185,000

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GREAT LOCATION

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WATER VIEW

M

CENTRAL LOCATION

Level 4.91 acre pastureland parcel located to the west of Carlsborg with easy access to Hwy 101. Power and phone are close by. A well and septic system are needed. ML#321178 $125,000. VERY NICE WATER VIEW can be seen from this 3.73 acre parcel. The parcel is partly wooded but mostly cleared. PUD water & power are already installed. A 4 BR septic permit has been issued but the septic system has not been installed. Nice clearing offers flexibility in placement of your new home. ML#321410 $135,000. BEAUTIFUL 2.25 ACRE PASTURELAND PARCEL that is square in shape and offers some mountain views. Great location with easy access to Sequim or Carlsborg areas. Power & phone are to the parcel, drilled well & 3 BR septic are already installed. ML#320390 $185,000.

D

QUALITY LIVING IN A BEAUTIFULLY UPGRADED HOME in a desirable neighborhood. With 2 BR, 2 BA and 2303 SF, this house boasts a chef’s kitchen w/ tons cabinets, newer floors, large soak tub & a propane fireplace. Each bedroom has a walk-in closet. This home features lots of storage, craftroom & office. Enjoy the new deck & large two car garage for storage. Backyard is landscaped & fenced for pets. You will love living in the 55+ neighborhood of Parkwood conveniently located to the town of Sequim. Call Mike Fuller (360) 477-9189. $219,000

N

QUIET AND SECLUDED

O

STRAIT VIEWS

P

DEVELOPMENT POTENTIAL

GREAT BUILDING PARCEL located on a small private lake in the foothills between Sequim & Port Angeles. Improvements to this parcel include a dock, well, 3 BR septic system, storage building w/1/2 BA, 1 car garage, & gazebo. ML#300133 $199,000. BEAUTIFUL 3 ACRE PASTURELAND PARCEL located just outside the city limits on the eastern side of Sequim. This north facing parcel has just enough slope to be perfect for a daylight basement style home. Power is available to the parcel, & a well is needed. Older cabin/storage building plus a 2 BR septic system that may or may not be usable. ML#320636 $225,000. APPROXIMATELY 7.9 ACRES located just south of the bypass along S. Sequim Ave. About 1.4 acres lies north of Brownfield Rd. the rest lies south of Brownfield Rd. The majority of this property is zoned R4-8 which is residential development zoning. ML#312040 $500,000


C-2

CountyWide Classifieds D Serving Clallam County D July 25, 2018 Home Services Windows/Glass

Domestic Services Adult/Elder Care

822051847

W A S H I N G T O N D I - WA N T E D : U s e d o u t VORCE -SEPARATION, board motor, 6-10HP. (360)582-7970 $155. $175 with children. NO COURT APYOUR TRASH IS PEARANCES. Includes SOMEBODY’S TREASURE. property, bills, custody, ADVERTISE IN GARAGE SALES support. Complete preparation of documents. Legal Alternatives, 503Wanted/Trade 7 7 2 - 5 2 9 5 . w w w. p a ra legalalternatives.com COVERED STORAGE: For small boat, 1 car garage. (360)928-9494 Home Furnishings

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

Tents & Travel Trailers

Motorhomes

Sneak-a-Peek

TAB: ‘15, New condition, awning with door, A/C WINNEBAGO: ‘95 Vecand heat, 3 way fridge, tra, 33’, 48K miles, fully stove top, TV, radio, soloaded, clean, A/C. lar panel, bike rack, LED $12,500. (360)683-4934 lighting, etc. Four years “I FOUND IT IN FREEBIES!” left on extended warranty. Aprox., 1700lbs, 15’, t o w w i t h s m a l l S U V. Tents & $18,400. (360)582-0911

M I S C : S e t t e e , F l ex Travel Trailers Steel brand 3 seater, golden brown, Round dining table, 5 drawer chest, cream sheep skin rug, boudoir chest, roMotorhomes bot floor cleaner, various lamps, all items in excellent condition. $25- P L E A S U R E WAY: ‘ 0 6 F O R E S T R I V E R : ‘ 1 7 XL-TS, price reduced, $200. (360)461-1621 exc. cond., 92K miles, Wildwood Heritage Glen $30,999. (360)457-1527 24RKHL Hyperlyte. Never used. 7 year service WINNEBAGO: ‘00 Cha- contract. Fully loaded. let, lg. slide out, new G2 satellite dish. Asking t i r e s a n d b ra ke s, 3 1 ’ $28,500. Contact Dave at (360)301-3045 or 81K miles. $19,000 obo. (360)504-3885. Garage/Moving Sales (360)912-5174

HOMETOWN PAPER HOMETOWN PRIDE

Garage Sales & Auctions Garage/Moving Sales Sequim

Garage/Moving Sales Sequim

#1

SEQUIM GUILD PROGRESSIVE

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.

GARAGE SALE SITE #2: Sat. 7/28, 8-3:pm The Barn @ 712 Happy Valley Rd. Building supplies, camping equipment, tools, spor ts equipment, framing, furniture, MORE! Pick up a map to the other sites, enter drawing for new o u t d o o r Fo u n t a i n . A l l proceeds go to Children’s Hospital. Look for our bright red signs!

ANNUAL MULTI-FAMILY Sale: Fri.-Sat.-Sun., 8-? pm, 52 Griffith Farm R d . To o l s, h o u s e h o l d goods, and something for everyone!

“I FOUND IT IN FREEBIES!”

#10

#5

“Nobody does it better.”

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7th Ave

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Kirner

Evans

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5th Ave

Priest Kane Wallace

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Gardiner Beach Rd

Rhapsody Rd

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Happy Valley Rd.

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Blue Grouse Run Rd

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Palo Alto Rd.

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Mariners View Dr

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Miller Rd.

Emerald Highlands

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W Sequim Bay

Bellway Nicki Doe Run

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7th Ave

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Miller Rd.

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Guy Kelly Rd

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Macleay

Spath McCawley

Spath McCawley

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$1.50 A Day

Jamestown

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Woodcock

Macleay

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Carlsborg

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Port Angeles

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Lotzgesell Lotsgesell

School House

N Lee '

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W Marine Dr W

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Dr ine Mar

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15 th St W 1 W 7th S 1 W 8th t S 19 th t St

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Olympic

Solmar

Lilly Emery Phinn

Woodcock

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Mountain Springs

Franson Howe

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young mom, about a year and a half old, who arrived with three adorable kittens. Two were just adopted, and Meow Meow would love to find her home with Miss Grey. Port Angeles Harbor

W

For LESS THAN

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Anderson

Lotzgesell Lotsgesell

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Lilly Emery Phinn

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101

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Buckhorn Klahane Bon Jon

Finn Hall

Peterson

Anderson

Greywolf

Heuhslein

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

r Marine D

Anderson Libby Nelson

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Finn Hall

lym pic Hwy d O Ol Heuhslein

Meadow Meadow RidgeWy Wy Ridge Heitsch Miletich

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Sequim

Rd ook iz H N Ed

W 16 th St

FIND ME A HOME!

JUST CLICK AND FIND! BUY! SELL!

Buckhorn Klahane Bon Jon

Mark it Sold listing (see ad on page 1) Garage Sale

The Bluffs

Dr

SUZUKI: ‘98 & ‘96 Sidekicks, 1.6 and 1.8L, HARLEY: ‘04 FLHRCI n e e d w o r k , y o u t o w. Road King Classic. 34k $1000. (360)374-2414 or (503)939-1616 Forks miles, 95 ci, $8,000. 360-457-4198 TOYOTA : ‘ 1 2 , R a v 4 HONDA: ‘89 CBR 600 Spor t utility, 4x4, 90k Hurricane. White, and m i l e s , $ 1 3 , 5 0 0 . w i t h silver, 20k miles. $2,500 h i t c h . $ 1 4 , 0 0 0 , e x c obo. (360)452-1519 cond. (360)460-3274

REAL ESTATE RENTALS AUTOMOTIVE EMPLOYMENT MERCHANDISE COUPONS

Greywolf

d G asman R

MEOW MEOW is a

Bo ath aven

GMC: ‘93 Jimmy. 4X4, V6, 4.3 L, 170k miles, fair cond. $1,500/obo. (360)808-2731

work for you!

683-3311

Sequim

is an adorable little 4 monthold grey tabby kitten. She is very attached to her mother, Meow Meow, and would love to find that purrfect home together.

W

FORD: ‘79 F150 Custom, V-8, 4WD, parked for years, as is. $600 obo.(360)670-9975

“We’re all about mew”

MISS GREY

W W 5th S 6 W th S t t 7 W th S t 8 W th S t 9 W th S t 10 th W S 1 W 1th t S 12 th t St

Others

CHEVY: ‘09 Silverado LT 4X4, extended cab 4 door, canopy with ladder rack, 6’ bed, 92K miles. $16,995. (360)461-0527

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

The Bluffs

W W 13th 1 St W 4th S 1 W 5th t S 16 th t W 18 St th St

NISSAN: ‘12 Cube, 22K miles, excellent cond., Sequim. $11,000. (406)491-6974

GARAGE SALES

and enjoy life…let

To subscribe or place an ad, call 360-683-3311

www.uptowncats.net

W

FORD: ‘92 Taurus. Runs well, automatic, $850. (360)460-1726

BMW: ‘94, K75S, 35,500 Sport Utility Vehicles miles, BMW hard cases, Others ready to ride, newer tires CHEVY: ‘90 Suburban, $2700. (360)683-2861 runs great, no rust, 4X4. HARLEY: ‘02 Dyna Low $3900. (360)452-5803 Rider. Low miles, exc. YOUR TRASH IS cond., $6,500. SOMEBODY’S TREASURE. (360)301-0213 ADVERTISE IN

Locally Focused

(360) 681-4770

W 4th St

CHEVY: ‘04 Cor vette. Exc. cond., $15,000. (360)460-1565

M I S C : C h ev, ‘ 7 5 , 3 / 4 ton, dump bed. $1200. WA N T E D : U s e d o u t - G M C , ‘ 7 4 Va n d u r a . $700. (360)683-8173 board motor, 6-10HP. (360)582-7970 TOYOTA: ‘85 4X4 with a tool box. $3,500. Motorcycles (360)928-0128

683-3311

1076 Towne Road, Sequim

kee Dr

CRESTLINER: ‘06, aluminum, 18’LX8’W, 2 motors, 4 cyc., 115 HP, 8 HP, electronics, galv. trailer. $18,650. (360)681-8452

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.

#13

HUGE GARAGE/ESTATE CONTRACTOR SALE: Tu e s . - S u n . , 7am-dusk, 330 McCormick, Sequim. Model home furniture, accessories, pictures, building supplies, lumber, beams, 4x8 cement board, hardiplank shingles, medicine cabinets, paints, nails, tar p a p e r. Au t o m o t i ve parts, tools, (4) Jeep wheels with new M&S t i r e s, O f f i c e e q u i p ment, chairs, file cabin e t s, n ew 3 M ove r head projector, supplies. Spor ting g o o d s, S k i s, p o l e s, boots, large fish net, Reebok exercise machine, washer and drye r, M i s c , k i t c h e n equipment, etc. Everything must go.

B U I C K : ‘ 0 0 C e n t u r y, very clean, 130K miles, runs great. $2500. (360)683-2861

FISH & SPORT 15: By V O L K S W A G E N : ‘ 7 0 Hotwoods.com. 4 pon- K a r m a n G h i a . G a r toon, 9.9 Johnson, 55 aged/project. $3,100. Minn Kota, Honda 1000, (360)775-7959 deck 5’X13.5’. $4500. (509)885-0999 Pickup Trucks

Locally Focused

SEQUIM GUILD PROGRESSIVE GARAGE SALE SITE #1 July 28 8am-3pm 81 Timothy Lane. Collectibles, plants, indoor/outdoor furni- ture, linens, baby gear, toys, games, yard art, unexpected treasures! Pick up a map to the other sites, enter drawing for new outdoor Fountain. All proceeds go to Children’s Hospital. Look for our bright red signs!

CADILLAC: ‘97 DeVille Brougham. 71K mi., white, 4-door, dark leather interior, clean VIN report, good tires, recent BOAT: Cris Craft, 17’, tune, immaculate inside Runabout, 1954 spor t and out, true luxury car. c ra f t , bu i l t by H a r o l d $5,500. (360)461-4813 Marquadt in PA, fully reAutomobiles s t o r e d w i t h t r a i l e r. Others $13,000. 360-928-9494

SUBARU: ‘08 Outback 2.5i. Ver y good condition. Maintenance r e c o r d s. 1 3 1 , 6 0 0 m i . $8,250. (360)477-5628.

E. S

Doreen Emerson, Owner

1-888-813-8545 www.wilderauto.com

101 and Deer Park Rd, Port Angeles • You Can Count On Us!

#12

683-3311

Feline Fun Resort Purr Parties View Window Suites Cat Gym

WILDER AUTO

G A R AG E S A L E : Fr i . Garage/Moving Sales Sat. 9-3pm. 2110 Taylor Port Angeles-East Cutoff Rd. Clothes, household items, camp- G A R AG E S A L E : S a t . ing, toys, some tools. too 7/28, 9-4pm. 141 Ivy Ln. many items to list. Puzzles, paintings and frames, VHS and DVD’s, small furniture, books, G A R AG E S A L E : Fr i . lamps, kitchenware, lapiSat. 9-3pm. 381 Farns- dary equipment, rocks w o r t h P l c . G a r d i n e r. and minerals, full size Household items. Way bed frame, linens, file too many things to list! If boxes, boxed cards. you come early bring donuts!

#6

Cadillac

B O AT : 8 f t C u s t o m made, Drift Pram, marine plywood, apoxy over glass plus, good cond. $275. (360)683-4781

C H RY S L E R : ‘ 0 9 P T Cruiser, excellent. condition, 76k miles. $4,800. (360)681-2673

E S TAT E S A L E : S a t . July 28th -Sun. July 29th, 9-5 p.m., 1031 W. 15th St., P.A. Jewelry, coins, beads, furniture, tools, record albums, rocks, stunning dining room table and chairs, and much more.

#11

Automobiles Classics & Collectibles

FORD: ‘70 F250 Classic, built 390, new transmission, custom paint and Marine interior, have all paperMiscellaneous work. $9,000 or trade. (360)457-6540 B E L L B OY : ‘ 7 4 , 1 7 ’ , Caulkin trailer. $450. Automobiles (360)912-1783

STK#P4138 1 only, subject to prior sale. Sale Price plus tax and license. A negotiable $150 document fee may be added. See Wilder Auto for details. Ad expires 1 week from date of publication.

Garage/Moving Sales Port Angeles-West

Dominion Terrace FUN MARKET Sat. 7/28. 9-2pm. 1301 S 3rd Ave. at Norman St. Flea Market treasures, bake sale, books, silent auction, cafe, raffle

SEQUIM GUILD PROGRESSIVE GARAGE SALE SITE #3: Sat. 7/28, 8-3:pm 921 E. Oak Street garden rolling seat, 18” doll items, plants, suitcases, backpacks, glassware, monkey- pod, surprises! Pick up a map to the other 3 sites, enter drawing for new outdoor Fountain. All proceeds go to Children’s Hospital. Look for our bright red signs!

SADIE is a sweet little twelve year old cat who came back to us when her beloved “kitty mom” passed away at the end of 2017. She is cute and tidy and has a lot of life and love to give!

$8,909

34 MPG HWY

#9

BIG NEIGHBORHOOD GARAGE SALE 9 houses. Fri.-Sat., 9-3 p.m., Start your search fo r t r e a s u r e a t 1 1 0 Strawberr y Field Dr. Follow the signs from there. Tools, watches, cameras, jewlery, furniture, dish sets, books. This is not junk! Something for everyone.

RACHEL is a very mellow senior kitty who loves people and would like to have her person all to herself. She reaches up and pats a person’s sleeve to communicate her desire to be petted.

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HARLEY DAVIDSON: ‘00 FXSTB Night Train. 13.5k miles, 88 ci, $5,000. 360-457-4198

“I FOUND IT IN FREEBIES!”

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

SEQUIM GUILD PROG. G A R AG E S A L E S I T E #4: Sat 7/28 9am-2pm D o m i n i o n Te r r C l u b house, 1301 S 3rd Ave. Lg desert scene stained glass, much more! Visit all 4 sites, enter drawing for new outdoor Fountain. All proceeds go to Children’s Hospital. Look TOOL SALE: Sat. 7/28, 9-3pm. 98 Marsh Hawk for our bright red signs Ln. off Gunn. Air tools and compressor, dr ill press, chop saw, router, CLASEN COVE bench grinder, (2) rolling FAMOUS ANNUAL tool chests, power washGARAGE SALE e r, c a m p i n g s u r v i va l S a t . , 8 - 3 p. m . , C a p e gear, (5) water barrels, H o p e Way o f f N . 5 t h cabin tent, Raleigh ten Ave. Follow the signs speed bike, shop heater, and balloons. About 20 hand an power tools, participants. garden supplies.

YARD Sale: Fri.-Sat.Sun. 9:00-4pm. 256 N. Sunnyside, Seq. Furniture, queen mattress/box, appliances, kitcheware, crafting/stamping supplies, Stampin’Up stamp sets, paper, Big Shots dies, embossing folders, organizers, jewelry, cameras, t o o l s, b i c y c l e s, C o l lectibles.

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MOVING SALE: Sat., July 28th 8 - 1pm. Come Here First! 82 Alpine View Lane in the Agnew area. From Hwy, 101 turn on N. Barr Rd. Go 1.7 mile to Alpine View Lane, second house on right. Items to look for are yard, garden, hand and shop TO O L S . R i d i n g l a w n mower, 25gal. sprayer, p u s h s p r a y e r, f e n c e posts. Lots of stuff not able to pack.

#8

#3

UNDER $10 ,000

#14

Lil and Lin’s Flea Market Antique/Vintage Finds July 27th and 28th 9-4pm. Sequim Prairie Grange 290 McLeay Rd. Multiple Vendors.

#7

#2

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

Sequim

Motorcycles

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C-3

CountyWide Classifieds D Serving Clallam County D July 25, 2018 Vans & Minivans Others

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

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. $3,000 obo. (360)477-4538

Legal Notices - General IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF WASHINGTON IN AND FOR THE COUNTY OF CLALLAM Case No. 18 4 00250 05 PROBATE NOTICE TO CREDITORS (RCW 11.40.030) In re the Estate of: MELVIN L. MARSH AND NINA J. MARSH, Deceased. The Personal Representative named below has been appointed as Personal Representative of this estate. Any person having a claim against the decedent must, before the time the claim would be barred by any 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 claim with the court. The claim must be presented within the later of: (1)Thirty (30) 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 (4) 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 decedent’s probate and non-probate assets. Date of first publication: July 25, 2018 PERSONAL REPRESENTATIVE: Bruce Marsh ATTORNEY FOR PERSONAL REPRESENTATIVE: W. Jeff Davis, WSBA #12246 of BELL & DAVIS PLLC ADDRESS FOR MAILING OR SERVICE: P.O. Box 510 Sequim, WA 98382 Pub: July 25, August 1, 8 2018 Legal No: 817915

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.

BECOME A CERTIFIED NURSING ASSISTANT! Sequim Health and Rehabilitation will be holding in-house CNA Classes beginning

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With more than 15,000 readers every week, CountyWide Classifieds is the #1 local place to buy and sell your stuff!

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Call (360) 457-8206 to adopt these pets.

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

Certified Nursing Assistants

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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

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TIGRE is quite the character! Not only is he physically impressive, but he’s got a cool personality, too! Tigre has been ok with other dogs, although the previous owner says he was fighting with other dogs when they were in the yard. Were investigating this further to see if he doesn’t like sharing toys.. but he still loves other dogs and would be good play partner! He is NOT GOOD WITH CATS. MOLLY is a blue heeler (Australian Cattle Dog)/ black lab mix. She had anxiety and fear issues (most of these issues have gotten SO much better!) but she needs and will thrive in an environment that is calm and quiet and one that is just her and her owner. She does not do well with cats. She also would do best in a home without children or other dogs. She is very smart and learns quickly. We are fostering Molly until she finds her new home, we want her to transition well, so we are willing to have interested and qualified people meet her at our home. Please call the shelter to arrange a meeting.

Puzzle answers in next week’s issue.

crossword Compliments of Wilder Auto

6

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

101 and Deer Park Rd, Port Angeles STK#P4138 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.

your bike is worth cash

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No. 18-4-00243-05 NOTICE TO CREDITORS SUPERIOR COURT OF WASHINGTON FOR CLALLAM COUNTY Estate of M. Janet Harker 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 25, 2018 Sharon A. Gyovai Personal Representative Attorney for Personal Representative: Alan E. Millet WSBA#11706 P.O. Box 1029 Sequim, Washington 98382 Pub.: SG July 25, August 1, 8 2018 Legal No. 818075

Vehicles Wanted

FREE C.N.A. CLASSES

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Legal Notices Clallam County

ACROSS 1. Rated horsepower (abbr.) 4. What a cow says 7. Snake-like fish 8. Spiritual leader 10. Catch 12. Car part 13. Extremely small amount 14. Nucleic acid 16. The Greatest of All Time 17. Lustrous 19. India’s least populated district 20. Muckraking journalist Jacob 21. Medicine 25. S. American plant

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www.stinkydogubathe.com ATHENA is loving, affectionate and just LOVES people. She just doesn’t prefer to be around other pets. Athena is a bit of a couch potato, but she also LOVES to run in our play yard. She used to be able to jump a 6’ fence, but she’s getting a bit old for that, now. She’d rather take a nap with you on the couch. Athena would be great with older kids, but still might be too clumsy for smaller kids. We are REALLY looking for someone that can provide her with everything she needs! Athena encompasses everything that people LOVE about pits!!!!

26. Small amount 27. Dry or withered 29. Where construction takes place 30. Russian river 31. Supervises flying 32. “City of Brotherly Love” native 39. Greeting at meeting 41. Common gibbon 42. Type of TV 43. Corpuscle count (abbr.) 44. Scottish port 45. Computer company 46. One from Asia 48. Former significant others

49. Woven fabrics or garments 50. One’s sense of self-esteem 51. The Science Guy 52. Monetary unit

DOWN

1. “The Leftovers” actress King 2. Epic 3. Missouri county 4. Chinese revolutionary 5. Get 6. Ancient Greek coin 8. Returned material authorization (abbr.) 9. Part of the human eye 11. A fisherman’s accessory

14. Brazilian state 15. Of a wedding 18. Prosecutor 19. The main constituent of chromosomes 20. Advice 22. Principles of right and wrong 23. Decorate a cake with frosting 24. Headgear 27. New York art district 28. __ Lilly, drug company 29. Car mechanics group 31. Influential U.S. president 32. Quell the anger

33. Swiss river 34. Personal computer 35. Incline from the vertical 36. Wild goats 37. Assert that someone has done wrong 38. Anti-apartheid leader __ Mandela 39. Crop of a bird 40. “A Doll’s House” playwright 44. Autonomic nervous system 47. Consumed

NUMERO is a really nice little guy that has been trying to find that FOREVER home, but just not having any luck. His last owner had to move across the country and bring Numero back to us. Numero would do best with an active owner, or an owner that can be with him most of the day. Numero is playful, lovable. He will be a loyal companion, for sure! He just needs to find someone that will be loyal to HIM, too! Numero would do best as an ONLY pet, and he plays too rough to be around little kids... Older kids or teenagers could be OK.

Would you like to sponsor this pet page? Call 683-3311


C-4

CountyWide Classifieds D Serving Clallam County D July 25, 2018 RUN A FREE AD FOR ITEMS PRICED $100 AND UNDER! DEADLINE: FRIDAY 3PM

FREEBIES

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

BASKETBALL HOOP DINING TABLE: Oak, HOTTUB: Large. FREE with sturdy backboard round, claw foot, pedes- - you haul. and support pole. $15. tal, (1) leaf. $100. (360)808-4153 (360)808-2866 Call 360-457-8928.

S E W I N G M AC H I N E : Singer, antique, treadle, oak cabinet, works. $100. (360)683-7904

EXTENSION LADDER: Aluminum, 24’, like new. KING BED: With frame, boxspring, and bedding $80. (360)477-4852 Exc. condition. $50. FLY ROD: Old South- Sequim. (406)253-1149 bend model 57-9, bamM AT C U T T E R : A l t o ’s boo. $95. (360)460-6720 4501 + 12 large mats. FREE: 1/2 Wine barrel. $40. Sequim. (360)461-9229 360-406-0657 FREE: 2 day admission M AT T RESS: Queen, tickets,Birch Bay Waterslides. Good thru Labor S i m m o n s B e a u t y Rest,10 years old, clean Day. 360-8093512 $45. 360-775-7364 FREE: Hide-a-bed, you MISC: Drummer’s stuff, haul. (360)460-5668 crash/ride and splash FREE: Hot tub, older, cymbals, Tom drum, etc. you haul. $50/all. (360)477-7759 (360)460-4943 MISC: Naval Flight JackFREE: Kodak Carousel et, medium, $40. Sickprojector, 8 carousels il- le/Saw from Japan, $10. luminated, slide sorter. (360)683-2589 (360)681-8663 MISC: TV 24” with tape F R E E : P a n a s o n i c player combo, $30. Oak 80amp vacuum, Hoover, dining table with leaves, steam-vac, carpet clean- $50. (360)683-3806 er. (360)477-4295 FREEZER: Fine condi- MIXER: Pro Kitchen Aid, a l l n ew a t t a c h m e n t s. tion. $100. $100. (360)457-9528 (360)457-5566

SNOW SLED: From the late 1950’s. $25. (360)808-6677

BOBBLEHEADS: (3) M a r i n e r s H O F, b ra n d new. $20/each. (360) 457-5790 BOOKCASE: Large double bookcase with 14 shelves. $50. 360-582-1280 BREAD MACHINE: 20 “Jirushi” square bread machine. $25. (360)670-6230 CANOE: Fiberglass. $75. (360)808-3105 COFFEE POT: Fiesta Ware, post ‘86 cobalt blue. $30. (360)683-9295 COLLECTIBLE: Cr ibbage board - 3 ft L with pegs. Lovely oak wood. $20. 360-681-7579 COPPER: Coal Shuttle. Ceramic handles. Dings no breaks. $65. 360-4574090

“I FOUND IT IN FREEBIES!”

CURIO CABINET: Black w r o u g h t i r o n , Fr e n c h style, 4 glass shelves. HAMPER: Round Dark$45. (360)681-3331 er Brown wicker clothes CUSHION: For outdoor hamper with lid. $15. loveseat, 2X18X43, (360)461-0149 striped, like new. $30. H A R DWA R E : B a r n (360)452-9106 door, 20’ single track, DESK: Wooden, flat top galvanized, complete. desk, 5’x34”. $40/obo. $95. (360)461-3070 (360)452-4755 HOME CINEMA: Audio DRILL PRESS: Bench s y s t e m , J a m o , ( 5 ) type, Central Machinery speakers, (1) subwoofer. $25. (360)683-7435 $85. (360)809-0697

what are you doing this weekend

?

Chances are you’ll find your entertainment in the Sequim Gazette - your hometown source for news, art, entertainment, leisure, sports and travel. So....if you haven’t planned anything yet, pick up your copy today, and start your weekend off right!

• 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

MOVING BOXES: H e a v y d u t y. 4 6 available. $20. (360)681-8015

SOUND BAR: Visio 40”, includes wireless subwoofer. Great TV sound! $80. (360)379-1344 STRING TRIMMER: Husqvarna 124C, extra heads. $95.00. Lv msg. (360)797-1622 TABLE SAW: “Ryobi” with 10” blade and stand, great cond. $45. (360)808-8675 TIE TACKS: 2 3 A s s o r t ed mostly aircraft, $3 ea., $50 all 23 tacks. 360-681-8592 TRUCK BOX: Dee Zee, s m . p i ck u p, d i a m o n d plated, keys $100. 360-457-5299 TRUCK CANOPY: 1998 Ford Ranger P/U, white. good condition $35. 360-683-5557 TV CONSOLE: 25” Sears, works great. $45. (360)461-0149 TYPEWRITER: IBM Wheelwriter 3, $25. (360)457-6388

PICNIC TABLE: Cedar with attached benches, T Y P E W R I T E R : S m i t h 6’Lx57”W, brown stain. Corona XC4600 Electric $100. 360-452-0150 with extra ribbons. $70. 360-582-6787 RAIN BARREL: 50 gal. with threaded top and WA K E B O A R D : S k i r o p e s , a l m o s t n e w. brass spigot. $30. $10/ea. (360)457-6431 (360)775-7823

HOMETOWN PAPER HOMETOWN PRIDE

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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

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families today PENINSULA

A special supplement produced by the Peninsula Daily News and Sequim Gazette

SUMMER IS UNDERWAY! Read about a few hikes the entire family can enjoy. — Page 8

ALSO INSIDE

Outdoor concerts — Page 5 Learning from one another at Pre-Three Co-op — Page 12

July 2018

volume 8, issue 3


families today On the cover July 2018

PENINSULA

volume 8, issue 3

A special supplement produced by the Peninsula Daily News and Sequim Gazette

SUMMER IS UNDERWAY!

LEFT — Hanna Brown leads her little brother, Caden, during a family hike on Dungeness Spit. photo by Holly Brown TOP RIGHT — Siblings Lucas and Catie Chance take in a sunset in Agnew. photo by Kari Chance BOTTOM RIGHT — Siblings Ella and Jonah McFarland and their dog, Angus, pose for a photo at Murdock Beach. photo by Becky McFarland

Read about a few hikes the entire family can enjoy. — Page 8

ALSO INSIDE

Outdoor concerts — Page 5 Learning from one another at Pre-Three Co-op — Page 12

Peninsula Families Today is looking for story ideas, news tips and more

families today PENINSULA

Peninsula Families Today is a family-focused publication and is inserted into both the Peninsula Daily News and Sequim Gazette. Please let us know what you’d like to see in the next issue of Peninsula Families Today. This publication welcomes input and new contributors. Educators, parents and professionals in their fields are invited to contribute informative and educational articles or columns for consideration. We cannot guarantee publication due to space and content considerations. If your submission is accepted, we reserve the right to edit it. Send articles, columns and photos (JPEGs at 200 dpi minimum) to section editor Brenda Hanrahan at bhanrahan@peninsuladailynews.com. For details, phone 360-452-2345.

Published by the Peninsula Daily News and Sequim Gazette advertising department Peninsula Daily News 305 W. First St. Port Angeles, WA 98362 360-452-2345

Sequim Gazette 147 W. Washington St. Sequim, WA 98382 360-683-3311

Terry R. Ward, regional publisher and vice president Steve Perry, general manager Brenda Hanrahan and Laura Lofgren, special sections editors

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TRY 5210 HEALTHY HABITS

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SPECIAL SUPPLEMENT TO PENINSULA DAILY NEWS AND SEQUIM GAZETTE


Library backpacks encourage youth to explore natural world by PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

Through September, North Olympic Library System (NOLS) patrons can check out a backpack geared toward preschoolers to encourage exploration of the natural world. Designed by the Burke Museum, each Backyard Scientist Kit contains a magnifying lens, specimen viewer, collection boxes, bug net, binoculars, ideas for nature walk activities, a book, a feather, a rock, a shell and an insect. Funded through a Thrive Washington grant and the Burke Museum, the backpacks are perfect to explore the outdoors with your young one without leaving your own backyard. “The backpacks and activity sheets do a great job of providing parents and caregivers with basic tools for open-ended conversation with preschoolers,” said Jennifer Knight, Youth Services librarian. “The Burke Museum’s activity guide succinctly gives people ideas on how to get kids talking, thinking and interpreting what they see, which is critical component of early literacy. “The backpack also encourages people to explore nature, which can introduce kids to all kinds of new experiences and vocabulary words that can help them be more prepared for kindergarten.” Backyard Scientist backpacks are available at each

branch of the North Olympic Library System. Search for “backyard scientist” in the library catalog or ask for them at any local branch.

ABOUT THE BURKE MUSEUM

The Burke Museum is a research-and collections-based museum in Seattle. It serves many audiences and communities, including Washington state residents, tourists and visitors to Seattle, educators and students, indigenous and Pacific communities, and researchers, scholars and enthusiasts. The 16 million objects (and counting) in the Burke collections are used for education and research throughout Washington. The museum is responsible for the state’s collections of natural and cultural heritage and sharing the knowledge that makes them meaningful.

NOLS LIBRARY LOCATIONS

• Port Angeles Library, 2210 S. Peabody St. • Sequim Library, 630 N. Sequim Ave. • Forks Library, 171 S. Forks Ave. • Clallam Bay Library, 16990 Highway 112

FOR MORE INFORMATION

For information about this and other library services for families, visit nols.org, email Youth@nols.org or contact your local NOLS branch. 872160877

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Port Angeles School District News Drop by our Stuff the Bus school supplies collection event on Friday, July 27 between 2 – 6 p.m. at Wal-Mart in PA. Look for the yellow and black school bus! Donations of school supplies may be dropped off at PASD’s central office throughout the summer, 216 E 4th St. At our annual Back to School Event, school supplies and back packs, as well as services, school information and other resources, will be made available to PA families in need to prepare for the new school year. The Back to School Event is Saturday, August 18, from 10 a.m. – 1 p.m. at Jefferson Elementary School, 218 E 12th St.

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Visit PASD’s website at www.portangelesschools.org for school news and current information. The 2018-19 school calendar is posted under Calendars. “Like” our District’s Facebook page and receive updates! PENINSULA FAMILIES TODAY  JULY 2018  3


United Way announces grant recipients by PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

United Way of Clallam County recently announced the recipients of the Albert and Helen Mangan Fund grant. This fund was established by the Clallam Community Foundation in 2018 and is operated by United Way of Clallam County. The donor’s objective for this fund is to support nonprofits in Clallam County whose work focuses on helping young people and the elderly.

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REASONS TO CHOOSE QUEEN OF ANGELS CATHOLIC SCHOOL WWW.QOFASCHOOL.ORG

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The Mangans requested special consideration be given to Volunteer Hospice of Clallam County and The Answer for Youth when distributing funds within a period of 10 years: 2018-2028. The first-ever distribution of this fund is for a total of $565,000 and will be distributed to the following organizations: • $100,000 to Boys & Girls Clubs of the Olympic Peninsula for the new Port Angeles Club House’s Albert and Helen Mangan Library and Education Lab • $100,000 to Peninsula Behavioral Health for the naming rights of the conference room in their new children’s clinic • $15,000 to St. Andrew’s Place for completion of their building’s roofing project • $100,000 to The Answer for Youth for its top proposed priority of paying off a portion of its building’s mortgage • $250,000 to Volunteer Hospice of Clallam County for resources to complete construction and renovation of its office building and on-site storage facility “Congratulations to all of 2018’s recipients that provide programs for the youth and elderly of Clallam County,” said Christy J. Smith, chief executive officer of United Way of Clallam County.

CLALLAM COUNTY COMMUNITY FOUNDATION

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The Clallam Community Foundation is a permanent endowment fund of United Way of Clallam County that distributes earnings to strengthen local nonprofits, provide grants and scholarships and allows people to give to our future community. For more information about the Clallam Community Foundation or United Way of Clallam County, visit unitedwayclallam.org or phone 360-457-3011.

Family Owned

by PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

Children entering kindergarten or equivalent this fall are invited to attend a kindergarten readiness program at the Port Angeles Library. Classes will be held at 1 p.m. Wednesdays July 25 and Aug. 1, at the library, 2210 S. Peabody St. Attendance is free, and registration is not required. North Olympic Library System and First Step Family Support Center staff will facilitate each session and will feature the reading of picture books, as well as a series of hands-on stations based on kindergartenreadiness skills. Participants in the program will receive a copy of each book read in addition to a handout with activities to do at home. Families attending the sack lunch program at Jefferson Elementary School during the summer are encouraged to head across the street to the library after lunch for this program. For more information, phone 360-417-8500, email youth@nols.org or visit nols.org.

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Outdoor concerts underway across North Olympic Peninsula by PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

Attending an outdoor concert is fun for the entire family, especially during mild summer evenings. A variety of free outdoor public concerts will be held in communities across the North Olympic Peninsula this summer, including:

MUSIC IN THE PARK

The Sequim 2018 Music in the Park series runs from 6 p.m. to 8 p.m. every Tuesday through Aug. 28 at the James Center for the Performing Arts, 350 N. Blake Ave. Sequim city organizers encourage attendees to bring chairs or blankets and picnic baskets to the concerts. The lineup for the rest of the summer, according to sequimwa.gov, is: v July 31 — Black Door Alley v Aug. 7 — Stardust Big Band v Aug. 14 — Sequim City Band v Aug. 21 — Rangers and the Re-Arrangers v Aug. 28 — Farmstrong

PERFORMERS ON THE PLAZA

Sequim welcomes the second season of Performers on the Plaza through the month of August. Performances are located at the Civic Center Plaza, 152 W. Cedar St., from noon and 2 p.m. Fridays. v Aug. 3 — Tony Flaggs Trio v Aug. 10 — Lukas Rose Duo

v Aug. 17 — Mike Klinger B3 v Aug. 24 — Black Rock v Aug. 31 — Ridgerunner

CONCERTS ON THE PIER

The Concerts on the Pier series, organized by the Port Angeles Regional Chamber of Commerce, runs every Wednesday evening throughout the summer through Sept. 19. Concerts will begin at 6 p.m. at City Pier, with parking on Lincoln Street and Railroad Avenue. Vendors will sell food and beverages. If heavy wind or bad weather is expected, the performances might be moved to The Gateway pavilion, located at the corner of Lincoln and Front streets. Audience members are encouraged to bring blankets or chairs to the informal, family-friendly performances. No smoking is allowed on the pier during the concerts. The series lineup for the rest of the summer, according to portangeles.org, is: v July 25 — FarmStrong v Aug. 1 — The Fabulous Murphtones v Aug. 8 — Alma y Azucar v Aug. 15 — The Olson Bros Band v Aug. 22 — Daring Greatly v Aug. 29 — Joy in Mudville v Sept. 5 — The Blue Rhinos v Sept. 12 — Stardust Big Band v Sept. 19 — The Weavils

CONCERTS ON THE DOCK

Port Townsend Main Street’s Concerts on the Dock summer music series will continue every Thursday through Aug. 30 at Pope Marine Park Plaza, 607 Water St. The free concerts will offer local vendors and a beer, wine and cider garden. Seating will open at 4:30 p.m. Shows will begin at 5 p.m. and end at 7:30 p.m. The series lineup, according to ptmainstreet.org, is as follows: v July 26 — Three For Silver v Aug. 2 — Global Heat v Aug. 9 — Toolshed Trio Grande v Aug. 16 — 4-3-2 Retro v Aug. 23 — Daring Greatly v Aug. 30 — Kevin Mason and the PT All Stars Bring a chair or a blanket and settle in for some tunes.

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PENINSULA FAMILIES TODAY  JULY 2018  5


Powering through the summer ritual of procrastination by KRISTIN HALBERG, a leadership and wellness coach based in Port Angeles and owner of The Dream Hatchery

Summer is in full swing. Most likely, whether you are aware of it or not, your family rituals are, too. Historically for me, summer rituals revolved around time on the water. I had the privilege of growing up on Lake Crescent. We played in and on the water nearly every day of summer vacation, tirelessly jumping off the dock, challenging our balance by standing and floating on old black inner tubes, swimming and making up various imaginative water games. As a teenager, I mixed these in with voraciously reading our entire library and writing snail mail letters to my pen pals while sunbathing on our floating dock. As an adult, these moments are mixed in with the responsibilities of work and caring for my garden.

WHAT ARE YOUR SUMMER RITUALS?

Whether or not we’re aware of our rituals, we all have them. But much of the time we throw ourselves into the busy activities of summer, one day following another until we’re surprised that it’s suddenly time for back-toschool shopping and summer is almost over. We procrastinate on the tasks of summer we don’t enjoy, try to cram a few more fun summer activities into the days remaining and wind up feeling overwhelmed by all the tasks we put off. This summer, I invite you to consider a more contemplative approach to your remaining sunny days.

PART I: IDENTIFY AND SAVOR

Stop right now, go outside and look around at the natural bounty of the summer season. What sights and sounds signal to you that it’s summer rather than another season of the year? If you grew up in a different part of the country, what summer experiences from your childhood do you miss or are happy to have left behind? What are your favorite sensory experiences of summer? Take the time to name your favorite ways to experience the sights, sounds, tastes, smells and felt sensations of summer. To make this a family activity, coax your family to

share their favorites over a meal. Once you’ve taken time to identify your favorite sensory experiences of summer, I invite you to savor those moments and allow them to stretch your imagination and your sense of time. Instead of rushing to clear the table, wash the dishes or check your phone after a meal, linger over your dinner conversations like the light lingers in the sky.

PART II: FREE YOUR MENTAL ENERGY

Now, think of a task that is part of your summer ritual of procrastination. If you were to complete this task, would it give you more peace of mind and free you up to enjoy the moments left? What larger purpose/goal is this task a part of? How might you tackle this task in a way that plays to your strengths and values, clears your mind from the nagging guilt of procrastination and accomplishes the larger goal this task represents? For example, one of the things I love about spring is planting a garden. I love watching the sprouts shoot up like magic. However, the task of summer weeding seems like it never ends. As a result in the past I’ve often neglected my garden, choosing to ignore it rather than tend it, trying to cram more fun water activities into my summer at the expense of my garden, even though one of my favorite sensory experiences of summer is the taste of fresh vegetables and the sights and sounds of wildlife in my yard. This year, after intentionally developing my spiritual apprenticeship to nature, instead of avoiding this chore, I set the goal of creating a wildlife friendly organic garden and broke the weeding down into bite-sized chunks. That is, rather than looking at the overwhelming task of weeding my entire garden each day, I focus on a couple square feet, mindfully noticing more about that small area. How is the soil? What insects did I uncover? Are they beneficial? What can I do to keep them happy? If they’re pests, how can I get rid of them organically? Practicing this mindful tending of my garden and looking for ways I can cultivate my strengths and values has

given me a deeper appreciation for the abundance of wildlife my garden attracts and expanded my knowledge of organic gardening. Now, when I look at my garden, instead of seeing it as a pile of work that still needs to be done, I take pride in the variety of butterflies and hummingbirds flitting from flower to flower, the garter snakes helping me save my plants from slugs, the brightly colored flowers waving in the breeze and the delicious summer vegetable crop interspersed amongst the flowers and herbs.

PART III: REFLECTION

When you appreciate and savor the aspects of summer you love and tackle the tasks that keep you from fully enjoying the moment, you are invited into a more mindful way of experiencing the ordinary and more opportunities for grace.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Kristin Halberg is an intuitive artist, writer, teacher and guide who blends the healing power of nature with the expressive arts, science and mystical traditions. Halberg’s company, The Dream Hatchery, catalyzes women’s return to belonging and wholeness and guides deep transformation in the areas of relationship, health and purpose. For more details, visit thedreamhatchery.com.

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Six skills of happiness help teens live a more positive life

Research also has shown that happy kids do better in school. How would you describe happiness? Happy learners remember information You might have trouble putting it into better, and happiness is positively associwords, but you know you want it for your- ated with GPA. self and your loved ones. The research also shows that schools One thing that’s harder than describing that teach happiness skills outperform it for many people is knowing how to schools that don’t and typically experience achieve it. dramatic drops in bullying, absenteeism Researchers studying social emotional and discipline issues. well-being define happiness as a balance: They also see impressive gains in stuthe combination of how frequent and dent engagement, optimism, test scores robust your positive emotional experiences and executive functioning skills that are are, how gracefully you recover from diffi- key to future success. cult experiences and how meaningful and When practiced, the six sustainable worthwhile you feel your life is overall. happiness skills below can sustain a “Happiness is the ability to consistently person’s ability to recognize that life’s recognize that life is good, even if it’s diffi- good, even if it’s hard sometimes, accordcult,” says Dr. Emiliana Simon-Thomas, ing to the research from Simon-Thomas: Ph.D., science director of the Greater Good Science Center at the University of MINDFULNESS California Berkeley. Being aware of your thoughts and “It’s being able to identify and enjoy the feelings in the present moment without positive times but also have resiliency to judging those thoughts or feelings as bounce back from the hard times.” admirable, shameful or anything in This is particularly important for youth. between. Research shows two out of three American teens are stressed and many don’t know HUMAN CONNECTION how to cope. Building and sustaining relationships with significant others, friendships and social engagement with peers, which is TEEN STRESS LEVELS When school is in session, teens are the the most reliable, enduring predictor of happiness in life. most stressed group in the country. The inability to reduce and cope with POSITIVE OUTLOOK stress and anxiety can negatively impact Harnessing the ability to imagine a different facets of a teen’s life, including fruitful outcome and maintain a readiness their health, friendships, relationships to pursue and experience the opportunity with parents and academic performance. To help further the idea that happiness in any circumstance. skills must be learned, Simon-Thomas PURPOSE identified six “Sustainable Happiness Understanding your ability to make a Skills” that provide the foundation for a difference in the world, at work, school or new initiative called Life’s Good: Experifor a team leads to a sense of purpose and ence Happiness, which helps bring scientific, evidence-based tools and sustainable increases your sense of happiness. happiness skills directly to young people GENEROSITY across America. Helping and giving to others can Backed by 70 years of scientific research increase one’s own happiness. showing that happy people are healthier, According to a study overseen by live longer, earn more and do better in school and life, the platform aims to reach, Harvard University, people who donated teach and increase sustainable happiness. time or money were 42 percent more likely to be happy when compared to Happiness is associated with positive health effects, according to the Journal of those who didn’t. Happiness Studies, including less insulin GRATITUDE resistance, better sleep, higher HDL choThe simple act of appreciating and lesterol levels and less reactivity to stress. thanking others for the goodness they conTeens who identify as happy also are tribute to your life helps foster happiness. more creative, helpful and sociable. by BRANDPOINT

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Jefferson Healthcare is proud to be the recipient of the Healthgrades 2018 Patient Safety Excellence Award™, a designation recognizing superior performance. The best part of our award isn’t what it means to our hospital. It’s what it means to you.

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SUMMER IS HERE! Spend a little time outdoors with your family this season by PENINSULA DAILY NEWS

The Olympic Peninsula features a wealth of family-friendly hiking trails making it easy to plan an outdoor experience this summer. Extended daylight hours, mild summer weather and plenty of things to see and do make the Peninsula an excellent choice for families to explore. Here are just a few trails to conquer and experiences to add to your family’s summer to-do list: OLYMPIC NATIONAL PARK Olympic National Park features an array of hikes suitable for children of all ages. Short trails at Hurricane Ridge are perfect hiking experiences for little legs. Exploring the Hoh Rain Forest and strolling along easy-to-access coastal beaches are other options for young adventurers. Along the way, youth will be learning about animals, trees and plants that call the park home. Children even have the chance to become an official junior Olympic National Park ranger. Free copies of the Olympic National Park Junior Ranger booklet can be picked up at any visitor center in the park. When children visit the park, they can complete the steps in the booklet to earn a junior ranger badge. The park also offers the Ocean Steward Junior Ranger Program, a fun, hands-on program for children ages 4 and older. Children are encouraged to explore the area’s coastal ecosystem, learn new facts and understand how to help protect Olympic National Park’s wilderness coast and the Pacific Ocean. Download and print the Ocean Steward Junior Ranger book at nps.gov/olym or obtain a free copy at any visitor center within the park. Children who complete the book according to the instructions will receive an Ocean Steward Patch. A park pass may be required at entrance stations. An annual park pass costs $55 and is good at any Olympic National Park entrance station for one year from the month of purchase. A consecutive seven-day park pass costs $30 per vehicle, or $25 for individuals on foot, bicycle or motorcycle. Children 15 years old and younger are admitted free of charge. Some of the more popular family-friendly trails that are appropriate for young children include: •  Hurricane Hill — The 3-mile round-trip trek begins from a parking area and climbs about 950 feet to offer amazing views of the Olympic Mountains, photo by BECKY MCFARLAND Jonah McFarland, 11, of Port Angeles enjoys a quiet moment cooling his feet off in a shallow channel of the Dungeness River. Strait of Juan de Fuca and British Columbia. 8  PENINSULA FAMILIES TODAY  JULY 2018

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photos (2) by KARI CHANCE

ABOVE: Catie Chance, 8, of Port Angeles makes a flower crown in a field of dandelions in Agnew. LEFT: Lucas Chance, 5, of Port Angeles poses for a photo in an old tree along the trail to Marymere Falls on a rainy summer day.

photo by TRISH TISDALE

RIGHT: Dennis Tisdale, 3, of Port Angeles is excited to see a waterfall in an isolated cove off the Striped Peak Trail at Salt Creek Recreation Area near Joyce.

The mostly paved trail is well-maintained. Children have a chance to watch deer and Olympic marmots feeding on wildflowers and grasses. Bears can sometimes be viewed in distant valleys. Stop at informational signs to identify mountain peaks and wildlife. Encourage children to try to identify wildflowers that bloom along the trail and learn about animals that live in the area. Be sure to pack a camera to let little ones try their hand at nature photography and to take photos of them enjoying the stroll. •  Lake Crescent — Cool off on a warm summer day by spending some time at Lake Crescent. Corded-off areas near East Beach and Fairholme are considered swimming areas, but children need to be supervised by parents or guardians at all times. •  Marymere Falls — A 1.8-mile round-trip trail starts by following the shoreline of Lake Crescent before leading people through old-growth forest to reach the waterfall. For about the first three-quarters of a mile of the trail, wheelchairs may be used with assistance. Children will enjoy crossing Barnes Creek over a rustic log bridge and will be amazed by the size of some of the trees located just off the trail. SPECIAL SUPPLEMENT TO PENINSULA DAILY NEWS AND SEQUIM GAZETTE

The final trek to the falls is a steep uphill climb with the choice of two lookouts: one about 50 feet above the falls and the other at its base. For a more ambitious hike, venture off the trail to the falls at the Mount Storm King trailhead. •  Ancient Groves Nature Trail — For a look at some more old-growth trees, venture into the Sol Duc Valley and stop at this self-guided nature trail. The loop is less than a mile long and offers views of tall trees and the Sol Duc River from above. •  Ruby Beach — This easy-to-access beach is located about 35 miles south of Forks. The beach is known for its pinkish sands, which derive color from tiny grains of garnet. Take in a sunset to fully appreciate the pink glow of the sands. A short trail through a green canopy of trees leads to a pile of driftwood that children should be careful climbing over to reach a sandy stretch of beach. >> SUMMER continued on page 11

PENINSULA FAMILIES TODAY  JULY 2018  9


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Island and Cape Flattery Lighthouse. The viewing platform at the end of the trail offers a wonderful place to view a variety of sea birds, sea otters and sometimes whales, so be sure to have children scan the sky and water for wildlife. The trail is a Makah Wilderness Area, so stay on the trail and supervise children closely. A Makah Recreation Permit is required to hike the Cape Flattery Trail. Permits can be obtained at the Makah Marina, Washburn’s General Store, Makah Tribal Center, Makah Mini Mart and the Makah Cultural and Research Center in Neah Bay.

<< SUMMER continued from page 9

Several sea stacks, Cedar Creek and its wide lagoon and Destruction Island Lighthouse add to the allure of Ruby Beach. Children will enjoy exploring tide pools and searching for a perfectly round beach cobble. Care should be taken when allowing children to approach the ocean. The Kalaloch-strip of beaches experiences strong and unexpected riptides.

photo by HOLLY BROWN

Caden Brown, 11, of Port Angeles kayaks on Lake Crescent.

As one of the county’s most popular parks, it offers visitors forests, rocky bluffs, tide pools, a sandy stretch of beach and campsites. The park features panoramic views of the Strait of Juan de Fuca, Crescent Bay and Vancouver Island. Salt Creek is on the National Audubon’s Olympic Loop of the Greater Washington State Birding Trail, making it a wonderful place to spot birds. The area was once the location of Camp Hayden, a World War II harbor defense military base. Remnants of two concrete bunkers can be viewed. The base was decommissioned at the end of World War II. Children can learn about sea life while exploring the adjacent Tongue Point Marine Life Sanctuary. The area includes a rocky outcropping that, at low tide, reveals starfish, sea urchins, limpets, sea cucumbers and other forms of marine life. Take care when exploring tide pools to make sure the delicate sea life is not harmed by feet, fingers, sticks or other objects. Salt Creek also provides access to the state’s Striped Peak Recreation Area, which features hiking and mountain bike trails. For details, visit clallam.net/Parks/SaltCreek.html. •  La Push — The seaside community of La Push has been a summer destination for locals and visitors alike for decades for its magnificent views. Home of the Quileute tribe, La Push offers beautiful views of the Pacific Ocean, a busy marina, nearby coastal trails, a popular campground and a resort. Don’t miss the opportunity to watch surfers bob in the choppy waves off First Beach or take in a colorful summer sunset with James Island in the background. Watch brown pelicans search for a catch near the entrance to the Quiluete River, and keep your eyes peeled for harbor seals in the cool waters. To learn more about things to see and do in La Push, visit quileutenation.org. • Cape Flattery — The short Cape Flattery Trail features boardwalk, stone and gravel steps, plus four observation decks offering breathtaking views of the Olympic Coast National Marine Sanctuary, Tatoosh

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STATE PARKS, REFUGES AND MORE TO EXPLORE • Fort Worden State Park and Conference Center — This scenic Port Townsend park features 12 miles of hiking and biking trails that are handicapped-compliant, Victorian houses used as barracks during the fort’s early years and loads of ways to enjoy a warm summer day. The park features a baseball/softball field; tennis courts; kayak, rowboat and bike rentals; two boat ramps and 235 feet of dock/moorage. The Port Townsend Marine Science Center, the Natural History Museum, a concession stand with restrooms, the Puget Sound Coast Artillery Museum and Point Wilson Lighthouse can be found along a beach side road. A long stretch of sandy beach on either side of the road provides easy places to look for shells, sea glass and beach cobbles. Let children explore Battery Kinzie to learn more about the history of Fort Worden. Children can wander through the fort, stopping to learn more at informational signs, and enjoy a sweeping view of the area from the top of the fort where giant guns were once mounted for protection. A Discover Pass is required for vehicle access to state parks. An annual pass costs $35. A one-day pass costs $11.50. For more information, visit discoverpass. wa.gov. • Dungeness Spit and Dungeness National Wildlife Refuge — The 261-acre refuge is home to more than 250 species of birds, 41 species of land mammals and eight species of marine mammals. Stretching 5.5 miles to the New Dungeness Light Station and several yards beyond, Dungeness Spit is the world’s longest natural sand spit. If planning to visit the lighthouse, check tidal charts and leave plenty of daylight hours to complete the hike. Pack a snack or light lunch to enjoy at picnic tables under the shadow of the lighthouse while taking in views of the spit and water. Venture inside the lighthouse to view educational displays and to talk to a knowledgeable volunteer about the history of the light station and its surrounding waters. Climb the 74 steps to the top of the lighthouse to see wonderful panoramic views of the spit and refuge, as well as the Strait of Juan de Fuca and Canada. Visit newdungenesslighthouse.com for details. The daily entrance pass, good for a family or group of up to four adults to the refuge, is $3. An annual Dungeness NWR Pass is available for $12. Children younger than 16 enter for free. Payment may be made by cash or check; bring exact change. •  Salt Creek Recreation Area County Park — This 196-acre Clallam County park is near Joyce off state Highway 112.

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PENINSULA FAMILIES TODAY  JULY 2018  11


Learning from one another at Peninsula Pre-Three Co-Op Parent-run co-op for toddlers creates a welcoming, learning community for all involved by TRISH TISDALE

When Rebecca van der Merwe first heard about Peninsula Pre-Three Co-Op, she didn’t think the program would be a good fit for her and her son. “I thought it was a daycare for people who couldn’t afford daycare,” she said, “and I thought the parent education component was for people who didn’t know parenting basics like diapering.” After a recommendation for the program from her son’s pediatrician, who had been involved with the program with her own sons, van der Merwe decided to give it a try. “She recommended Pre-Three to me as a way for my son — an only child — to socialize more with other children,” van der Merwe explained. “She said it would also be good for me as a parent to join a supportive community of other parents.” As she attended the weekly classes, van der Merwe said she discovered a group of parents who have honest discussions with each other about parenting, while their children gain social interaction with similar-aged children. “I am so thankful that this program exists in Port Angeles,” she said. “It’s helped us immensely during the challenging toddler years.”

PENINSULA PRE-THREE CO-OP

Peninsula Pre-Three Co-Op is a parent-run organization for children ages 10 months to 3½ years old and their parents or caregivers. The program’s goal is to provide a supportive learning community for families. Children interact and play in a supervised environment, overseen by a teacher and rotating “working parents,” while parents remain on-site and participate in parenting discussions facilitated by an instructor from Peninsula College. The nonprofit organization has been around for almost 40 years. Pre-Three is located at First Baptist Church, 105 W. Sixth St., Port Angeles, although it is not affiliated with the church. Each week, parents or caregivers attend class with their children. There are four classes, separated by ages. Morning classes are available for children ages 10 months to 18 months, 18 months to 2½ years old and 2½ to 3½ years old. Pre-Three also offers an evening multi-age class for children ages 18 months to 3½ years. This particular class has seen growth in the past few years with parents who work during the day. “After a few classes, I realized I was learning a lot about my child by assisting the teacher with the other children and by watching my son interact with the other parents and teachers,” said van der Merwe. “My ability to communicate with toddlers and understand their needs has really improved because I’ve been exposed to such a wide variety of personalities and parenting styles.” >> PRE-THREE continued on page 13

photo by REBECCA VAN DER MERWE

Willem van der Merwe puts together a puzzle in the sensory room at Peninsula Pre-Three Cooperative.

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beneficial for a child who might not be ready to be apart from a parent. The discussions are casual, so parents can easily get up and take care of their child as needed. Van der Merwe agreed that the parent discussions are a highlight of Pre-Three. “Parents are honest and open during group discussions,” she said. WORKING TOGETHER “We have valuable lessons to share with each other.” As a parent-run co-op, parents take turns each week Cammack became involved in Pre-Three as a parent PARENTING DISCUSSIONS filling the role of a “working parent.” The parenting discussions are one aspect that sets Pre- when her two daughters were enrolled in the program. These parents assist the teacher in interacting with “It’s been a lot of fun to get to play both roles of parent Three apart from other parent-children activities. the children, bringing snacks for the children and helpand instructor,” she said. “The discussions are important for a number of reaing to keep the classroom clean. “As a parent enrolled in the program, I felt such relief sons,” said Kaylee Cammack, program coordinator and Parents can also volunteer to serve on the board, which an instructor for the Family Life Education program at to hear other parents share stories of being overwhelmed oversees the school and runs the operations. Peninsula College, which facilitates Peninsula Pre-Three with parenting. Now, I get to continue to interact and All parents earn credits from Peninsula College for play with young kids as well as work with their parents.” as well as co-operative preschool programs in Port their participation in the classes and also by serving on Townsend and Joyce. the board. Parents can ultimately earn Family Life Edu“As parents learn together and share stories, it creates COST cation certificates from their involvement in Pre-Three. a more closely knit group of parents,” she explained. Classes run from September through May. “This is great for building supportive friendships. The A modified, multi-age class is held in the summer CLASS STRUCTURE parent-education component of our program is something that does not include the parenting discussion or college Every class follows a similar schedule, and children that you can’t get from most playgroups.” credit. grow to know and enjoy the predictable routine. Morning Discussion topics vary each week, but the ideas are Pre-Three’s second summer session will run classes run for two hours. The evening class is 1½ hours generated from parents and often stem from issues they Thursdays from July 19 to Aug. 23. Cost is $50 (and $30 and has a modified schedule but still maintains the same are currently struggling with. for siblings). core components of the morning classes. Popular themes include tantrums, sleep habits, lanTuition is prorated for those who enroll after the sesClass begins with circle time and songs and then guage development, sibling rivalry, potty training, power sion has started. transitions into indoor free-play and sensory activities. struggles, praise vs. encouragement and more. A fall orientation for new and returning families will During this time, the teacher interacts with the chil“We value that we are always learning both as chilbe held Wednesday, Sept. 5, at 5:30 p.m. in the Pre-Three dren with the assistance of two or three “working parclassroom. dren and as adults,” Cammack said. ents.” Meanwhile, the other parents engage in a parentDiscussions are held in the same room where children ing discussion facilitated by a certified instructor from play but in a separate area of the classroom. This can be >> PRE-THREE continued on page 14 Peninsula College. After the discussion, the parents and children gather Fellow Pre-Three parent Kayla McCann found that together for songs and instruments while one of the the program has helped her daughter as well. working parents sets up a healthy snack in the adjoining “She has learned so many social skills since we began room. The day ends with outdoor play (weather permitPre-Three. She has really come out of her shell,” she said. ting) and a closing circle with songs. By this time, kids are ready to go home for lunch and nap. << PRE-THREE continued from page 12

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CLASS INFORMATION, UPCOMING DATES

<< PRE-THREE continued from page 13

Fall classes begin the week of Sept. 10. There is an annual registration fee of $40 ($10 for siblings). Each quarter runs about 11 weeks and costs $110 ($55 for siblings). The evening class costs $85 (and $42.50 for siblings). Limited scholarships are available.

New/returning family orientation: Wednesday, Sept. 5, at 5:30 p.m. Summer session II: Thursdays, July 19–Aug. 23, 9:30 a.m. to 11:30 a.m.: 10 months–5 years Fall quarter begins: Sept. 11 (Ages are based on your child’s age in September.)

COMMUNITY

A resounding explanation of Pre-Three is that it’s a welcoming family. “I feel like I belong to a community,” said van der Merwe. “I left my career to stay home with my son, and it can be very isolating to be a stay-at-home mom.” McCann added, “I have loved being involved with such an amazing organization and getting to know so many other families. I knew that becoming involved with a great group of people and children would be an amazing opportunity for us.” Cammack especially loves seeing parents connect with one another. “I love the interactions with parents and children,” she said. “It’s definitely fun to see the excitement combined with relief when a parent takes home a new technique or strategy to try with their child.” The first years of children’s lives are critical for setting them on the right trajectory, and Pre-Three helps them reach their potential by providing a structured and stimulating way for them to interact with their environment and their peers. Meanwhile, parents learn from each other through supportive, nonjudgmental discussions. The program is affordable, available year-round, and provides a child-safe environment for babies and toddlers. If you’re interested in learning more about Peninsula Pre-Three Co-Op, contact the membership coordinator at 360-207-5663 or email peninsulaprethree@gmail.com.

SCHOOL YEAR CLASSES: • Tuesday class – 9:30 a.m. to 11:30 a.m.: 18 months – 2½ years • Wednesday class – 9:30 a.m. to 11:30 a.m.: 2½ years – 3½ years • Thursday morning class – 9 a.m. to 11 a.m.: 10 months – 18 months • Thursday evening class – 5:30 p.m. to 7 p.m.: 18 months – 3½ years Tuition is $110 per quarter ($55 for siblings). The evening class is $85 per quarter ($42.50 for siblings). There is also a nonrefundable, annual $40 registration fee ($10 for siblings). photo by REBECCA VAN DER MERWE Families are always welcome to attend a class for free. Teacher Carly Palacios helps Dillon Tisdale of Port Angeles with a Contact Peninsula Pre-Three to arrange a visit. sensory puzzle during a Pre-Three class. Limited scholarships are available. Families are always welcome to attend a class for free. Contact the membership coordinator to arrange a visit. Additional information can also be found online at tinyurl.com/y8nt6eap or on the Pre-Three Facebook page Crescent Cooperative Preschool Program (Joyce) at facebook.com/peninsulapre3. • Children attend class two to four days a week • Ages: 3 years to 5 years • Contact: crescentcooperativepreschool@gmail.com Trish Tisdale is treasurer of Peninsula Pre-Three Co-Op. She joined the program in 2015 when her son was Port Townsend Cooperative Playschool • Children and parents attend class one day a week 8 months old and now attends with both her children. • Ages: 9 months to 4 years • Contact: membership@ptplayschool.org

OTHER CO-OP PROGRAMS

Sequim Pre Three (This program is not affiliated with Peninsula College.) • Children and parents attend class one day a week • Ages: 10 months to 3½ years • Contact: sequimpre3@gmail.com

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Mark your calendars for Peninsula Pre-3 Cooperatives’s annual Harvest Carnival & Silent Auction on Oct. 20 from 1 p.m. to 5 p.m. in Jefferson Elementary School gymnasium, 218 E. 12th St. in Port Angeles. The event will include games, prizes, crafts, a cake walk, gift basket raffle, bake sale and a silent auction. Games and crafts are designed for children 8 years and younger, but it will be fun for the whole family. The first 100 children will receive a free book from Clallam County Literacy Council. Admission costs $3 per person and includes a few free game tickets and unlimited crafts.

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Free events at area libraries by NORTH OLYMPIC LIBRARY SYSTEM

STORYTIME ON THE ROAD

The theme for the 2018 Summer Reading Program is Libraries Rock! This summertime celebration, which encourages children to keep reading during their summer break from school, features a reading challenge and a multitude of events for all ages. Research shows that children who do not read during the summer experience “summer slide” and may lose up to a month of the instructional knowledge they gained during the previous school year. Library summer reading programs have been shown to help alleviate the “summer slide” by providing access to books, enrichment activities and encouraging young people to keep reading. The 2018 Summer Reading Program continues through Aug. 18. As part of the North Olympic Library System’s Summer Reading Program, library staff are hitting the road during the month of July for a one-of-a-kind storytime series. Catch a special roving storytime on Fridays in July at 10:30 a.m. at a different location each week. Storytimes are for toddlers, preschoolers and the adults in their lives. Remaining storytimes include: • Thursday, July 26, at 10:30 a.m. at the Railroad Bridge Park amphitheater, 2151 W. Hendrickson Road in Sequim • Friday, July 27, at 10:30 a.m. at the Port Angeles Fire Department, 102 E. Fifth St. in Port Angeles

evening for let-your-hair-down adult fun, but is suitable for all ages.

ROCKHOUNDING

Learn how to search for and find fossils, minerals, rocks and gold on the Olympic Peninsula from Garret Romaine, author of “Gem Trails of Washington.” • Friday, Aug. 3, noon, Clallam Bay Library, 16990 Highway 112 • Friday, Aug. 3, 5 p.m., Forks Library, 171 S. Forks Ave. • Saturday, Aug. 4, noon, Port Angeles Library • Saturday, Aug. 4, 5 p.m., Sequim Library, 630 N. Sequim Ave.

GANSANGO MUSIC AND DANCE Watch the talents of a multicultural group of dancers and musicians come alive in traditional and contemporary dance from West Africa. • Tuesday, July 31, 10:30 a.m., Sequim Library • Tuesday, July 31, 2 p.m., Port Angeles Library

ROCK THE LIBRARY!

• Friday, Aug. 3, 10:30 a.m. Port Angeles Library

PAJAMA STORYTIME

DONUTS AND BOOKS

Grab a donut and talk about books. Teens in grades seven through 12 are invited to share their favorite books and hear about a few new titles. This is a great opportunity to pick up a book you might not normally read. Library staff also will share tools and tips on finding your next great read. Bring a favorite book title to share, or just sit back and enjoy a donut and juice. • Monday, Aug. 6, 11 a.m., Port Angeles Library

DIG WITH THE BURKE MUSEUM

Take a journey through geologic time as you examine real fossils, rocks, and minerals, as well as cast replicas of dinosaurs and other prehistoric animals and plants. Unearth fossils in dig pits and learn about the work of geologists and paleontologists. • Tuesday, Aug. 7, 10:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m., Forks Library • Tuesday, Aug. 7, 4 p.m. to 6 p.m., Port Angeles Library • Wednesday, Aug. 8, 10:30 a.m. to 12:30 p.m., Sequim Library

Keep on those Saturday morning pajamas and head to the library for a special storytime hosted by teen volunteers. Pajama storytime features songs, crafts and, of course, stories. • Saturday, Aug. 11, 10:30 a.m., Port Angeles Library

HAPHAZARDLY EVER AFTER

The Port Angeles Community Players Children’s Theatre presents Haphazardly Ever After. Magical fun awaits in this one-of-a-kind fractured fairy tale farce. • Monday, Aug. 13, 6:30 p.m. Port Angeles Library

PIRATES, MERMAIDS STORYTIME

This adventurous storytime features swashbuckling pirate stories, sea chanties, games and crafts that will make you go “Argh!” Be sure to come dressed as your favorite pirate or mermaid. • Tuesday, Aug. 14, 2 p.m., Forks Library

For more information about North Olympic Library System, visit nols.org.

Rock the library at this music-themed night featuring trivia, a costume contest, prizes and more. Bring your own team of four to six people, or join one at the event. • Tuesday, July 31, 6:30 p.m., Sequim Library

BLOCK FEST

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BLOCK Fest is a research-based block play program geared toward children from 8 months to 8 years and their caregivers. ART BLASTAPALOOZA Participants can rotate from station to Art Blastapalooza will be held Friday, station in a self-guided tour to play with a July 27, at 7 p.m. at the Port Angeles variety of different blocks. Library, 2210 S. Peabody St., and will • Thursday, Aug. 2, 10:30 a.m., Forks showcase live music from Seattle-based Library street band Neon Brass Party and the • Thursday, Aug. 2, 2:30 p.m., Clallam ceremonial grand illumination of the giant Bay Library “Reading Person” sculpture. Enjoy fun, hands-on activities such as a PRINCESS STORYTIME book domino race, DIY musical-instruRoyal attire is encouraged at this very ments, book toss, wearable art and a special storytime presented by Sequim colorful characters photo booth in the Irrigation Festival Royalty. “Books Rock Village” — and win prizes. Children can enjoy stories, songs, games A live auction conducted by the North Olympic Library Foundation (NOLF) will and one-on-one time with the princesses. • Thursday, Aug. 2, 10:30 a.m., offer opportunities to take home children’s Sequim Library chairs artistically enhanced by local artists. FAVORITE STORIES PUPPET SHOW The newest Art in the Library exhibit, See favorite stories brought to life “Summer Fun and Fantasy,” will be availthrough the magic of puppetry in a show able for viewing throughout the evening. written and performed by teen volunteers. Art Blastapalooza is planned as an

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Kids age 2-18 Come get FREE FOOD every day!

Lunches served 11:30am-1:30pm Monday-Friday SUMMER FOOD SERVICE PROGRAM This summer we are partnering with the USDA in their Summer Food Service Program to bring FREE meals to youth in our community. The Summer Food Service Program, also known as the Summer Meals Program,was established to ensure that children continue to receive nutritious meals when school is not in session. All kids are welcome to come enjoy a meal and/or snack at William Shore Pool this summer free of charge! (All meals are administered on a first come first serve basis each day.)

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June 25th to August 31st

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