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LIVING ON THE PENINSULA | SUMMER | JUNE 2012 1 SUMMER 2012 Supplement to the Sequim Gazette and Port Townsend & Jefferson County Leader ANIMAL TALES Pg. 6 Playful Hoh Rain Forest river otters Pg. 11 Olympic Gentle Paws Pg. 16 Bloodhounds sniffing around for purpose Pg. 22 Equine group rides to the rescue Pg. 25 Puppy Pilots lead the way Pg. 39 Back Country Horsemen

Living on the Peninsula, Summer 2012

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Lifestyle for the Olympic Peninsula of Washington State

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Page 1: Living on the Peninsula, Summer 2012

LIVING ON THE PENINSULA | SUMMER | JUNE 2012 1LIVING ON THE PENINSULA | SUMMER | JUNE 2012 1

SUMMER 2012

LIVING ON THE PENINSULA | SUMMER | JUNE 2012Supplement to the Sequim Gazette and Port Townsend & Jefferson County Leader

ANIMAL TALESPg. 6 Playful Hoh Rain Forest river otters

Pg. 11 Olympic Gentle Paws

Pg. 16 Bloodhounds snif� ng around for purpose

Pg. 22 Equine group rides to the rescue

Pg. 25 Puppy Pilots lead the way

Pg. 39 Back Country Horsemen

Page 2: Living on the Peninsula, Summer 2012

2 Living on the PeninsuLa | suMMeR | June 2012

(360) 681-2727141 TIMBERLINE • SEQUIM, WA(360) 681-2727(360) 681-2727

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Contractor Lic.#AAWNII*991DA

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Enjoy World-Class Asian CuisineRight Here on the Olympic Peninsula!

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Read the article at:www.a-r-n.net/jin_e

Tendy Deng,Owner/Chef,Has studied at Martin Yan’s

Chinese Culinary Arts Enrichment

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• Freshly-paved parking lot• Elegant landscaping

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C H I N E S E Restaurant News TOP 100 Award Winner for 2009

V O T E DB E S T CHINESE FOOD 2004-2011

We’ve made improvements to serve you better!

Watch for more changes to come!

Page 3: Living on the Peninsula, Summer 2012

LIVING ON THE PENINSULA | SUMMER | JUNE 2012 3

Your journey to beating cancerjust got shorter.

You don’t have to leave the North Olympic Peninsula to get exceptional cancer care.

Located in Sequim, Olympic Medical Cancer Center delivers world-class cancer care

close to home. This year, we’re celebrating the anniversary of our 10-year affiliation

with Seattle Cancer Care Alliance, which gives our patients full access to the

world-renowned therapies developed at Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center,

UW Medicine and Seattle Children’s. If you’re dealing with cancer, Olympic Medical

Cancer Center can help. To learn more, visit omcforhope.com or call (360) 683-9895.

Page 4: Living on the Peninsula, Summer 2012

4 Living on the PeninsuLa | suMMeR | June 2012Where family ownership … makes the difference

500 Hendrickson Road • Sequim, WA 98382 • 360.683.3345 • info@thefi fthavenue.com • thefi fthavenue.com

Active Retirement Living.

550 Hendrickson Road • Sequim, WA 98382 • 360.683.3348 • [email protected] • sherwoodassistedliving.com

Assisted Living With A Difference

There’s never a shortage of things to enjoy!

Fun at the Fifth!

More than independent senior living – a lifestyle of luxury660 Evergreen Farm Way • Sequim, WA 98382 • 360.681.3100 • [email protected] • thelodgeatsherwood.com

Luxury Retirement Living.

Page 5: Living on the Peninsula, Summer 2012

LIVING ON THE PENINSULA | SUMMER | JUNE 2012 5

10 Food & Spirits Basil Chicken, Taiwan Style!

18 Heart & Soul Who can you talk to about a dead cat?

DEPARTMENTS20 Good Gardening A boutique nursery within Over the Fence

41 The Living End Bonds eons old

42 Now & Then Photographic journal

11 1366

2222

2828

SPOTLIGHT6 Playful Hoh Rain Forest river otters mimic human families

11 Canine Connections

13 Welcome aboard the schooner Adventuress

16 Snif� ng around for purpose Bloodhound search and rescue

22 Equine group rides to the rescue

25 Puppy Pilots leading the way

26 There's just something about lavender

28 Iris Edey's love and � owers

31 What's in a name? California woman traces family roots to peninsula

39 Blazing the back country

Design:Cathy Clark Cathy Clark earned a bachelor’s degree in art from Calvin College, which led to a career in graphic design. She has been an award-winning designer for the Sequim Gazette since 2004. She enjoys traveling and reading history in her free time. Clark can be reached at [email protected].

Vol. 8, Number 2, Living on the Peninsula is a quarterly publication. © 2012 Sequim Gazette © 2012 Port Townsend & Jefferson County Leader

Contact us:

P.O. Box 1750, Sequim, WA 98382 360-683-3311

Patricia Morrison Coate: [email protected]

226 Adams St., Port Townsend, WA 98368

360-385-2900Fred Obee: [email protected]

Page 6: Living on the Peninsula, Summer 2012

6 LIVING ON THE PENINSULA | SUMMER | JUNE 2012

A s Henry David � oreau re� ected on humanity at Walden Pond almost 200 years ago, so Olympic National Park Ranger Jon Preston does today at

Ta� Creek in the old-growth Hoh Rain Forest located on the West End of the Olympic Peninsula.

Preston, who is upbeat in his approach to nature in compari-son to � oreau’s deep transcendental musing, o� en focuses on the wily antics of a family of river otters who inhabit pristine Ta� Creek.

� e Hoh Rain Forest Visitor Center-based ranger could use the same webbed feet that propel the river otters when wa-terborne. � e center is located under a lush canopy of spruces, red cedar, vine maple and other coniferous and deciduous trees. Rain usually falls by the bucket from September through February, the prime time for river otter action in the creek, with average totals of 140-170 inches easily surpassing the 120-inch average at nearby Forks, the rainiest town in all the lower 48 states.

Ta� Creek, the center of the action for observing Preston’s family of river otters, is just steps away from the visitor center, which is 18 miles inland o� U.S. Highway 101, at the end of the Upper Hoh Road. � e center’s interpretive display, set up several decades ago by Hoh Rain Forest scholar and author Ruth Kirk, o� ers retro-style glimpses at the � ora, fauna and geology of the

Hoh River Valley region.Ta� Creek’s name was given not in honor of an employee,

explorer or scientist, but in the spirit of West End pioneer humor. Former Hoh Rain Forest Ranger Smitty Parratt tells the tale of Ta� Creek in Poseidon Peak Publishing’s “Gods & Goblins,” Olympic National Park’s place name book. U.S. Forest Service crewman Charley Anderson named it 100 years ago a� er then-President William Howard Ta� , who served from 1909-1913, Parratt states, because “the spring-fed creek had no head and wandered aimlessly around � atlands with no idea of where it was going”.

Having the rain forest wilderness of Ta� Creek right at his back door at the interpretive center provides Preston with a unique opportunity to observe the daily and seasonal activities of a family of � ve river otters with which he’s become well acquainted.

“We used to occasionally see river otters, they were a passing thing, until the salmon started coming back,” Preston recalls. “� e salmon numbers shot up when we replaced a culvert 11 years ago. Suddenly these otters would come out and hang out for months … I was able to start to � gure out their routine.”

One winter weekend Preston invited me out to his station for an up-close look at the river otter family’s feasting on spawning salmon. � e nearly dead, black and crimson red scaled � sh were

obviously dying and an easy target. It was amazing to be so close to the wily animals in action in the wild as they scurried up a mud bank to a � at grassy section that served as their dining table in the wild. No long hike and binoculars were needed. � e river otters were right there, running around like your pet dog would in your backyard. It was like stepping into the frame of a Disney nature adventure � lm.

� is visit came a� er Preston had observed the river otters for years and he knew exactly where to look for them and was able to tell me what to expect.

“It starts in morning upstream, they start chasing � sh,” Preston says of knowing when to go out to see the river otters. “You hear a chirpy bark in the distance” that leads you to them. “I observed them, following them around making their paces. I was able to pick them out as a family of � ve — mom, dad and three kids, with one being younger. I began to watch the brother and sister picking on each other and Mom intervene … watch-ing these things I made a connection — it was just like my own family in a way, as far as being a parent intervening.”

Seeing how the river otter captures a salmon also was intriguing to him. “Taking down one of those big � sh is no small task.”

Preston went from observing to interpreting for others the life of the river otters at Ta� Creek, introducing visitors to what

Playful Hoh Rain Forest river otters mimic human families

Story by Chris Cook | Photos by Jon Preston

Brother and sister river otters

atop a fallen nurse log stalk Taft Creek,

looking for their next coho salmon or perhaps a frog

or two.

Page 7: Living on the Peninsula, Summer 2012

LIVING ON THE PENINSULA | SUMMER | JUNE 2012 7

he’d been observing. � e visitors, especially children, he says, became engrossed in seeing nature in action in a natural setting.

“It’s something that’s been going on since the beginning of time. I don’t know of a place in Western Washington that has that kind of experience, where you can get that kind of experience so easily.”

While observing river otters elsewhere is not uncommon, with the otter found just about anywhere freshwater � sh are found in Washing-ton, you might spend all day trying to catch a glimpse of them.

� e sea otter is a marine mammal that weighs between 30-100 pounds. � ey are the heaviest members of the weasel family, while the river otter is a semi-aquatic mammal that usually weighs between 11-31 pounds. � e river otter’s streamlined � gure allows it to glide through the water. It has a thick neck, almost-hidden eyes, webbed feet, short legs, broad hips with a tapered tail that makes up about one-third of its body length, a great sense of smell and hearing. � ey live in the wild to about 8 or 9 years of age. � ey are most active at dawn or dusk and usually cover about a mile and a half to three miles per day, though they are capable of swimming two dozen miles in a day.

While at the Hoh Rain Forest station, “it’s like being at the Wood-land Park Zoo, but it’s not a zoo and no one is feeding them.”

A bit of drama was added to the Ta� Creek river otters’ lifestyle in 2011 when Preston noticed a female bobcat hanging out in the forest surrounding the creek. � e river otters customarily would haul up the exhausted, no longer struggling, spawning salmon up to the shoreline or atop a log that spans the creek. “� e bobcat hides out at bushes at the end of a log,” Preston says, while the otters get sidetracked by being playful with each other. “With the other otter egging it on, they jump o� the log and chase each other around. � e bobcat grabs the � sh and jumps back into forest.”

While the smooth-furred animals look docile when poking their round eyes above the Ta� Creek surface, they can show their ties to the weasel family when accosted. � e Anglo-Saxon root word for weasel is “weatsop” and de� ned as “a vicious bloodthirsty animal.”

Preston tells of the plight of a U.S. Fish & Wildlife crewman he met who was trapping beavers in a culvert to relocate the animals whose dams were causing road failures due to � ooding around the culvert.

“He was driving down in a truck checking traps and found a trap with a river otter in it. He hauled it out by the tail, letting it go. In � ve seconds he was bitten four times, right up his leg. � ere’s not a lot of animals that mess with them. � ey have teeth sharp enough to capture a slimy salmon,” Preston said.

“� e river otter is a formable animal. It doesn’t have hands, it’s a freshwater version of a seal. A seal can usually bit the darn thing in half, sea lions grab � sh by the head and swallow them whole. River otters have to, start to � nish, kill a � sh and then eat it. � at’s a lot of e� ort, goes on for about 15 minutes and is exciting to watch.”

Preston has faced his own danger during a close encounter with the mother river otter when she almost landed on him. Dressed in camou� age clothing, he positioned himself near their feeding area on Ta� Creek. For almost a half-hour, with camera in hand, he did not move.

“I heard them coming downstream. � e female Mom pops out of the creek and almost lands in my lap. She sat there gathering herself, then Dad comes downstream and looks up, he and I made eye contact. � ey have pretty good eyesight. � ere is an inherent curiosity in them. If you’re sitting low to the ground not moving, they sometimes come and take a closer look at you. � ere’s a mud slide they went up and down. � e kids hung out in one spot, Dad is kind of on the lazy side. He picked his spot and Mom traveled between two of them.”

He clicked o� two shots with his auto shutter set. Fortunately, with a bark and not a bite, the mother slid back into the creek.

� e river otters’ seasonal feeding reaches its peak from early September into the � rst two weeks of January, during the salmon

Playful Hoh Rain Forest river otters mimic human families

Spring-fed Taft Creek nurtures the

freshwater plants the river otters slink around in.

The beauty of the vibrant green plants lying in and re� ected in the crystal-pure water rivals

the � nest paintings of the Impressionist school of

art. Photo by Chris Cook

Dinner time is anytime for Taft Creek

river otters when spawning coho

salmon are easy prey.

Spawning coho, almost black

near death, swimming in Taft Creek are prime

food for hungry river otters and an important part of the ecological

cycle of the Hoh Rain Forest.

LIVING ON THE PENINSULA | SUMMER | JUNE 2012 7

Page 8: Living on the Peninsula, Summer 2012

8 LIVING ON THE PENINSULA | SUMMER | JUNE 2012

www.olympicpeninsulaaudubon.org or email rco� [email protected] or call 360.681.4076

Olympic Peninsula Audubon SocietyTh e Olympic Peninsula Audubon Society promotes birding,

conservation of habitat, and biological diversity on the Olympic Peninsula through our education and conservation eff orts.

“Come Bird With Us”

Protection Island Pu� n Marine Sunset Dinner Cruisesdeparting from the John Wayne Marina

July 20th & 21st • 7pm-9pm • $65 per personDinner consists of Dill and Garlic Baked Salmon, Capt. Pete’s

Party Potatoes, Northwest Caesar Salad, fresh baked Pan D’Amore Bread, and Chocolate Drizzled Fresh Raspberry

Brownie. Beer and wine will be available for purchase.

Call Sara Richerts 360-775-5084 • email: [email protected]

“Lessons &Training”at Olympic

ViewStables

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loved one. Home is just a word—it’s what

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360/452-7222 [email protected]

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A VILLAGE CONCEPTSRETIREMENT COMMUNITY

spawning season. Up to 3,000 spawn-ing salmon � ood Ta�

Creek, Preston esti-mates. “Bring your rain

coats, this is also the rainiest time of the year.”

“� ey are like sumo otters, just bloated,” Preston says of the annual feeding frenzy. “� ey hit � sh hard at the beginning then

get selective. An explosion of salmon at the location gives it away. (� e river otters) are like a car driving through a crowd of people who are trying to get away.”

Preston also has through careful observation discovered where the river otters burrow their nests at Ta� Creek. “� e entrances can be underwater

like a beaver’s. (At Ta� Creek) they are downstream of the Hall

of Mosses bridge, at the head of the pond … easily seen downstream of the

bridge in wintertime. � e river otters’ diet runs to fowl, too,

migratory ducks to be precise. “� ey behave like mini white sharks,” Preston says

of his � rst-hand views of river otters ravenously attacking the water fowl. “� ey ambush, go under the duck, pull it down by the feet.” All that’s le� is “a whole bunch of feathers in the stream vegetation,” as Preston describes the scene. “In a cloud of feathers all the rest of the ducks take o� , making a very loud honking sound as they explode into the forest.”

Eagles feed on salmon in Ta� Creek, too, providing action in the air above the only opening in the forest in this area where they can feed on the � sh. � eir wide wing spans aren’t made for the tight turns needed when two � ght for a � sh. � ey zig and zag, Preston says, nicking alder trees. � e loser in the airborne � shing

derby can end up looking pretty undigni� ed for an eagle. “� ey usually calculate where they are going,” he adds. “Here,

they run into branches panicking. I saw an eagle hit a branch one time and fall into the mud. � e eagle was walking in the mud and couldn’t take o� . � e eagle walked and walked humiliated, � nally making a running take o� on the road.”

Above and beyond the river otters’ salmon and duck feeding is the weasel-like animals’ role in completing a time immemorial cycle that makes up the rain forest ecology. As the river otters — plus bobcats, cougars, coyotes and other animals found in the Hoh Rain Forest — digest and excrete their intake of salmon and other prey, they transfer nutrients from the salmon to the trees and plants of the rain forest.

“Ninety percent of the mass of � sh moves into the terrestrial environment,” Preston says. “It ends up on land and feeds the forest protecting the baby salmon. � e nutrients are a critical component of this cycle of salmon. � ere’s been a multitude of research done on salmon carcasses and what happens a� er-ward.” If the salmon cycle was broken over centuries the rain forest would likely turn into grass lands, Preston opines. � e river otter waste product is “like packets of fertilize that deliver themselves,” he says.

Campers wishing to experience the unique Hoh Rain Forest environment � nd a year-round campground with 88 sites located in an old-growth forest. A National Parks pass is required to enter the park and there is a per-night camping fee. Go to www.nps.gov/olym/planyourvisit/visiting-the-hoh.htm for more information on facilities and the Olympic National Park’s visitor center located there.

Creek, Preston esti-mates. “Bring your rain

coats, this is also the rainiest time of the year.”

A cautious mother river otter

eyes the camera held by a seated Jon Preston. He

quietly sat and waited for this moment in the damp rain forest along the banks of Taft Creek.

The animal splashed out of the creek onto land much

closer to the camera than he anticipated.

Page 9: Living on the Peninsula, Summer 2012

Living on the PeninsuLa | suMMeR | June 2012 9

Sandy Sinnes, our Diabetes Specialist, is accepting

appointments on Fridays for half-hour consultations; $20.

Call for details.

424 East 2nd Street, Port Angeles360 452-4200 www.jimsrx.com

YOUR DIABETES CARE CENTER

living with

Your full, complete, one-stop source for all your diabetic supplies …

diabetesJim’s Pharmacy offers one of the largest selections of diabetic supplies and equipment on the Olympic Peninsula. You’ll � nd blood glucose monitors, glucose tabs, test strips, specialty foot creams, and much more all in one location. We train our clients how to use them through demonstration, and we pre-� ll syringes.

Page 10: Living on the Peninsula, Summer 2012

10 LIVING ON THE PENINSULA | SUMMER | JUNE 2012

Come see our store in the Sequim Village Center• Vitamins • Herbal Remedies • Homeopathy • Skin & Nail Care

• Natural Cosmetics • Largest Selection of Domestic & Imported Organic WinesMonday-Saturday 9am - 6pm • (360) 683-6056

PRODUCE• Farm-Direct • Organics

• Sequim & Eastern Washington

NATURAL GROCERIES• Organics • Gluten-free • Bulk Foods

• Natural Body Care • Nutritional Supplements

OLDTYME BUTCHER• Our Own Beef • Fresh Poultry & Seafood

COUNTRY-STYLE DELI• Daily Soups, Salads, & Sandwiches

• Espresso & Fruit Smoothies

BUYING CLUB• Everybody’s a Member!

UNIQUE MERCANTILE• Gifts & Greeting Cards

• Kitchen Supplies

FARM STORE• Animal Feeds • Hay & Straw

• Pet Supplies • Birdseed

NURSERY• Fruit & Veggie Starts • Ornaments

• Flowers • Natural Fertilizers & Soils• Potted & Bare-root Trees

An artful dining experience

Open Monday-Saturday • Lunch 11 am - 3 pm • Dinner 4 pm - 9 pm

120 West Bell St. • Sequim, WA360-683-8069www.galarethai.com

“Dine with us here at Galare Thai and travel to my hometown of Chiang Mai without ever having to leave the country.”

Suree Chommuang, Proprietor & Chef

Welcome to the Finest Thai Cuisine in Sequim!

Come hungry. Leave happy.1360 W. Washington St., Sequim, WA 98382 • (360) 683-2363 (River Road exit, next to Walmart)Sun-Thur 6am-10pm

Fri-Sat 6am-12am

#1 Family Dining Restaurant in America

Senior Early Bird3-6pm, Mon-Fri(see store for details)

Kids Eat Free4pm-Close Daily

(see store for details)

*Locally Ownedand Operated

Open For Breakfast, Lunch and Dinner

Serving Breakfast All Day

FOOD Spirits&Basil Chicken, Taiwan Style!

� e following recipe is a creation of Tendy Deng, owner and chef of Tendy’s Garden Chinese

Restaurant, 920 E. First St. in Port Angeles.

Tendy’s has been voted Best Chinese Food on the peninsula eight years in a row, was named a

Top 100 Chinese Restaurant in the U.S., and was selected as a Cover Page Success Story by Asian

Restaurant News.Tendy has studied at Martin Yan’s Chinese Culinary Arts Enrichment Workshop.

O� ering dine-in and take-out options, Tendy’s is the perfect choice for your next family meal,

romantic dinner or event.

Hours are 11 a.m.-9:30 p.m. Monday-Friday; noon-9:30 p.m.; Saturday-Sunday. Phone 360-452-

3322. Check the website at www.tendyschinese.com.

Ingredients1 pound diced chicken

Basil, garlic and sliced ginger, to taste

Bell peppers, green onions, water chestnuts,

carrots as desired1/2 ounce soy sauce

1/2 ounce oyster sauce

1 ounce white wine

1½ ounces soy paste (from Taiwan)

1 teaspoon sugarA few drops of sesame oil

Corn starch for consistency

DirectionsPan fry the diced chicken until it’s a golden color. Add fresh garlic and ginger and stir-fry for 20

seconds for � avor. Then add your favorite vegetables as desired. Add white wine and let mixture

sizzle for a few seconds. Add soy sauce, oyster sauce, soy paste and sugar together. Add corn

starch until sauce is of the desired consistency. Enjoy!

Photo by John Huston

Page 11: Living on the Peninsula, Summer 2012

LIVING ON THE PENINSULA | SUMMER | JUNE 2012 11

T here are many acts of love that elevate the hu-man spirit. � e connection between canines and humans is one that transcends age and

situation. � e generous people in the Gentle Paws therapy group volunteer their time and family pets as a gi� to the community in the form of visits to nursing homes, schools, libraries, hospitals, retirement homes and adult day care set-tings. In addition to having fun, the dogs and their handlers encourage children to read, bring joy to older members of the community who are no longer able to have pets of their own, and participate in local events.

� e Gentle Paws organization began in 2000 through the e� orts of three local, civic-minded individuals: Chris Cornell, Sue Tyler and Jackie Ortelli. Cornell, who is a retired

Canine ConnectionsStory and photos by Kelly McKillip

Gentle Paws

Some of the members of the Gentle Paws therapy group get together for a monthly meeting. From left, Director Chris Cornell and Bree, Carolyn Money and Hunter, Dixie Keltner and Izzy, Chris Spirz and Cocoa, Scott Cameron and Gina, Lois Bowling and Meg, and Linda Keck with Boo.

Cavalier King Charles spaniel Lucy gets double attention from residents at Discovery Memory Care during a Gentle Paws visit.

civil engineer from Phoenix, Ariz., and an American Ken-nel Club obedience judge, has remained the director of the volunteer organization for 12 years.

� e thriving group of 46 handlers and their dogs visit 23 settings from Port Townsend to Forks, making about 15-20 visits monthly. Over the years, the group has been a presence at events such as health fairs, dog shows, Kiwanis children’s fests and the Irrigation Festival parade. Every July, Gentle Paws o� ers a free pet sitting station during the Se-

quim Lavender Festival where visitors can leave their animals while they enjoy the fairs and farms.

Greywolf Elementary School is regularly on the visit list. In addition to the two-way out� ow of a� ection, the children are encour-aged to read to the dogs.

School psychologist and counselor Cheryl McAliley, � rst-grade teacher Cathy Green and fourth-grade teacher Vicki Lemke believe the dogs give the youngsters incentive and help them become comfort-able with their reading skills.

Renee Mulliken, who teaches second grade, says that some of the students initially

were fearful but warmed up by � rst coming close to the animals to see what it felt like to touch a so� nose or a furry ear. And visits are not without practical application. On a day her class was learning how to make linear measurements, the dogs were measured to determine their length and height and comparisons made as to which one was tallest, shortest and had the longest tail. Mulliken � nds children who are on the autism spectrum really connect with the dogs, o� en conversing with them. Class members have written news stories about the dogs and their handlers.

Another location where dogs and children connect is the Sequim Library. � e dogs are goodwill ambassadors, says branch manager Lauren Dahlgren. � e children don’t feel self-conscious while reading to the dogs. Dahlgren has wanted to have this type of program for years and is very happy that it has become a reality. Alyse Johnston brings her son, Sid, to the library reading sessions. � eir family is planning to adopt a pet soon and reading to the dogs gives Sid a chance to interact in a soothing way. Other children who don’t have pets at home will come to the library to get their doggy connection.

� e Gentle Paws volunteers also make frequent visits to retirement and assisted living facilities such as Discovery Memory Care on Washington Street. Smiles and lots of

Page 12: Living on the Peninsula, Summer 2012

12 LIVING ON THE PENINSULA | SUMMER | JUNE 2012

petting go on during the visit. Beth Stark, life enrichment director, says contact with animals makes all the di� erence to the residents.

Handler Karen Borman, who brings her Cardigan Welsh corgi Drummer for visits, says the events are lots of fun.

� e experience of reading to the dogs allows children to talk about their lives and pets at home. � e older folks will just glow when the pets show up for visits.

Celene Wendt brings Hannah, a husky/shepherd mix that she adopted from a shelter. Wendt is happy to share her pet, � nding it a very simple way to bring joy to others.

� erapy dogs come in all breeds, sizes and personalities. One of the smaller ani-mals in the group is Cricket, an ever-alert chihuahua/miniature pinscher belonging to Ardythe Wendt. Much more relaxed, very large and huggable is Polly Sar� eld’s dog, a Leonberger named Trinity.

Cornell o� en is present at the visits with his three therapy dogs, Labrador retriever Mercedes, � at-coated retriever Bree, and his lap-loving pomeranian Fox.

� ere is no age limit to becoming a therapy dog handler although those under 18 years old must be ac-companied by an adult and all participants must be able to control their animals. Handlers with Gentle Paws have ranged from ages 8-90. � e dogs must pass basic obedi-ence and temperament tests and be certi� ed by a � erapy Dog International (TDI) evaluator. Cornell happens to be one of two evaluators for Washington along with Judith Bell, who also lives in Sequim.

Practice sessions and tests are sponsored by Gentle

Paws at various times during the year. Dogs must be at least 1 year old, in good health, have annual exams, tests for parasites and receive appropriate vaccinations. � ere is no fee to join Gentle Paws or attend practice sessions, but there is a $10 cost for the test. Additionally, dogs and handlers must be registered by a nationally known therapy organiza-tion such as TDI, which charges an initial fee of $40 and an annual renewal of $30. � e cost includes $3 million liability insurance coverage.

Cornell encourages anyone interested in learning more about becoming a member of Gentle Paws to contact him at 360-681-4440 or by e-mail at [email protected]. More information about therapy dogs in general can be found on the web at www.tdi-dog.org.A resident at Discovery Memory Care in Sequim visits with

Chris Cornell’s lap-loving pomeranian Fox.

Shetland sheepdog Josie listens intently to � rst-graders read at Grey-wolf Elementary School.

Page 13: Living on the Peninsula, Summer 2012

LIVING ON THE PENINSULA | SUMMER | JUNE 2012 13

Welcome aboard!The schooner Adventuress is hitting

its pace just as it turns 100Story by Fred Obee

The schooner Adventuress sails by the Port Townsend waterfront. The schooner’s presence in town has contributed greatly to enhancing Port Townsend’s reputation as a welcome port for wooden boats. Photos courtesy of Sound Experience

It’s hard to imagine Port Townsend Bay without its signature schooner, the historical, 101-foot Adventuress. Long and sleek, it leans slightly as its white, ga� -rigged sails � ll with wind and the

bow carves through the blue waters of the bay. Against the backdrop of sparsely populated islands, Adventuress is a timeless vision. Is it 2012 or 1920? It’s an easy illusion to get lost in.

But as iconic as it is today, as few as seven years ago everything about Adventuress was in doubt. � e nonpro� t environmental education organization that owns it, Sound Experience, was in debt, the ship needed extensive and expensive restoration and some wondered whether Ad-venturess should even stay in Port Townsend. To get more � nancial support, maybe the ship should move to a larger, more prosperous corner of Puget Sound, some suggested.

Catherine Collins, the executive director of Sound Experience for the past seven years, remembers that debate well.

“It was a pivotal decision to keep Adventuress in Port Townsend,” Collins said.

But deciding to stay here also meant Sound Experi-ence would have to crank up the outreach machine and win more supporters around the sound. With a clear mission of environmental education, they got organized and started expanding their circle of friends.

“We reintroduced the membership to the work Ad-

venturess was doing,” Collins said. “We said, ‘Everyone is welcome. � is is your ship.’”

What came next was nothing short of a blossoming.

Rebuilding, restoringAdventuress ramped up the number of sails it con-

ducted for the public and increased the schedule around the sound, and as the ship’s pro� le grew, so did support from outside organizations and individuals. One gener-ous donor contributed $500,000 to an endowment for the ship’s maintenance, and in the � rst year, that fund earned $25,000 for restoration. Unfortunately, the reces-sion hit the following year and like virtually every invest-ment fund in the nation, the endowment lost money. It would take four years for the fund to return to its original principal amount.

Needing more cash for restoration of the ship, Sound Experience turned to its elected representatives for help and Congressman Norm Dicks secured $180,000 in federal funds toward the restoration. � e fact that Ad-venturess was named a National Historic Landmark in 1989 helped secure that grant and others. With money for the work in hand, the organization o� cially launched the Centennial Restoration Project with the goal of completely renovating Adventuress in time for its 100th

birthday in 2013. � e sta� and crew decided to commit themselves to a high quality restoration, so every � x at this point is one that will last 50 years.

As luck would have it, Sound Experience’s goal of expanding its membership came just at the dawn of the social network explosion and in 2010 Partners in Pres-ervation o� ered grants to the winners of online voting. It was an awkward moment for Port Townsend. In addition to Adventuress, the Customs House, which houses the Port Townsend Post O� ce, also was vying for the grant money. Ultimately, Adventuress won the competition and $125,000 in its “Vote for the Boat” campaign and another key part of the restoration puzzle was solved.

� e last major step in the renovation is restoration of the hull. Sound Experience will need to raise $300,000 to complete the job. When that work is � nished, Adven-turess will be as sound as ever, just as the ship hits the centennial mark in 2013.

Endowment for the futurePutting the restoration work mainly in the rear view

mirror will then allow Sound Experience to turn its ef-forts toward building the endowment, Collins said. � ey have $500,000 in the bank now and will need to build that fund to $5 million.

Page 14: Living on the Peninsula, Summer 2012

14 Living on the PeninsuLa | suMMeR | June 2012

If that goal can be reached, “We will be covered in perpetuity and Adven-turess will sail forever,” Collins says, her eyes brightening at the enormity of that challenge and the boldness of that vision. “That’s the goal. We’re setting up the people in the future to be successful.”

Looking back, Collins says reaching out to all of Puget Sound, and to a certain extent, the rest of the nation, to help support Adventuress was an obvious step, but so was keeping the boat in Port Townsend.

Unlike almost any port around the sound, Port Townsend has a growing workforce of skilled shipwrights who know wooden boats and Adventur-ess is helping support expansion of that workforce. The Northwest School of Wooden Boatbuilding uses Adventuress as a classroom, whether it is rebuilding interior bunks or sewing a new main sail. And now, when Ad-venturess calls for bids on work, local folks who learned those skills are the winners, not because hometown people are favored but because this is the place on Puget Sound most ready and able to take care of a nearly 100-year-old schooner. It is an important force in the local marine trades industry, in training and wages paid.

Adventuress also is building community and changing lives in other ways, Collins is quick to point out.

First, Adventuress is a ship on an environmental mission, welcoming people aboard to learn about the complex web of life in Puget Sound. They are dedicated to delivering powerful shipboard youth and adult programs that emphasize environmental stewardship, leadership, community and historical preservation.

But in following that path aboard a schooner in close quarters with others and with chores to accomplish, lessons of collaboration also are imparted. It is common for young people to come away from an experience on the boat feeling better about themselves and more secure in their own lives, Collins said. Adventuress is about the science, that’s for sure, but also is about build-ing a welcoming community that is physically and emotionally safe.

That last point was driven home for Collins recently on a public sail for families who are battling cancer. It was especially moving for Collins, herself a cancer survivor.

For that one afternoon, the focus was on blue water, seabirds, porpoises, plankton and kelp. For one afternoon, hospitals, tests, procedures, radiation, chemotherapy and a prognosis were left in a historical schooner’s wake.

“It’s super personal,” Collins says of the many-faceted mission Adventur-ess is on. “It doesn’t get any more personal than that.”

To learn more about Sound Experience and the programs offered aboard the historical schooner Adventuress, visit soundexperience.org or call 360-379-0438.

above: adventuress plows through the water in a brisk breeze. the ship is used as a platform for environmental education focusing on Puget sound’s marine environment. Photo by elizabeth Becker

above, right: Program participants learn to fold sails after a day on the water. along with learning science and making new friends, the young people learn that many hands make light work.

above: the Port of Port townsend is perfectly suited to take care of adventuress. here, the ship is transported on the port’s big travel lift. Restoration of the ship has been a long process, but is now on the final lap. Photo by elizabeth Becker

Below: Young people haul away to raise the sails on the historical schooner. in addition to environmental education, program participants learn the value of working together for a common goal. Photo by elizabeth Becker

Page 15: Living on the Peninsula, Summer 2012

Living on the PeninsuLa | suMMeR | June 2012 15

• parasomnia (abnormal behavior during sleep)

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Page 16: Living on the Peninsula, Summer 2012

16 LIVING ON THE PENINSULA | SUMMER | JUNE 2012

Sheri and Tim Whetstine, of Sequim, never have to worry about losing their car keys. � ey have noses that work at least 1,000 times better than the average person’s.

� e couple — retired � re� ghters and a paramedic from California — are active members of the Northwest Bloodhounds Search & Rescue group based out of Kit-sap County. At 19 months and 5 years old, their “kids” Ruckus and Tule are in training. � e dogs, purebred bloodhounds, are trained to trail scents.

Working dogs� ough cute and cuddly in appearance, every sig-

nature physical trait on a bloodhound serves a speci� c function, Sheri Whetstine emphasized. At 140 or more pounds, bloodhounds are strong and have high endur-ance, and are able to track for more than 130 miles.

Long, drooping ears sweep the ground stirring smells upward. Wrinkled skin around the face helps trap scent particles. Even drool has an important role, keeping scent moist.

When a bloodhound sni� s a scent article — which can be anything from a piece of clothing to a cloth that’s been wiped across a seat where a person once sat — chemical vapors undetectable by the human nose bombard the dog’s scent receptors and create an “odor image.” Using the odor image as reference, the dog can locate the sub-ject’s trail and distinguish it from the multitude of other odors surrounding the trail.

“Bloodhounds are good at what they do,” Sheri said. “� ey have one of the best noses for scent on the face of the planet and will keep going until they either � nd what they are looking for or until you pull them o� of it.”

Giving backNorthwest Bloodhounds Search & Rescue members

focus on � nding missing people. Searches o� en occur in the middle of the night during poor weather conditions to assist law enforcement agencies in � nding lost or over-due hikers, � shermen, children and elderly individuals who’ve wandered away from nursing homes. Members do not search for lost animals or criminals.

While the work is rewarding, the end result isn’t always a happy ending, Sheri said, which is why a portion of training is focused on working with cadavers.

“Bloodhounds are very sensitive and if they � nd a deceased body, they take it personally,” she said.

When Sheri and Tim � rst joined the Northwest Blood-hounds Search & Rescue, it was for personal reasons. She was searching for purpose a� er retirement. He wanted something to throw his energy into.

“When I stopped being a ‘hero’ I felt lost,” Sheri admit-ted. “I wanted to keep giving back.”

� e experience has evolved into more than either of them ever imagined possible.

“Having a canine partner is so rewarding,” she said. “I am synced mentally with the dog in a way that cannot be described.”

A few years ago, the Whetstines were called to help locate a missing 5-year-old boy who wandered away from his campsite. It was windy — blowing more than 40 miles per hour — and the terrain was dense and mountain-

Sequim couple trains bloodhounds for search and rescueStory and photos by Ashley Miller

Sequim couple trains bloodhounds for search and rescueSequim couple trains bloodhounds for search and rescueSequim couple trains bloodhounds for search and rescueSequim couple trains bloodhounds for search and rescueSequim couple trains bloodhounds for search and rescueSequim couple trains bloodhounds for search and rescue

Wife and husband pair Sheri and Tim Whetstine spends a Saturday afternoon training their dogs Ruckus and Tule for search and rescue together.

Page 17: Living on the Peninsula, Summer 2012

LIVING ON THE PENINSULA | SUMMER | JUNE 2012 17

Val & Larry

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Meet Charla Wright Life Enrichment Director

Olympic Rehabilitation of Sequim1000 S. 5th Ave. • Sequim • 360-582-3900 • Fax 360-582-3903

Charla Wright, Life Enrichment Director, brings to Avamere a Master’s in Education and two decades of experience designing programs addressing goals in the areas of cognition, physical, social and emotional domains. Th e Activities Program refl ects Charla’s years of experience in

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Search and rescueNorthwest Bloodhounds Search & Rescue handlers are registered with the Washington State Department of Emergency Management and are ready to search for lost or missing persons as unpaid volunteers. Members come from all walks of life and are located throughout the state. For more information, call 360-620-4068 or go online to www.nwbloodhounds.org.

ous. Chile — Sheri’s former bloodhound who’s since died of natural causes — trailed the scent for an hour wandering to and fro, much like a young child would. Men and women on all-terrain vehicles set out in the direction that Chile led them and eventually found the child a quarter of a mile up the mountain. He was safe and uninjured, a fact that might not have been true if he’d endured the elements overnight.

“It’s not about being a hero or receiving recogni-tion,” Sheri said, her husband nodding in agreement at the statement. “I don’t even care if it’s my dog that � nds a missing person. Just being part of the group that saves a person’s life is incredible.”

‘Mission response ready’Each and every mission is conducted in an

orderly fashion. Handlers are trained in CPR and registered with the Washington State Department of Emergency Management. � ey set out in hiking boots with orange shirts, cargo vests containing identi� cation, whistles, a radio with GPS, maps, water and other critical supplies.

� e dogs are harnessed in leather with strong nylon

leashes and chain collars. Each canine must complete a minimum of 60 scent trails and then pass three � eld tests to be certi� ed. Together, the teams search for lost or missing people. � ey don’t get paid or rewarded. It’s all by volunteering.

� e unit goal is to have handlers and their dogs “mission response ready” in 12-18 months. � is means obtaining Washington Administrative Code and unit requirements, attending classes and � eld training sessions, and completing regularly scheduled unit trainings.

Twice monthly K-9 training sessions are o� ered, and highly recommended, to help socialize and train bloodhounds.

As the Whetstines approach “mission response ready” status with Ruckus and Tule, they express an interest in getting involved with the Clallam County Search & Rescue branch.

“A lot of people and organizations don’t know what we do or how it’s done,” Tim said. “If they did, I guar-antee they would call us more o� en.”

Sheri Whetstine praises Ruckus, a 19-month-old bloodhound in training, for successfully � nding her glove in a grassy � eld.

Page 18: Living on the Peninsula, Summer 2012

18 LIVING ON THE PENINSULA | SUMMER | JUNE 2012

&HEART Soul

Seventeen years ago I stopped at Sequim Bay State Park to have lunch. I watched three kittens vying for table scraps under a nearby picnic table. I asked the people camped up the hill if those were their cats.

No, they said, they were just kittens who had been aban-doned and were trying to survive on le� overs.

Over the period of a week, I returned several times to the park to catch the kittens and bring them home with me. � ey lived in a burrow in the ground at the top of the blu� . � e � rst two weren’t hard to catch — tuna was a great incentive — but the third one eluded me, even though she was the tiniest, until I borrowed a large humane trap and put smelly salmon inside.

� ose feral kittens were wild things. Untouchable. One time I went into the garage to feed them and they were gone. Except they weren’t. � ey had burrowed under the � oor of one of the cabinets and curled up together in that space. Finally, Kokomo let me pet her, then Eleanor, but � underfoot was aloof. Every time I looked under the bed for him, he’d hiss and leap out at me. � en one day I heard a deep rumble while I petted Eleanor and discovered it came from him, from his hiding place under the bed. Not long a� er that day, he crawled up into my lap, wanting love.

Kokomo had brief psychotic episodes in which she warred with the toilet brush. Eleanor tossed her head from side to side as she played with her scratching post. And � underfoot — well, the name � t. He was a wild man, but also my sensitive boy cat.

T’foot died two weeks ago, the last of that generation of beloved cats. He was a tuxedo cat, black with a white shirtfront. He seemed to be OK, although old and tired, and then he got sick and then he was dead. Dana and I tried every medication the vets suggested and gave him � uids, but none of it did any good. He had just reached the great struggle of his dying.

Working at home as I do, cats are my everyday compan-ions. � ey go to the slider to have it opened, and le� open, even during the winter. � ey follow me into the bathroom, then decide they want to leave again once the door is closed. � e warm physicality of them comforts me.

But they don’t live long enough and when each one dies, I grieve. � ey leave a hole in the house, an absence of being. I see them out of the corner of my eye. I expect them to come when I put out the food bowls. I miss them.

Yet when there are always wars and murders and � res and fathers and children dying and starving people, I feel sheepish about talking to anyone about my sadness at � underfoot’s passing.

� ere is usually someone with a greater reason for tears than us. And if they are being stoic, not visibly su� ering, how can we talk about our smaller sorrows or joys?

One of my friends always seems to have a more obscure and dangerous disease than me, or know someone who

does. If I had shingles on my arm, she would talk about someone who had shingles covering their whole body in-side and out, but laid in their hospital bed singing. If I had a neurological disorder, she would have a tumor growing slowly into her brain.

� is e� ectively shuts me up. Maybe that’s the purpose.

Equally e� ective in silenc-ing me is the dagger of “still” which many people wield.

“Are you still missing your father?”

“Are you still in bed with that � u?”

“Are you st i l l unem-ployed?”

“Are you still …?What a list of rules we have about what we are supposed

to feel and think and how long we are supposed to feel and think it!

Yet we were created with the capacity for all of life’s emo-tions and the feeling of them and their expression is our wholeness. It undergirds our art and literature and music. Our sighs, our tears, our laughter, are our prayers. A friend said that she had an ongoing prayerful conversation with the universe and I think that this is what it consists of.

� ose of us lucky enough to have spouses who share life’s nitty-grittiness with us have a leg up. But one person is not enough. Spouses have to go o� to work or to Arizona to visit sick relatives or they have their own fears and griefs.

We can feel disappointed and aggrieved or we can make more friends.

As we get older our losses accumulate. We may watch a parent die or see one of them descend into a chronic and debilitating illness. I’ve watched a friend move across the country to be with a long-lost love, another disappear into a nunnery and, later, an older friend cross that bridge between life and death. I hold them in my heart. I smile about their quirkiness. I remember times of deep sharing.

But, as with � underfoot, I no longer can touch them or hug them. I may hope to reconnect with them in the realm of pure spirit, but this human, embodied existence retains only their imprint on my heart.

We may be heavy-hearted, but ultimately we create new families of relatives and friends as we go along. I like warm, huggy friends. Playful companions

who don’t judge me or ana-lyze me. Friends with open-hearted, infectious laughs like my grandmother’s.

Individuals capable of radical hospitality, as our ministerial intern put it.

So, who did I talk to about � underfoot?I talked to my brother who, as a child, chattered without

ceasing. As an adult, he gradually became a good listener, particularly a� er I stopped thinking of him simply as my little brother.

I cried, mostly, and rambled incoherently to a cat-loving friend.

I sat in the sun listening to the birds sing, letting the warmth start to heal my heart. I walked the cobbled beach, teetering from rock to rock, skating on seaweed. I talked to myself, to the water, to the universe. I shook my � st at the mountains and asked what was the point of all the dying.

Nobody can � x it. No one can answer those questions.But people can listen. � ey can hug you and touch your

heart. Choose carefully when you share your tender spots, but share them.

Karen Frank has an M.T.S. from Seattle University in Trans-forming Spirituality. She is a writer, spiritual director and pho-

tographer in Port Townsend. You are welcome to contact her at [email protected]

with questions or comments.

Who can you talk to about a dead cat?

By Karen Frank

who don’t judge me or ana-lyze me. Friends with open-

talk to about a dead cat?talk to about a dead cat?

18 LIVING ON THE PENINSULA | SUMMER | JUNE 2012

Page 19: Living on the Peninsula, Summer 2012

LIVING ON THE PENINSULA | SUMMER | JUNE 2012 19

Hearing loss aff ects all aspects of your life, but only as long as you allow it. • Weʼll help you take the fi rst step in staying closely connected to your family and friends by providing a comfortable, personalized experience.

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Page 20: Living on the Peninsula, Summer 2012

20 LIVING ON THE PENINSULA | SUMMER | JUNE 201220 LIVING ON THE PENINSULA | SUMMER | JUNE 2012

GOOD Gardening

Jerri Sanford, owner of Over the Fence in Sequim, de� ed conventional wisdom of downsizing during a weakened national economy and instead stepped boldly forward with a di� erent idea — branching out and extending her busi-ness. Yes, with fear; yes, with shaky knees. In the past year she hired Dawna Emerson-Hinton, who managed Vision Nursery & Landscaping in Sequim for six years. She spent much of her time at Vision in garden design and creating baskets/containers.

Together, Jerri and Dawna have etched out the rear sec-tion of the store to create a boutique nursery where patrons can choose an exquisite pot and then � ll it with a variety of one-of-a-kind plants. Jerri’s husband, Fran, has built a pot-ting area where Dawna can work her magic in creating a planting that highlights color, foliage and texture.

Dawna laughs as she considers the long road she’s taken to this new adventure. She credits her grandmother for her love of plants. Her grandmother, Ramona Hand, was a self-taught landscaper and was the � rst female contractor in Washington. She was a Renaissance woman, with a variety of interests, including gardening, interior design on homes her contractor husband built, her family and her own home contracting. Dawna’s grandmother and grandfather built a hexagonal home in the upper hills of Kent, now named Car-rollwood, which was featured in Sunset magazine. Her eyes so� en and become misty when she remembers the many lessons her grandmother taught her.

Dawna opted for a degree in forestry because she loved the outdoors, but has found herself on a slightly di� erent path toward artistry — a jewelry maker, landscaper, � oral designer, cake decorator. All of these forays, she suggests, have given her opportunities to learn more about classi-cal design elements. In her present work, she brings an enthusiasm, a con� dence in her artist’s eye and a commit-

ment to price her work fairly. Along with her work at Over the Fence this past year, she also has been a consultant for Skagit Gardens, giving classes and doing design work for the Tulalip Casino.

Before designing a planted pot, she asks clients what col-ors they don’t like, any plants they don’t love, the conditions of where the pot will be sited and whether it will be solo or grouped. � en she’s o� to work, sometimes with a creation in her head and allowing the creation its own journey to completion.

Step by step, she moves through both the art and science of creating a beautifully designed planter.

� e location of the planter automatically limits plants she chooses. Sunny spot or shady? Windy? Our valley has many microclimates.

What color is the pot? � e size? If there is a great deal of texture in the pot, she so� ens the design with more of a monochromatic design. If it’s fairly neutral, she chooses both complementary and contrasting colors.

She chooses a plant that o� ers drama like ornamental grasses or canna; some that will be � llers such as coleus, huerchera or dusty miller; and then some that are spillers such as bacopa or creeping jenny. � e dramatic plant, the thriller, should be in the back of the planting to add depth rather than in the middle where most people plant them.

� en she places a piece of sphagnum moss in the bottom drain hole. She cautions against using rocks (or packing peanuts) because they can stop water � ow and then plants end up root-bound.

She takes the pot to the permanent site rather than trying to hoist it a� erward when it will be heavy. She � lls it with Organic Black Gold mixed with a bit of Soil Moist, a polymer that holds water and will o� er a bit of needed nourishment in August, when it’s hotter and people are tired of daily water-

ings. She mixes in a 14-14-14 Osmocote into the soil.Every other week, she uses a water soluble Peters fertil-

izer.An aha-moment for me was to learn that she does not

plant the � llers and spillers upright; rather, she angles them so that the foliage “face” is looking at people. She illustrated by showing that an upright plant shows mostly stems. She wants to see foliage.

Dawna loves her clients and feels especially supported by women. Over the years, they have recognized that her work is art and delight in the details of her e� orts.

At home, she knows her biggest supporters are her hus-band, Doug, to whom she’s been married for 27 years, and her sons Ethan and Dakota, both in their 20s. Check out the planters she’s recently planted at Over the Fence that face the corner parking spot. In the one still le� to plant, she hopes to incorporate both vegetables and � owers to show how easily they can cohabitate and how decorative and textural vegetable plants can be.

Dawna’s enthusiasm shines in her smile, in her passion for the richness of soil and the beauty of plants. As an artist, she’s serious about her work and constantly hones her cra� . Stop by and meet her. You’ll probably leave with a smile on your face. It seems her enthusiasm is contagious.

A boutique nursery within Over the Fence store

Dawna Emerson-HintonAt Over the Fence,

112 E. Washington St., Sequim360-681-6851

Thursday and Friday, alternating Saturdays10 a.m.-5:30 p.m.

Prairie Moon Design ConsultantMonday-Wednesday, by appointment

360-460-1523

Story by Beverly Hoffman. Photos by David Godfrey

Page 21: Living on the Peninsula, Summer 2012

LIVING ON THE PENINSULA | SUMMER | JUNE 2012 21

The ocean is our playground... come play with us!Fun adventure cruises in the Pacific Northwest on the waters of the Salish Sea, including the Strait of Juan de Fuca, Haro Strait,

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1-360-452-6210 ~ www.ExpeditionsNW.comCall or visit our website for other scheduled events and harbor cruises

Friday Harbor Day CruiseThree great dates to choose from!!Saturdays-- June 30, August 25 or September 23, 2012, 8 a.m. to 7 p.m.

Enjoy a relaxing and scenic cruise to beautiful Friday Harbor on San Juan Island. You’ll have approximately 5 hours to explore Friday Harbor shops, eateries, museums and galleries, or do some hiking, biking or kayaking. The waters around the island are rich with marine wildlife, and we frequently get to visit with J, K or L Pod on our way to the island! Call today to reserve!! Only $98.00 per person.

Pacific Northwest Marine Wildlife CruiseSaturdays-- June 23, July 14 or August 4, 2012, 9 a.m. to 3 p.m.

The Strait of Juan de Fuca and the waters leading to the San Juan Islands provide some of the best opportunities for marine wildlife viewing in the world. These waters offer a huge variety of wildlife including four whale species often seen in the Pacific Northwest. A 6-hour wildlife search for ONLY $85.00!! Don’t let this opportunity pass you by!!!

Join us for the Exhilaration of Exploration:DayLight ~ NightLife Casino Cruise ~ Aug 12 - 14 Explore by day the scenery and wildlife that makes this one of the most beautiful places on the planet...And discover the rich nightlife of two beautiful casinos in classic Northwest style. Hood Canal ~ Aug 19 - 21 Combines a cruise down the Hood Canal (nothing like you’ve ever seen from the highway) with an on-board BBQ with the Captain and crew as well as stays at two world-class golf resorts: Port Ludlow and Alderbrook. As we sail between the two, our on board geologist will discuss the geological importance of the Hood Canal.

Neah Bay Expedition ~ Sept 10 & 11 A classic Northwest adventure experience...One of a kind historical artifacts at the Makah Nation museum, salmon-on-a-stick BBQ dinner, overnight accommodations, Tatoosh Island Marine Wildlife Sanctuary sail-by and more.

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Page 22: Living on the Peninsula, Summer 2012

22 LIVING ON THE PENINSULA | SUMMER | JUNE 2012

Even as her body weight has crept up with good groceries since February, a once neglected and starved black

bay mare still turns away from those who tend to her — unless there’s hay in hand. But Val-erie Jackson and Diane Royall brush aside her brush-o� , knowing trust once fractured mends slowly. � ey also know months of patience and green grass will put the mare right — and even-tually in a carefully selected home. � e rural Sequim friends and neighbors began rescuing horses in Clallam County six years ago with meager means but lots of heart.

� e emaciated mare is one of seven, from a group of 16 horses seized for severe malnutrition and neglect in Clallam County, being brought back to health by Royall, Jackson and other volunteers under the Olympic Peninsula Equine Net-work, a division of the new nonpro� t Eyes � at Smile. � e rest have gone to other foster and adoptive homes.

A month a� er the seizure, Royall wrote on Facebook, “I am sure many people out there are unaware of how painful it is go without nutrition (starve) for extended periods of time. We as humans may know how it feels to miss an occasional meal, which is entirely up to us. Our pets and livestock get to wait around in a pen or on a chain anticipating when that next meal

(the highlight of their day) will come. When the meal does not come, the poor animals get very stressed out and begin to lose condition. It is the human factor here that is responsible to all of the critters we choose to bring into our lives. To make sure they have what they need.…”

Joining forces for horsesIn November 2011, the women met Brian Pettyjohn of Port

Angeles through other horse groups. As Royall recalls it, a� er getting to know their situation, Pettyjohn proclaimed, “Girls, you need help!” However, with a good-natured grin, Pettyjohn protests he was much more diplomatic when he o� ered his leadership skills to Jackson and Royall. With roots as a Texas horseman and at the urging of his wife, Joanne, in March the 74-year-old Pettyjohn set up Eyes � at Smile, a nonpro� t 501(c)(3) corporation with the Olympic Peninsula Equine Network as one of its divisions. Pettyjohn is president, Jackson

and Royall are vice presidents and Gayle Baker is treasurer. � e organization’s nonpro� t status with the IRS allows it to accept donations to continue its rescue/rehabilitation work and to establish an equine therapy facility on � ve acres the women own and another six the organiza-tion is buying.

Jackson and Royall have nothing but praise for their new partner: “Brian has brought new

energy and inspiration to our hopes and dreams of really get-ting this facility up and running like a real shelter. He has given us direction and support. He really cares about people and the animals and has some great ideas about where we should be for our community and how we can be there to help others. His past (volunteer) experience should speak for itself with other agencies in Clallam County. Brian really puts his heart and soul into his pet projects and we are very blessed to be one of those projects.”

As a youth who rescued and rehabilitated his own horse, not only did Pettyjohn want to see Jackson and Royall’s suc-cess stories grow, he’s been single-minded in legitimizing their work in the public’s eye. � ey know they’ve improved the lives of horses and their caregivers — now it’s time for the everyone else to know, too.

Equine group rides to the rescue:Rehabilitating horses, educating owners

Story and photos by Patricia Morrison Coate

“The essential joy of being with horses is that it brings us in contact with the rare elements of grace, beauty, spirit and � re.”

– Sharon Ralls Lemon

Equine group rides to the rescue:

Andy’s inquisitive sniff puts a smile on longtime horse lover Brian Pettyjohn,

who holds treats in his other hand.

Page 23: Living on the Peninsula, Summer 2012

LIVING ON THE PENINSULA | SUMMER | JUNE 2012 23

“We’re recruiting 15-20 members for an advisory board and the traits we’re looking for are horse expertise with busi-ness, and mental health and � nancial expertise,” Pettyjohn said. “We will depend on them for counsel. A lot of people in the community are horse people and we want to be sure we get every piece of information we can (on horses and equine therapy). Just because we love horses doesn’t necessarily mean we’re as knowledgeable as we should be.”

RescueIn the past half-dozen years Jackson and Royall have

criss-crossed Washington helping horses and people in need. According to Royall, “ We’ve helped market and place horses, arranged for vets and clinics and shipping, picked up large horses, plucked auction horses out of peril (of slaughter), relocated horses for owners in dire straits not able to care for themselves, let alone horses. Sometimes when the family gets back on their feet we return the horses with bows in their manes and supplies for the horses.”

� e horsewomen explained that there’s a sliding scale of “rescue” from mild to intense intervention and they work with individuals, other shelters and law enforcement 24/7. Some-times all that’s required is educating people about or assisting them with the proper care of their horses or counseling owners on the best course when they no longer can keep them.

“We’ve found there are a lot of old people here and what happens is when the caregiver of a horse dies, the family doesn’t know how to or can’t care for the horse,” Pettyjohn said. “We’ll o� er (human) training or have the horse signed over to us, nurse it back to health if need be and put it up for adoption. With the old horses we get, we’re helping the own-ers and we’ll be training those horses for social and physical therapy for next year.”

In the best of cases, owners plan ahead, as in the case of Andy, a 16-year-old Tennessee Walker gelding whose own-ers wanted to travel, so they signed him over to Royall four years ago. “I taught him some manners,” Royall chuckled, as he nuzzled her for treats. “He’s not perfect but I think he’s wonderful. You’d be amazed at the number of purebreds we’ve rescued,” she said.”

It’s a sad fact — some people call them-selves “horse rescuers” when in reality they’re hoarders, barnyard breeders or collectors of “free” horses. “Unfortunately, ‘free status’ leads to neglect,” Jackson said, “especially for horses advertised as giveaways to any and all online.”

“� ese horses let us know how much they appreciate us,” Royall said. “From the February seizure, there were two the vet said had a 50-percent chance of survival, but within a couple of days, the gelding started whinnying because he was so excited, like he was saying, ‘You’re gonna feed us? Again? Today?!’ Animals, when they feel neglected wonder, ‘What did I do? I was the best horse I could be.’ � ey get their hearts broken.”

Added Jackson, “It gets to the point we don’t want to have the horses re-homed again so we try to interview people as thoroughly as we can by checking references, seeing their property and giving them a basic education — but you gotta let them go.”

Therapy“I’ll talk your arm o� because I love what I’m doing,” Pet-

tyjohn said about the group’s plans to launch equine therapy programs next year, following standards of � e Equine As-sisted Growth and Learning Association, a mental health therapy program, and other accredited groups.

At the nonpro� t’s planned 11-acre facility southwest of Sequim, the immediate goal is to raise enough funds to build a covered corral and o� ces for a veterinarian, mental health and equine specialists and hire some sta� .

Pettyjohn said a horse is one of the most re� ective animals of a human’s personality. “If you’re afraid, the horse knows, if you’re aggressive or passive, horses know, too, but if you’re friendly, they respond very well.”

He’s sensed and seen � rst-hand the silent language of ac-ceptance between horse and human.

“For example, take a quadriplegic child balancing to the extent he or she can, with regular therapy all of a sudden that child is holding the saddle horn. Or when I see a normally non-communicative or autistic child talk to his horse — oh, boy! � at’s the � rst step to opening that little brain up,” Pet-tyjohn grinned. “I’ve seen it happen! It’s amazing when that horse penetrates where humans can’t. You can see things

Eyes That Smile/ Olympic Peninsula Equine NetworkPO Box 252, Sequim, WA 98382 855-50-HORSE or 855-504-6773 Website: www.eyesthatsmile.org

“All I pay my psychiatrist is the cost of feed and hay — and he’ll listen to me

any day.” – Author Unknown

Above: After being rescued in February, Mandy, a black bay, has gained between 100-125 pounds in the care of the Olympic Peninsula Equine Network. At right: Snowball, a large pony mare, is recovering from scratches, a bacterial skin infection caused by standing in mud, and a severe sign of neglect.

Rescuers Diane Royall, left, and Valerie Jackson, right, show off Karma, a 10-month-old pinto � lly, and one of their

recent success stories. They treated her for severe malnutrition, poor-quality hooves and worms.

Page 24: Living on the Peninsula, Summer 2012

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happening in that child’s mind. It’s something just short of a miracle.”

Other physical and emotional challenges are harder to see, such as the anxiety with post-traumatic stress disorder or the diffidence in attachment or op-positional disorders seen in chil-dren. In those cases for healing wounds, Pettyjohn said, “We give the client a task to do with the horse that it normally wouldn’t do voluntarily and have the client, without force or intimidation, get the horse to do it. When they’re successful, it establishes a bond of trust.”

The road ahead“We want to be recognized for equine communication

and for potential owners — a little bit of knowledge goes a long ways in protecting these horses,” Jackson said. “Brian is

the reason we are even dreaming of setting up a horse rescue facility for Clallam County! He and his wife, Joanne, each have their own individual histories involving horses and they both share our love of them. They want to help us help the horses and through them bring equine-assisted therapy programs to our community.”

“When people need help, we’re glad to educate them but we need help, too,” Royall added. “There’s no worse sinking feeling than seeing the hay go down and wonder when funds are going

to come in, but we’ve never let anybody go hungry.”To make a tax-deductible donation to Eyes That Smile/

Olympic Peninsula Equine Rescue, contact PO Box 252, Sequim, WA 98382, or call 855-504-6773 for donation in-formation or rescue calls.

The organization will have an open house from 1-5 p.m. Saturday, June 20 at 554 Roupe Road, Sequim. Some of the rescued horses will be on-site and there will be training demonstrations.

“There is something about the outside of a horse that is good for the inside of a man.” – Winston Churchill

at right: Karma and snowball feast on hay, carefully watch-ful of a stranger taking their photo.

at far right: Diane Royall, with treats in hand, gives Johnny, a 9-year-old paint, an affection-ate rub, while andy watches. Johnny’s owners became un-employed and signed over the well-treated horse to Royall. he’s been adopted and will move to a new home soon.

Page 25: Living on the Peninsula, Summer 2012

LIVING ON THE PENINSULA | SUMMER | JUNE 2012 25LIVING ON THE PENINSULA | SUMMER | JUNE 2012 25

Sitting calmly on their haunches and with big brown eyes, Paka, Delilah and Desiree are a trio of youngsters on their best behavior. At

least they are trying. Whether they know what lies ahead is uncertain, but they seem to understand they are in school and are doing their best to learn.

“� e basic goal for our puppies is self-control,” says Deb Cox, the driving force behind Puppy Pilots, a Sequim guide dog raising club. “� e dog learns we are the most important thing in the world — and they learn to be calm.”

Becoming a guide dog for a visually impaired person is the highest rung on the service animal ladder. � e dogs must be perfect, able to avoid distractions of every kind and be ever mindful of their owners.

� e dogs trained on the Olympic Peninsula come from Guide Dogs for the Blind. � e organization was established in 1942 and is located in San Rafael, Calif., 20 miles north of San Francisco. In October 1995, an additional campus 25 miles east of Portland, Ore. was established in Boring, Ore.

� e vast majority of dogs are bred from specially selected stock and most are Labrador retrievers. Labs have proven over time to have the best disposition and they also exhibit a willingness to work and they thrive on praise.

Cox is now training her � � h dog since the founding of Puppy Pilots seven years ago. Cox said the group got started a� er she put out the word and 25 people showed up for a meeting. Today they have two meetings a month.

People who want to be a puppy raiser � rst meet with Cox and she � lls them in on the responsibilities. She does a home visit to make sure there’s a good place for the puppy and then goes over the training regimen. Potential puppy raisers o� en start out as sitters, relieving others who go on vacation or otherwise aren’t available for short periods.

“We’re always looking for new sitters and raisers,” Cox said. � e dogs can’t just be kenneled if their handler goes out of town. “� ey can’t go two weeks without training or they backslide,” Cox said.

Guide Dogs for the Blind pays for any veterinarian bills, but puppy raisers have to pay for food and other supplies. To cover those costs, Puppy Pilots has regular fundraisers.

� e main purpose of the Puppy Pilots program is to acclimate the dogs to all kinds of environ-ments. Buses, o� ces, busy sidewalks, parks and

public buildings. Even restaurants and co� ee shops are fair game and most proprietors allow the dogs in when they see they are on a mission. � e dogs stay with the raisers from puppyhood until they are 15 months old. At that point, they go to Oregon where a determination is made about whether they are ready for harness training.

“We call it going to college,” Cox said. Not every dog makes it through the process to becoming a guide dog. About half will wash out or be trained for a purpose other than guiding the visually impaired.

Kelli Walker and Kim Rosa-les are two puppy raisers in the Puppy Pilots club. � ey say they were well prepared to take on training a Guide Dog.

“For me it was about what I ex-pected,” Rosales said, and she credits the training she received for that. � e No. 1 question the puppy raisers get is: “How can you give up such a beautiful dog?”

Cox, Walker and Rosales all say it’s not that hard because you accept the terms when you begin. “You go into it with a di� erent mindset,” Walker said.

She works at Rodda Paint Company in Sequim and brings her puppy to work with her. “She’s well socialized with the customers.”

And, they say, once the dog does go away for additional training, they are kept in the loop on how training is going and where the dog ends up.

Puppy Pilots collaborates closely with the Sequim Valley Lions Club, which sponsors White Cane Days, a bene� t for the visually impaired. � e

Lions are sponsoring one of the puppies being trained in Sequim now.

Puppy Pilots always is looking for volunteers. � ey have one puppy raiser living in Port

Townsend and they always are open to � nding new people in communities

across the peninsula.Ultimately, the puppy raisers

say, the best part of the job is knowing a dog they trained has become a life-changing

companion for a visually impaired person.

“� at’s the best part.” Cox said.

To learn more about P uppy P i lot s , con-tact Deb Cox at [email protected].

Leading the way

Puppy Pilots club members help raise and train guide dogs for the visually impaired

Story and photos by Fred Obee

Sitting calmly on their haunches and with big brown eyes, Paka, Delilah and Desiree are a trio of youngsters on their best behavior. At

� e main purpose of the Puppy Pilots program is to acclimate the dogs to all kinds of environ-ments. Buses, o� ces, busy sidewalks, parks and

Puppy Pilots club members help raise and train guide dogs for the visually impaired

Paka, a yellow Labrador retriever, is one of the puppies undergoing guide dog training on the peninsula. Her name means cat in Swahili.

� e main purpose of the Puppy Pilots program is to acclimate the dogs to all kinds of environ-ments. Buses, o� ces, busy sidewalks, parks and

public buildings. Even restaurants and co� ee shops are fair game and most proprietors allow the dogs in when they see they are on a mission. � e dogs stay with the raisers from puppyhood until they are 15 months old. At that point, they go to Oregon where a determination is made about whether they are ready for

“We call it going to college,” Cox said. Not every dog makes it through the process to becoming a guide

“For me it was about what I ex-pected,” Rosales said, and she credits the training she received for that. � e No. 1 question the puppy raisers get is: “How can you give up such a beautiful dog?”

Cox, Walker and Rosales all say it’s not that hard because you accept the terms when you begin. “You go into it with a di� erent mindset,”

She works at Rodda Paint Company in She works at Rodda Paint Company in Sequim and brings her puppy to work with her. “She’s well socialized with the customers.”

And, they say, once the dog does go away for additional training, they are kept in the loop on how training is going and where the dog ends up.

Puppy Pilots collaborates closely with the Sequim Valley Lions Club, which sponsors White Cane Days, a bene� t for the visually impaired. � e

Lions are sponsoring one of the puppies being trained in Sequim now.

Puppy Pilots always is looking for volunteers. � ey have one puppy raiser living in Port

Townsend and they always are open to � nding new people in communities

across the peninsula.Ultimately, the puppy raisers

say, the best part of the job is knowing a dog they trained has become a life-changing

companion for a visually impaired person.

“� at’s the best part.” Cox said.

To learn more about P uppy P i lot s , con-tact Deb Cox at [email protected].

Desiree is the oldest of the puppies now being

trained in Sequim by Deb Cox of Puppy

Pilots.

Page 26: Living on the Peninsula, Summer 2012

26 LIVING ON THE PENINSULA | SUMMER | JUNE 2012

P eople say we who live on the North Olympic Peninsula are lucky. Given the purported annual rainfall of only 15 inches, mild weather that has no hint of tornadoes,

hurricanes, severe snowstorms or heat waves into the 100-de-gree mark, and spectacular views of mountains, water, � ora and fauna, well, they are right, we are lucky.

Add the glorious lavender that grows almost wild in the Sequim area and you’ve got paradise.

Granted, there are lavender farms throughout the country, as well as the world — indeed, Provence, France, has long been celebrated for its lavender � elds — but Sequim is actually trademarked as the Lavender Capital of North America® and the climate for growing lavender mimics that of Provence.

“Sequim is special,” says Scott Nagel, executive director of the Sequim Lavender Farm Faire. “We have the perfect microcli-mate for growing lavender.” � is, he says, was discovered nearly 20 years ago when local farmers were looking for a new crop to help sustain Sequim’s rural life.

� ere’s just something about lavender that attracts attention. Whether it’s the heady scent that permeates the air during the early summer months, the � elds of blooming purple plants at family farms tucked into the folds of the North Olympic Pen-insula, or the plant itself, a burst of blue-violet blossoms at the end of spiked foliage whose essential oil is purported to have healing power, lavender beckons.

� e proof is in the fact that, come mid-July, upwards of 30,000 people will � nd their way to the lavender � elds for the 16th annual weekend celebration.

What’s the draw? Well, there’s all the aforementioned perks that make the North Olympic Peninsula a destination of choice. But the weekend event, which features an up-close look at ev-erything lavender, including farm tours, a street fair, lavender in the park, concerts, cooking-with-lavender demonstrations and arts and cra� s booths, is the biggest reason for the population boom in July.

“� ere are lavender festivals everywhere, but nothing like what we do in Sequim,” Nagel maintains. “We put on the best lavender event in the country.”

Mickie Vail, director of operations for the Sequim Lavender Farm Faire, agrees. But, she takes it one step further, calling Sequim and its surroundings a destination resort.

“People come for the three-day celebration and then stay a week or so visiting the other areas of interest here,” she says.

� at’s all well and good, but, again, what is so compelling about a plant whose name is derived from the Latin word lavere, meaning “to wash”?

Mary Jendrucko, festival director for the Sequim Lavender Growers Association, says it’s about communing with nature.

“People like to come out to the countryside, to look at nature, to enjoy the rural environment and see the lavender,” she says. At the farms on tour for example, families can enjoy a picnic lunch amid the lavender plants. � at’s a di� cult � nd

in a big-city setting. Jendrucko and her husband, Paul, are well-known in the

area for their handmade bandannas � lled with lavender. � ese colorful creations are meant to bring calm and comfort for those who wear them, which, by the way, are of the furry type — dogs, that is.

“People come because of the fascination of lavender,” adds Carmen Ragsdale, who, along with her husband, Steve, own Sunshine Herb and Lavender Farm just outside of Sequim. “It’s beauty and long history is what draws the tourists.” One plant, she says, can be used in just about every aspect of our lives, from makeup to healing aspects to infusion in all sorts of foods.

BeginningsLike all good ideas that turn into a successful venture,

growing lavender in and around Sequim began with a vision, that being to restore the agricultural base of the fertile Sequim prairie.

� e founders of the lavender movement, including Mary Borland-Liebsch of Olympic Lavender Farm, and Mike Re-ichner of Purple Haze Lavender Farm, tapped not only into the right crop, but also were founders of what has become a worldwide agritourism market.

According to those who keep the history books, eight lav-ender farms began planting between 1995-1998. Since then, at least 30 more have been established. Today, more than 150,000 lavender plants are in the ground in the Sequim area, with hun-dreds of thousands sold wholesale around the world.

� e popular lavender event has grown along with the number of plants and in turn, has greatly increased tourism on the North Olympic Peninsula. Indeed, the Sequim Laven-der Festival has been voted one of the top 100 events by the American Bus Association, and, as previously stated, Sequim is recognized as the Lavender Capital of North America®, a registered trademark.

Sequim Lavender Weekend According to Barbara Hanna, communications and

marketing director for the City of Sequim, Sequim Lavender Weekend is one of the largest, if not the largest, tourism events on the Olympic Peninsula. � at translates into an economic boost for the area. When 30,000 or so visitors stay in hotels, eat in restaurants and spend money in local shops, it boosts city co� ers.

“� e city has a stake in the success of the festival,” Hanna says of its recent additional support of the two associations involved with the production of Sequim Lavender Weekend.

Because there are two associations — the Sequim Lavender Farmers Association and the Sequim Lavender Growers As-sociation — the city decided to rename this year’s event the Sequim Lavender Weekend.

The Sequim Lavender Farmers Association, which

sponsors the Sequim Lavender Farm Faire, and the Sequim Lavender Growers Association, sponsor of the Sequim Lav-ender Festival, fall under the new umbrella name Sequim Lavender Weekend. With so many activities o� ered by each association, the city wanted a name that would attract visitors without confusion.

In all, 13 lavender farms will be open to tourists. In addition, the weekend o� ers an endless amount of shopping, food and fun at either the downtown Street Fair or Lavender in the Park at Carrie Blake Park. To be sure, there is enough to keep a visitor entertained for the three-day weekend.

“When people come to Sequim they have a good feeling about this community,” Nagel says. “� e people who live here give the � rst impression, which is very welcoming. Visitors are looking for small-town, friendly America and they get it here in Sequim.” � at, and, of course, the lavender.

So what’s the draw, the attraction to a purple plant? � e answer is all of the above.

“People love lavender,” Vail says. “It’s amazing. You say laven-der and people start gushing about how much they like it.”

And will our luck hold out with some of that mild weather and the infamous blue hole?

Mary Jendrucko assures she has taken care of that little detail.

“I’ve already ordered up good weather for the (lavender) weekend.”

Mary Powell is the former editor of the Sequim Gazette. She worked in the newspaper industry for nearly 20 years, was an edu-cation reporter and also the editor for the Columbia Basin Herald in Moses Lake. She has won several journalism awards, most for editorial writing. Now semi-retired, she volunteers for several local organizations and enjoys an occasional freelance assignment.

Story by Mary Powell • Photo by Cathy Clark

Sequim Lavender Weekend expects crowds from far and wideSequim Lavender Weekend expects crowds from far and wideSequim Lavender Weekend expects crowds from far and wideSequim Lavender Weekend expects crowds from far and wideSequim Lavender Weekend expects crowds from far and wideSequim Lavender Weekend expects crowds from far and wideSequim Lavender Weekend expects crowds from far and wideSequim Lavender Weekend expects crowds from far and wideSequim Lavender Weekend expects crowds from far and wideThere’s just something about lavender

Sequim Lavender Weekend• July 20-22• Sequim Lavender Farm FaireSeven farms on tour: $10 advance/$15/weekend, military $10, children 12 and under free. Includes free shuttle buses to and from each farm. Lavender in the Park features more than 100 booths, lavender products, food, music, crafts, and more. No admis-sion fee to Lavender in the Park. • Sequim Lavender FestivalSix farms open to the public. No admission. Downtown Street Fair features 172 crafts booths, food court. Free lavender bundle with military identifi cation. • For more information regarding Sequim Lavender Weekend, visit www.sequimlavenderweekend.com, www.sequimlavenderfarms.org or www.lavenderfestival.com.

Page 27: Living on the Peninsula, Summer 2012

LIVING ON THE PENINSULA | SUMMER | JUNE 2012 27

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Page 28: Living on the Peninsula, Summer 2012

28 LIVING ON THE PENINSULA | SUMMER | JUNE 2012LIVING ON THE PENINSULA | SUMMER | JUNE 2012

� ere are two attributes that botanical illustrator Iris Edey says played a major role in her success as a watercolorist. � e � rst is the natural tal-ent she inherited from her grandmother and the second is the discipline she learned as the daughter of a British soldier, in the rigors of boarding school, and as a dressmaker.

Edey began her formal education at age 5 in Singapore where her father was stationed in the army. When World War II broke out, her father was captured and spent the next 3½ years as a POW. Edey, her siblings and stepmother managed to escape on the last boat out, spend-ing nine harrowing weeks at sea, via Cape Town, South Africa, before returning to England. She subsequently attended boarding school for most of her childhood but also lived in Kenya where her father was stationed a� er the war.

At age 17, a love of sewing led her to become a dressmaker’s apprentice. Edey worked under a practiced seamstress, called a hand, in an atmosphere where distractions such as talking or listening to music were not allowed. Although she always had sketched and already was very disciplined, Edey believes that

Love andFlowersA pro� le of

botanical illustrator Iris Edey

Story and photos by Kelly McKillipWatercolors by Iris Edey

At left: The iris is Edey’s namesake and signature � ower.Right: Iris Edey creates her beautiful watercolor paintings using one of the drawings from her many sketch books.

Above: A symphony of violets will adorn the cover of the soon-to-be published book of Tony Edey’s poetry entitled, “Still Shakin’ with Laughter.”

Page 29: Living on the Peninsula, Summer 2012

LIVING ON THE PENINSULA | SUMMER | JUNE 2012 29

the attentiveness required to achieve success in the di� cult medium of watercolor seeded itself in those years of repetitive and single-minded couture sewing.

At age18, Edey met her husband, Tony, in London. � e two young people glanced at each other across the room during a church service and both knew that there would be no other. During the � ve years she waited for her husband-to-be to � nish his education at the Royal School of Mines and complete his National Service with the Royal Engineers, Edey became an independent seamstress, worked as a lace saleswoman in London and became a nanny in Devon.

� e Edeys married in 1959. His work soon brought the couple to Northern Rhodesia, now Zambia, Africa, where their son and daughter were born. � e family also lived in Venezuela, Chile, New Zealand, Europe and the U.S. Ex-cept for the time when her children were very young, Edey made sketches of the local � ora in her notebooks. She always used pen and ink which required her to look and draw with great care, creating her sketches from front to back, as she does in watercolor.

In 1974, the family moved to Bellevue. � e next year Edey’s children gave her a gi� of an oil painting kit. She took lessons at the local park and recreation center and began drawing in earnest again. Studying toll painting taught her a lot about color and she soon became a teacher herself. Eventually, Edey decided that oils did not dry fast enough to suit her and she took up Sumi, a Japanese painting method which uses watercolor or ink on rice paper. Edey says it was the most di� cult medium she has ever worked in, but the e� ort engendered

an unwavering love of watercolor.� e family subsequently moved to Colorado, where Edey

created a great deal of art, o� en showing her work in four di� erent galleries at the same time. She became a professional botanical watercolorist in 1981 and her business name is appropriately Iris’ Garden.

Iris is not only her namesake but also a favorite subject, al-though she paints many types of � owers and other botanicals. Edey begins a work by tracing one of her sketches from the 14 books she has compiled. � is template o� en will be used in di� erent ways. Critical to her success is the knowledge of how to mix color, which is then applied with great care. She has done a lot of experimenting over the years and never

stops learning. � e Edeys moved to Sequim in 1989. In the

following years, Tony waged a winning battle against melanoma while also su� ering from Parkinson’s disease. Iris says that, despite his ill-

nesses, her husband never lost his sense of humor. In 2000, the couple published the book, “Life Lines,”

featuring humorous verse by Tony with illustra-tions by Iris. � ey began a second volume, “Still Shakin’ with Laughter.” Unfortunately,

Parkinson’s claimed Tony’s life in 2009 be-fore they could complete the work.

Devastated by the loss of her soul mate and inspiration, Iris stopped painting.

In 2011, Edey picked up her brush again and is back in full � ow creating beautiful and intricate illustrations. She’s very busy preparing for an exhibit of more than 50 of her paintings for the Sequim Museum & Arts Center (MAC) exhibit in July.

With the help of her proj-

ect coordinator and fellow artist, Magdalena Bassett, Edey is publishing the second volume of Tony’s poetry. Additionally, a book of sketches, compiled from Edey’s 14 volumes, soon will be in print.

Edey believes her renewed energy and � tness are due to the Hatha yoga she has practiced for nearly 50 years and her love of the natural world. When not painting � owers, she can be found tending them at her Sequim home garden.

Iris Edey may be contacted at [email protected] or by phone at 360-683-4721. Her books will be available in July in Sequim at MAC, at 175 W. Cedar St., Paci� c Mist Books at 121 W. Washington St. or online at Amazon.com.

Kelly McKillip always has loved writing and the arts and recently has forayed into combining the two in freelance articles. She has a bachelor’s degree in biology from Marylhurst College in Marylhurst, Ore., and a bachelor’s degree in nursing from Hayward State University in California. She volunteers at the Dungeness Valley Health & Wellness Clinic and Museum & Arts Center in the Dungeness Valley.

In addition to � owers, Iris Edey paints beautiful watercolor botanicals of fruits and other plants.

This beautiful camellia is Iris Edey’s largest work to date.

A delicate rose becomes a work of art under Iris

Edey’s careful hand.

Page 30: Living on the Peninsula, Summer 2012

30 Living on the PeninsuLa | suMMeR | June 2012

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Page 31: Living on the Peninsula, Summer 2012

LIVING ON THE PENINSULA | SUMMER | JUNE 2012 31

What’s in a name?

Little did Pamala Kay Grender of Temecula, Calif., know when she accepted her grand-mother’s gi� of old, tattered family photo books

that she was setting the stage for a � ve-year, history-seeking odyssey spanning two continents, several states and generations of kin she didn’t know existed.

In fact, when the genealogical journey that led herdirectly to the North Olympic Peninsula and compelled her to write a memoir about her newfound relatives be-gan, she wasn’t sure how to pronounce the family name at the center of it all — Bugge, like “buggy.”

“My grandmother must have been so taken with her husband’s side of the family that she failed to tell her son, my dad, much about her nine brothers and sisters, most of whom, by the time he was a young man, had moved to the far West,” Grender said of her grandmother, Soneva Bugge Egge. “As a result, he never even got to know some of his aunts, uncles and � rst cousins.”

Inspired by the family photographic collection, some of which were postcards containing dated postmark

and location clues, and armed with bits of information gleaned from her father and other relatives, Grender began her quest to reconnect the time-splintered links of her Bugge family tree. � e culmination of those e� orts, a family memoir titled “Faded Treasures, Vibrant Lives,” was published by Little Creek Press in 2011.

As Grender would come to discover, three of her grandmother’s West-venturing brothers – Hans, Jens and Samuel Bugge – settled on the North Olympic Peninsula beginning in the 1890s. All born in Norway,

Samuel became a sea captain in Port Townsend and Hans and Jens successful entrepreneurial businessmen and civil servants in the Sequim-Dungeness Valley.

Grender said among her biggest research surprises was discovering that the Hood Canal bridge is o� cially named the Wil-liam A. Bugge Bridge, a� er Samuel’s son and former director of highways for Washington. She also was surprised to learn of the impres-sive professional accomplishments of Hans and Jens in this area.

Although few visible traces remain of Hans and Jens Bugge’s entrepreneurial exploits in Sequim and the once-bustling seaport communities of neighboring Port Williams and Washington Harbor along Se-quim Bay, their enterprises made the Bugge name a familiar one in the region around the

turn of the 20th century.Hans owned and operated an export business

and commercial port via the long ship-docking wharf at Port Williams along with a hotel, restaurant, post o� ce and store there. � e eldest Bugge sibling also earned the nickname of Washington’s “Clam King” for his successful Bugge Cannery Company at Washington Harbor, which he oversaw for nearly two decades and which employed as many as 40 people during peak periods. Jens, a

California woman traces family roots to peninsula

by Reneé Mizar, Communications CoordinatorMuseum & Arts Center in the Sequim-Dungeness Valley

information gleaned from her father and

brothers – Hans, Jens and Samuel Bugge – settled on the North Olympic Peninsula beginning in the 1890s. All born in Norway,

Samuel became a sea captain in Port Townsend and Hans and Jens successful entrepreneurial businessmen and civil servants in

Grender said among her biggest research surprises was discovering that the Hood Canal bridge is o� cially named the Wil-

Author Pamala Kay Grender utilized sev-eral historical and genealogical resources throughout Clallam County, including the Museum & Arts Center in Sequim and the Clallam County Historical Society, while researching her 2011 book, “Faded Trea-sures, Vibrant Lives.”

Pamala Kay Grender (far right) and several cousins gathered for this photo at Bugge Road, located along Sequim Bay, during a family reunion in Sequim in July 2011. Photo courtesy of Pamala Grender

Hans Bugge’s Bugge Cannery Company at Washington Harbor, now the site of the Battelle Marine Science Laboratory. Image from the Virginia Keeting Collection, Museum & Arts Center in the Sequim-Dungeness Valley

Page 32: Living on the Peninsula, Summer 2012

32 LIVING ON THE PENINSULA | SUMMER | JUNE 2012

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mercantile proprietor, also lived a life of civil service, serving as a Sequim mayor, city councilman and � re chief. Both also served as postmasters and in Clallam County o� ces — Hans as commissioner and Jens as treasurer.

Personal journey through the pastWhile her book chronicles the lives of her grand-

mother and nine siblings, Grender noted that it is also the story of her own personal journey to uncover her family’s past. As a past board member of the Temecula Valley Historical Society and past president of the Temecula Valley Museum Board, as well as an active museum vol-unteer, Grender already was well-versed in the value that

historical research, and localized historical knowledge especially, can play when combined with genealogical investigation.

Using a detective-like, multi-pronged approach, Grender’s research included gathering oral histories from relatives; utilizing the Internet via Google searches and subscription-based genealogy websites; and contact-ing museums, historical societies and research centers in locales where the Bugge siblings had lived. She said she spent three years gathering and compiling notebooks full of information before beginning to write the book.

She and her husband also made numerous trips along the West Coast over the span of � ve years, visiting Alaska as well as the North Olympic Peninsula, to conduct in-person research. In addition to visiting the Je� erson County Historical Society in Port Townsend and Clallam County Historical Society in Port Angeles, Grender said much of her peninsula-based research was concentrated at the Museum & Arts Center in the Sequim-Dungeness Valley (MAC), located in Sequim.

In recognition of those newfound family ties to this area, an annual reunion of cousins on Grender’s father’s side was changed from its usual Midwest location to Sequim. Grender said � ve cousins joined her for the gathering in July 2011, which included a visit to the site of Jens Bugge’s cabin, now gone, on Bugge Road.

“One of the cousins, Steven Egge, as a very young boy, visited Jens Bugge’s cabin on Sequim Bay with his family.

mercantile proprietor, also lived a life of civil service, Above: Bugge’s Tureen brand clams, packaged by the Bugge Canning Company. Museum & Arts Center in the Sequim-Dungeness Valley Collection

At left: Moon Kist brand clam nectar, packaged by the Bugge Canning Company. Museum & Arts Center in the Sequim-Dungeness Valley Collection. Photo by Robert Cooper

Page 33: Living on the Peninsula, Summer 2012

LIVING ON THE PENINSULA | SUMMER | JUNE 2012 33

Steven, his parents and two brothers spent several vacations � shing on Sequim Bay while staying at the cabin in the ’50s,” Grender recalled.

Published in time for the reunion, Grender said “Faded Treasures, Vibrant Lives” has garnered a very positive reaction from her family and it also has resulted in her making contact with some previously unknown relatives and exchanging additional information.

“I was thanked by each and everyone one of my cousins who was given a book. All were grateful for the research that had been done,” Grender said. “One called to tell me she and her husband were taking o� that very day for a trip to Norway. She said she had my book in her suitcase and that they would try to � nd the Bugges’ original hometown.”

Returning to Sequim this summerGrender will return to Sequim this summer to present a program

about the Bugge family, and Hans and Jens in particular, at 5:30 p.m. Friday, July 13, at the MAC Exhibit Center, 175 W. Cedar St. in Sequim. � e evening event, which includes a book signing of “Faded Treasures, Vibrant Lives” and refreshments, is free with suggested donation and open to the public.

Grender’s presentation also coincides with the debut of a new MAC history exhibit about the local canning and maritime industries.

With the genealogy of her Bugge relatives now well-documented, Grender said she plans to direct her genealogy-sleuthing energy toward researching her husband’s family. However, as anyone thoroughly en-grossed in genealogy likely will attest, one’s family research is never really � nished no matter how much information has been gathered about a given relative or branch of the family tree.

“� e Bugges were such a fascinating family, for the rest of my life I will probably continue gathering information about them,” said Grender,

who dedicated her book to her four grandchildren. “My grandchildren, who range in age from 2 to 14, are too young to be very interested but they each have an autographed copy of the book which, with time, I know will be appreciated. I felt it was important for both present and future generations to know and appreciate family members who had gone before them.”

Hans Bugge, posing with bags of the resource that would earn him the nickname of Washing-ton’s “Clam King.” Image from the Virginia Keeting Collection, Museum & Arts Center in the Sequim-Dungeness Valley

Page 34: Living on the Peninsula, Summer 2012

34 LIVING ON THE PENINSULA | SUMMER | JUNE 2012

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Page 36: Living on the Peninsula, Summer 2012

36 LIVING ON THE PENINSULA | SUMMER | JUNE 201236

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Page 37: Living on the Peninsula, Summer 2012

LIVING ON THE PENINSULA | SUMMER | JUNE 2012 37

Come visit us!Come visit us!Come visit us!Come visit us!Come visit us!IN JEFFERSON COUNTYIN JEFFERSON COUNTYIN JEFFERSON COUNTYIN JEFFERSON COUNTYIN JEFFERSON COUNTY

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Page 38: Living on the Peninsula, Summer 2012

38 LIVING ON THE PENINSULA | SUMMER | JUNE 2012

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Page 39: Living on the Peninsula, Summer 2012

LIVING ON THE PENINSULA | SUMMER | JUNE 2012 39

The next time you are out hiking or biking or rid-ing a horse on one of the peninsula’s many well-kept trails, you might ask yourself who keeps

the trails clear of fallen trees and other debris. � e answer more than likely would be the Back Country Horsemen of Washington volunteers.

A well-organized group of 160 members, the BCHW is constantly working to build and maintain both front and backcountry trails for everyone to use. “Our main goal is to keep public lands open to everyone,” said Peninsula Chapter president Jennifer Reandeau. “� at includes all trails, lower trails for bikers and hikers and all the way up to and into the Wilderness area, where we can’t use any power tools,” she said.

Chapter vice president Del Sage, said that they have several di� erent trail committees. “We’re sometimes limited to 12 heartbeats,” he said, “including horses and dogs.” He explained that they don’t want too many horses on a given trail at a time, so they try to limit the amount to 12 creatures. If more than a dozen are going to a particular destination, the next group will start at a later time.

One of these groups met every Monday during April and part of May to work on trails on Miller Peninsula near Sequim. “We had anywhere from one to 12 people show up,” Sage said. “One Monday, I was the only one who came, but that doesn’t matter.” He said that among the chapter’s recent accomplishments is a bridge members built over the Little River near the Elwha area, for which they had to fell some trees. “We also made a walk log across Elk Creek in Forks and we’re building a bridge on Big Quil (Quilcene),” he continued.

Reandeau said that Sage is a leader on many of the big projects they do. “His education comes from years of logging.” Sage was awarded the Lopper Award at a recent rendezvous of BCHW in Ellensburg. � ere were only three awards given statewide and the Peninsula Chapter was proud to have Sage be recognized for his many volunteer hours.

Sage’s horse Rocky assists him in his work. “Just throw a harness on Rocky and he is ready to go to work,” he said, explaining that Rocky is half dra� horse and half saddle horse. “His daddy was an English Shire (o� en called the Gentle Giants).” For those who want to read more about Sage and his horse, they are both featured in the May 2012 issue of the free publication Northwest Horse Source.

Other achievements of the Peninsula Chapter of BCHW

are clearing and maintaining trails at Long Ridge, Aurora Ridge, Lillian, Elkhorn, Wolf Creek, Sol Duc, Bogachiel, Hoh, Quinault, Queets, Dosewallips, Mount Muller/Little-ton, Happy Valley, Slab Camp, Upper Dun-geness, as well as Foothills and the Olympic Discovery Trail.

“At some point, we will have worked on 70 percent of the Discovery Trail that will eventually stretch 100 miles from Port Townsend to west of Port Angeles,” Rean-deau said. � e members have built fences, gates and bridges for the Discovery Trail.

� ey also have cleared ground, built campsites, � re pits, corrals and watering systems for the stock camp at the Mount Muller/Littleton trailhead and assisted with projects at the Clallam County Fair and Salt Creek Recre-ation Area campgrounds, where they have painted buildings and assembled picnic tables.

“We also do noxious weed control,” said chapter director and trail maintenance coordinator Tom Mix. As a crosscut sawyer, Mix also instructs and certi� es volunteer sawyers for work on fallen trees.

“As per agency policy, we do not certify volunteer saw-yers for felling of trees. Trees fall on some of the trails every year,” he said. � at o� en requires a crew to pack in and work for several days. “Depending on where we go, we have to operate within the land manager’s rules,” Mix explained. Some trails cover up to seven di� erent management rules and the volunteers agree to comply with all of them.

Each of the 36 BCHW chapters keeps track of its volun-teer hours and Cate Bendock, volunteer hours coordinator for the Peninsula Chapter, said that in 2011 there were a total of 4,423.45 hours logged. “Both Tom and Del give countless hours,” she said. Figuring the labor at $15 an hour for most of the hours and $25 an hour for skilled labor, the hourly dollar value for last year came to $76,496.75. � ey also take into account equipment use. Working under detailed BCHW

guidelines, the total of labor and equipment supplied for maintenance on the 583.7 miles of trails on the peninsula was $130,135.

Every year, as part of their goals to “work with and receive training under direction of public o� cials from Department of National Resources, U.S. Forest Service and Olympic National Park,” the members coordinate with ONP rangers to host a “Mule Barn Day.” � is year the event was held at the Elwha Ranger Station where nearly 40 people came to learn about how to pack a mule for back-country trail work; protocol for hikers when they meet mule trains on the trail; good horse/mule behavior for trail work; how and what to pack in your saddle bags; and a reminder of

Blazing the back country

By Elizabeth Kelly

Back Country Horsemen of Washington – Peninsula ChapterP.O. Box 1931Port Angeles, WA 98362www.pbchw.org

Top: From left, Jeff Mix and Del Sage pack in on Snow Brushy Trail. Photo courtesy of BCHW.Above: Pack mules ready for the trail.

Photo by Elizabeth Kelly

Page 40: Living on the Peninsula, Summer 2012

40 LIVING ON THE PENINSULA | SUMMER | JUNE 2012

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the 10 essentials to carry always: compass, maps, water and iodine puri� cation tablets, sharp knife, whistle, space blanket with cord, matches and striker paper in a container, matches in another container, � re starter material and a � rst aid kit.

Another important mission of the chapter is to work with youth groups such as the Boy Scouts and 4-H to provide them with Leave No Trace (LNT) educational skills, including animal skills, while working together with BCHW on the trails. One teaching practice is how to yield appropriately on the trail — “bikers yield to everyone, hikers yield to equestrians and equestrians yield to no one.”

� e international program, LNT (www.int.org\leavenotrace), provides succinct and di-rect ways to preserve the environment for everyone. � eir teachings include how to dispose of waste properly; leave what you � nd; minimize camp� re impacts; respect wildlife; � nd suitable camping sites; and plan ahead and prepare. � e chapter hosts an LNT tent at the Clallam County Fair each year to help make the public aware of these practices.

Beginning on June 27 and on July 11, 18 and 25, the Peninsula chapter will join with Kiwanis to o� er horse rides for children with disabilities at Beausite Lake camp near Chi-macum. A walker will accompany each horse and rider on either side of the horse to provide safety for the children.

“� ere are some people who object to horses in the backcountry,” Mix said, and yet, it’s the horses and their riders that keep the trails open and o� en helped build them in the � rst place.

� e unifying focus of BCHW, Peninsula Chapter, is horses and mules — riding, showing, packing, admiring or keeping them as big pets. However, not all members have horses or even ride, but have a concern to help keep the trails open for all. A 501(c)(3) organization, the local chapter networks with Back Country Horsemen of America (BCHA) in 25 other states.

If you are looking for an opportunity to make a di� erence, volunteer outside, learn about your environment and enjoy good company, read more about the Peninsula chapter of Back Country Horsemen on its website or send an e-mail to [email protected].

Elizabeth Kelly has lived on the Olympic Peninsula nearly a dozen years. She has worked for three newspapers as a reporter and freelance writer. She also worked as a technical writer. She has traveled to all seven continents and continues to be curious about the world around her.

Tom Mix, left, and Larry lack of Olympic National Park, clear a Sol Duc River trail with a 10-foot crosscut saw. Photo courtesy of BCHW.

Page 41: Living on the Peninsula, Summer 2012

LIVING ON THE PENINSULA | SUMMER | JUNE 2012 41LIVING ON THE PENINSULA | SUMMER | JUNE 2012LIVING ON THE PENINSULA | SUMMER | JUNE 2012 41

THE Living END

Disclaimer: My “dog heart” was lost years ago to Clancy Cochran Jensen, a perfect GoldenMuttRetriever. My house now serves as quarters for our three feline masters.

Humans and animals have a long history of living to-gether and forming emotional bonds. In what may be the oldest evidence of this special relationship, a 12,000-year-old human skeleton was discovered in Israel, entombed with its hand resting on the skeleton of a 6-month-old wolf puppy. Perhaps best said by Dr. Ann Berger, a researcher and physi-cian at the National Institute for Health in Bethesda: “� e bond between animals and humans is part of our evolution, and it’s very powerful.”

� e intuitive, forever bond that we have with our pets is in many ways beyond our understanding — very much as one might expect from such a lengthy relationship between di� erent species over the centuries. In my daily practice as a veterinarian, I repeatedly bear witness to, and am in awe of, this powerful relationship.

Take a walk at the beach and almost without fail, you will see a pet and her human frolicking in the sand and waves. Why? Do you have an answer? I really do not, yet this is a ubiquitous phenomenon, one that transcends reason and is based on love and trust. We bring out the joy of life in one another.

From 1980-1984, while I was attending veterinary school at Washington State University, the dean was Dr. Leo Bustad. A very jovial fellow, Dr. Bustad was one of the founding members of � e Delta Foundation, a group dedicated to promotion of the human-animal bond. � ere were two other visionaries — two brothers, Dr. Michael J. McCulloch, a psychiatrist, and Dr. William McCulloch. � ese professionals came to know one another as they shared the observation that pets were having a positive impact on their human clients’ health and happiness. Each had ob-served in his own practice (and personal life) this consistent theme. � ey speculated that there was much more depth to what they were witnessing. However, they knew that anec-dotal stories were not enough to capture the attention of the medical community. Scienti� c research was needed.

Research � ndings accumulated that having an animal in one’s life helped reduce blood pressure, lower stress and anxiety levels, and stimulate the release of endorphins which make people feel good. � e Delta Society knew it was time to put their now-proven theories into every day application.

� e National Service Dog Center® was founded with a goal to focus on advocating for the acceptability of service dogs in public places. It also provides tools to help those with disabilities � nd a service dog trainer and understand their rights. Another organization, � erapy Dogs International (TDI®), is a volunteer group organized to provide quali� ed handlers and their therapy dogs for visits to institutions, fa-cilities and any other place where therapy dogs are needed.

Many of my clients have service dogs and are very active in our community — from search and rescue, to reading with children, visiting nursing homes, and in the case of my neighbor’s dog Jag, apprehending criminals!

In the May 4 Seattle Times, an article penned by Jennifer Sullivan looks at the role cats play in the rehabilitation of incarcerated individuals.

Since January, staff at Larch Corrections Center, a minimum-custody prison near Vancouver, have assigned two shelter cats to each live with a pair of inmates in the hope that

the relationships will result in better behavior — in both the felons and the cats ....

On a recent a� ernoon, Clementine, a small gray and white cat, spread out on her scratching post, staring at 35-year-old inmate Richard Amaro as he talked about her likes and dislikes. He boasted about her sunny disposition and said he and his cell mate are lucky to be assigned such a mellow cat, compared to their neighbors’ cat, the redoubt-able Princess Natalie.

“� is gives you a so� er side; it makes you feel like you have a kid at home. When I’ve been out during the day I remember I’ve got my daughter at home waiting for me,” said Amaro, who is serving time for the� , harassment and contracting without a license. � ese cats, previously considered unadoptable, are eventually placed in homes outside the prison environment.

Cats enjoy sharing our homes and lives and in ad-dition to their role at Larch Corrections Center, serve as therapy pets in nursing homes. I am on the sta� of my three cats, Leif (who grew up on our sailboat and sailed to Mexico and back with us), Susie and Walter the wild-child.

� e world would be a lonely place without the com-panionship of animals. Children raised in a loving family learn patience, emotional maturity, safety and trust from their pets and parents. As a child, I relied on my many pets for stability, comfort and friendship. Rabbits, salamanders, turtles, kitties and pup-pies graced my life from my earliest memories. Unconditional: always there, so� and furry, or small and slimy — I loved them all. Caring for these creatures who depended on me for their safety and welfare taught me critical life skills not otherwise available in my human family.

� e � ow and then ebb of life is much faster for our companion animals than for humans. � is fact brings great joy and unspeakable grief as the relationship grows, deepens and, inevitably for the human member of the bond, ends long before we are ready. It is not possible to be fully prepared for the death of a beloved family pet.

A painful reality for pet owners is that we must eventu-ally make end-of-life choices for our family friend. As a pet’s guardian, it is both an honor and a burden to have such a deci-sion in our hands. Our pets trust us implicitly, uncondition-ally, and rely on us to make correct, compassionate decisions about their welfare. � is honor and burden includes when to end their life. As a veterinarian, one of my more critical roles is to guide families through the lengthy, painful decisions around euthanasia. “How will I know when it is time? Is my pet su� ering? Am I being sel� sh? What would you do?”

Clearly, this responsibility is a pivotal one in my work. � ose who have su� ered a loss (and who hasn’t?) are familiar with the breaking waves of grief, rage, peace and anguish that they cycle through during adjustment to death. It is startling to newly graduated veterinarians how o� en these feelings manifest as rage. Our role is to remain involved, know that the rage is a key aspect of the grief process and simply be available to the pet’s family as they process their incredible loss.

As a veterinarian and as an animal lover, I am exposed to all sides of the inevitable health changes that come to our beloved pets with age. However, with advances in the

understanding of veterinary care, age does not have to be a disease. As with our own health care, pet owners increasingly advocate for proactive health care for their family pets.

In my practice, all members of the family are considered, not only the pets. We see families through despair and loss of both pets and human family members — many a client stops by years a� er the loss of a husband/wife/child/parent or pet to share a cup of co� ee with us, cry, smile or sit quietly. � ere is much to learn from those who come through our o� ce doors.

Jensen owns Blue Mountain Animal Clinic in Port Angeles.

Bonds eons oldBy Dr. Sharon Jensen, DVM

Living

Above: Angel Pairadee, a 1-year-old female golden

retriever, cuddles with Dr. Sharon Jensen.At left Leif (black &

white) Susie in basket (larger cat)

with Walter the wild child, grey.

LIVING ON THE PENINSULA | SUMMER | JUNE 2012 41

Page 42: Living on the Peninsula, Summer 2012

42 LIVING ON THE PENINSULA | SUMMER | JUNE 2012LIVING ON THE PENINSULA | SUMMER | JUNE 2012

&NOW ThenGlendale Creamery/Nash’s Farm Store, Dungeness

Standing on the corner of Sequim-Dungeness Way and Towne Road in Dungeness is a century-old structure that already possessed a rich and colorful history before becoming home to Nash’s Farm Store in

2011. Located within eyesight of the historical Dungeness Schoolhouse, the Glendale Creamery operated in the early 1900s and is credited as being the � rst creamery in Dungeness. Beyond its functioning as a creamery, which included having operated under the banner of the Dungeness Cooperative Creamery, the building later become a new location for the Dungeness Tavern, which operated into the mid-1990s.Historical photo courtesy of the Museum & Arts Center in the Sequim-Dungeness ValleyCurrent photo by Reneé Mizar, Museum & Arts Center in the Sequim-Dungeness Valley

42

The Hood Canal bridge has been a crucial transportation link for Je� erson County for decades, but in February 1979 it sank in high

winds, severing the umbilical to Kitsap County. For four years, people had to drive around the sound to get from Kitsap to Je� erson County. Some locals actually remember those days fondly and say the lack of access kept at bay the crush of a growing population and preserved small-town values. When half the bridge was reconstructed several years ago, it again was closed for about six weeks, causing Je� erson and Clallam County residents once again to look only to each other for their needs, and, instead of being hurt by the bridge closure, sales for many local merchants went up. Today, the message of local resilience is again a prominent one, as communities recognize the value of building strong local links in good times as insurance against the bad times. During the last reconstruction, the bulge in the middle that slowed tra� c was removed and now motorists have a straight shot across the top of Hood Canal.Historical photo courtesy of the Port Townsend Leader collectionCurrent photo is by Patrick J. Sullivan, Port Townsend Leader

Hood Canal bridge

Page 43: Living on the Peninsula, Summer 2012

Living on the PeninsuLa | suMMeR | June 2012 43

Port Angeles/Sequim (360) 417-0700

Outside the area toll free (800) 457-4492

www.dungenessline.us

Late night or early morning � ight?Ask us about special hotel rates!

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Page 44: Living on the Peninsula, Summer 2012

44 Living on the PeninsuLa | suMMeR | June 2012

Come enjoy the beautiful sweeping view.

A perfect way to spend a day!

You Pick or We Pick Berries and Lavender

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Order gourmet preserveswww.graysmarsh.com