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Methow Valley News Health & Wellness The valley’s newest providers, and more SUPPLEMENT Rise up Phoenix Festival celebrates our resilience ARTS Page A7 PUBLISHED WEEKLY SINCE 1903 TWISP, WASHINGTON VOL. 113 NO. 21 WWW.METHOWVALLEYNEWS.COM SEPTEMBER 30, 2015 $1 A column by Don Reddington Living with Alzheimer’s CHAPTER 8 Living with Alzheimer’s: Reflections on the project Editor’s note: This is the eighth and final article in a series written by Methow Valley resident Don Red- dington, exploring the issues of living with Alzheimer’s disease. The arti- cles were written in collaboration with Raleigh Bowden, M.D., Katie and Josephine Bristol, and Methow Valley News reporter Lau- relle Walsh. About one year ago Dr. Raleigh Bowden and I began discussing writing a book about what it’s like to live with Alzheimer’s disease (AD). I have been educating myself about Alzheimer’s and talking openly with people about the disease since I received my diagnosis in early 2014. I have found that a lot of people are in denial about having the disease, or are trying to hide it. I decided I want to help people with AD who may be denying it, and the family members of people with AD. I want to be open about what my friend Jerry Bristol, who is at a later stage of the disease, and I are going through and about how people with AD would like to be treated. I am a man on a mission. With the help of Dr. Raleigh and reporter Laurelle Walsh, I drafted a sample chapter of Living with Alzheimer’s, which Methow Valley News publisher Don Nelson agreed to publish as part of a monthly column that started in Janu- ary 2015. Since then we have published seven chapters plus an introduction by Ms. Walsh. We included the experi- ences of my wife, Ginger, Josephine Bristol, Katie Bristol and Jody Love — all of whom have lived with a person with Alzheimer’s. This will be the final chapter, and I would like to express what this project has meant to me. This project has made Jerry and me very happy! We have been delighted and surprised at the community response, and that the articles went all over the country because people passed them I want to be open about what my friend Jerry Bristol, who is at a later stage of the disease, and I are going through and about how people with AD would like to be treated. I am a man on a mission. Don Reddington Firefighter Daniel Lyon healing, growing more alert after eight surgeries By Marcy Stamper Firefighter Daniel Lyon is about halfway through his initial treatment for the severe burns he sustained in the Twisp River Fire, according to his father, Dan Lyon. Based on physicians’ projections for the healing process from this type of injury, Daniel could be released from Harborview Medical Center in about six weeks. He will continue with exten- sive rehabilitation and physical therapy, said Dan. Daniel, age 25, has had eight surger- ies since the Aug. 19 accident. The first four surgeries were to remove dead tis- sue, a process known as debridement that prevents infection and helps pro- mote healing. The following four surgeries grafted Daniel’s own skin onto areas that were critically burned. The next surgery, to graft skin onto his arms and fingers, should be the last major graft, said Dan. “We hope for great progress after that,” he said. One of the first grafts surgeons per- formed was for Daniel’s legs, which are now healing. His eighth operation, on Sept. 22, concentrated on grafts for his face. Daniel remains in Harborview’s intensive care unit. “We’re still hoping and praying for miracles — and we’ve had some,” said Dan. Although Daniel has been heavily Homeowners insurance may be harder to come by Wildfires’ impact could drive up policy prices By Ann McCreary Property owners seeking new home- owners insurance policies may find it more difficult and expensive, depend- ing on their location, as a result of the past two summers of wildfires in the Methow Valley and surrounding areas. While fires were actively burning in the region, many insurance companies imposed a moratorium on writing new policies in areas impacted by wildfires, according to local insurance agents. “As soon as they knew the area was evacuated” companies imposed mora- toriums, said Judy McAuliffe of Libke Insurance Associates in Twisp. “All of the Highway 97 corridor got it.” Now, as the fire season is winding down, most companies appear to be accepting new applications. However, homeowners seeking insurance for houses in some specific areas of the Methow Valley may find they have to shop around and pay a higher premium. “A lot of companies have decided they’re just not going to write in specific areas, so it’s a lot harder to get insur- ance,” said Melinda Bourn, owner of Melbourn Insurance Agency. “Some are declining to write [policies] altogether, and others are choosing to write at a higher price.” The changes appear to be specific to a couple of housing developments in the Methow Valley at this point, Bourn said. “The two areas that are getting diffi- cult that I’m seeing in the last few weeks are Pine Forest and Edelweiss,” she said. “I’m not saying you can’t get any insurance at all, it just may not be as cost-effective as before,” Bourn said. “We can find a market, but it may not be what people want to pay.” In some cases insurance premiums are two or three times higher than in the past, she said. Bourn said she’s spoken with Forest Service closing roads to ATVs again By Marcy Stamper In another reversal, the U.S. Forest Service plans to close roads in the Okan- ogan-Wenatchee National Forest that had been opened to wheeled all-terrain vehicles (ATVs) for the past few months, according to Karl Forsgaard, president of the Alpine Lakes Protection Society. The Forest Service opened 350 miles of roads to ATVs in all seven ranger dis- tricts in the forest at the end of June. Forsgaard was one of a group of rep- resentatives of environmental organiza- tions, ATV rider groups, county road departments and the governor’s office who participated in a conference call on Friday (Sept. 25) with Jason Kuiken, the deputy forest supervisor for the Okano- gan-Wenatchee National Forest. “Recently there have been develop- ments regarding the WATV [wheeled ATV] routes that we would like to share with all of you who have been involved throughout the process,” wrote Kuiken in the email notifying the parties about the phone meeting. In the conference call, Kuiken explained that they need to evaluate the new ATV routes under the National Environmental Policy Act before the Forest Service can change which vehi- cles are allowed to travel on the roads, said Forsgaard. Before June, ATVs had not been permitted to use these roads. The Forest Service is still work- ing on a press release explaining the ATV developments, according to Cathy Dowd, public affairs officer with the Okanogan-Wenatchee National Forest. The Okanogan-Wenatchee Forest has been working on its travel management rule for the past decade, which, when complete, will include a detailed map showing all roads and trails open to motorized travel, according to Jennifer Zbyszewski, recreation program man- ager for the Methow Valley Ranger Dis- trict. The map will also show the types of vehicles allowed on them. Forest managers had been hoping to have a draft of the environmental analy- sis on the travel management changes for public review this fall, but it was delayed because staff had to be diverted to wild- fires this summer, according to Forsgaard’s account of the phone conference. Wheeled ATVs are a special class of ATVs that must have certain safety fea- tures, including lights, mirrors, and a special license. The Alpine Lakes Protection Society was a plaintiff, along with the Kittitas Audubon Society and the Sierra Club, in a lawsuit filed against the Forest Service in June. The lawsuit claimed that the Forest Service failed to follow environmental laws that require public input and an analysis of which roads or trails would be open to any motorized use, including by off-road vehicles and wheeled ATVs. Kuiken did not mention the lawsuit in his remarks during last week’s confer- ence call, said Forsgaard. Photo courtesy of the Lyon family Daniel Lyon was severely burned in the Aug. 19 fire that killed three other firefighters. See REFLECTIONS, A3 Fair games See LYON, A2 See INSURANCE, A2 This contented-looking hen, raised by Sage McFetridge of Winthrop, was the grand champion in the poultry division at the Okanogan County fair. The fair not only featured live horses and other livestock, but there were also blazing-fast carousel horses, fun for a quick spin between exhibits. Photos by Marcy Stamper

Methow Valley News, Sept. 30, 2016

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Page 1: Methow Valley News, Sept. 30, 2016

Methow Valley NewsHealth & WellnessThe valley’s newest providers, and moreSUPPLEMENT

Rise upPhoenix Festival

celebrates our resilienceARTS Page A7

PUBLISHED WEEKLY SINCE 1903 TWISP, WASHINGTON VOL. 113 NO. 21 WWW.METHOWVALLEYNEWS.COM SEPTEMBER 30, 2015 $1

A column by Don Reddington

Living w i t h

Alzheimer’s

CHAPTER 8Living with Alzheimer’s:

Reflections on the project

Editor’s note: This is the eighth and final article in a series written by Methow Valley resident Don Red-dington, exploring the issues of living with Alzheimer’s disease. The arti-cles were written in collaboration with Raleigh Bowden, M. D., Katie and Josephine Bristol, and Methow Valley News reporter Lau-relle Walsh.

About one year ago Dr. Ra leigh Bowden and I began discussing writing a book about what it’s like to live with Alzheimer’s disease (AD). I have been educating myself about Alzheimer’s and talking openly with people about the disease since I received my diagnosis in early 2014. I have found that a lot of people are in denial about having the disease, or are trying to hide it.

I decided I want to help people with AD who may be denying it, and the family members of people with AD. I want to be open about what my friend Jerry Bristol, who is at a later stage of the disease, and I are going through and about how people with AD would like to be treated. I am a man on a mission.

With the help of Dr. Raleigh and reporter Laurelle Walsh, I drafted a sample chapter of Living with Alzheimer’s, which Methow Valley News publisher Don Nelson agreed to publish as part of a monthly column

that started in Janu-ary 2015.

Since then we h ave p u b l i s h e d seven chapters plus an introduction by Ms. Wa l sh. We included the experi-ences of my wife, Ginger, Josephine Bristol, Katie Bristol and Jody Love — all of whom have lived with a person with Alzheimer’s. This will be the final chapter, and I would like to express what th is project has meant to me.

This project has made Jerry and me very happy! We have been delighted and

surprised at the community response, and that the articles went all over the country because people passed them

“ I want to be open about what my friend Jerry Bristol, who is at a later stage of the disease,

and I are going through and

about how people with AD would

like to be treated. I am a man on a

mission.— Don Reddington

Firefighter Daniel Lyon healing, growing more alert after eight surgeriesBy Marcy Stamper

Firefighter Daniel Lyon is about halfway through his initial treatment for the severe burns he sustained in the Twisp River Fire, according to his father, Dan Lyon.

Based on physicians’ projections for the healing process from this type of injury, Daniel could be released from Harborview Medical Center in about six weeks. He will continue with exten-sive rehabilitation and physical therapy, said Dan.

Daniel, age 25, has had eight surger-ies since the Aug. 19 accident. The first four surgeries were to remove dead tis-sue, a process known as debridement that prevents infection and helps pro-mote healing.

The following four surgeries grafted Daniel’s own skin onto areas that were critically burned. The next surgery, to graft skin onto his arms and fingers, should be the last major graft, said Dan. “We hope for great progress after that,” he said.

One of the first grafts surgeons per-formed was for Daniel’s legs, which are now healing. His eighth operation, on

Sept. 22, concentrated on grafts for his face. Daniel remains in Harborview’s intensive care unit.

“We’re still hoping and praying for miracles — and we’ve had some,” said Dan.

Although Daniel has been heavily

Homeowners insurance may be harder to come byWildfires’ impact could drive up policy pricesBy Ann McCreary

Property owners seeking new home-owners insurance policies may find it more difficult and expensive, depend-

ing on their location, as a result of the past two summers of wildfires in the Methow Valley and surrounding areas.

While fires were actively burning in the region, many insurance companies imposed a moratorium on writing new policies in areas impacted by wildfires, according to local insurance agents.

“As soon as they knew the area was evacuated” companies imposed mora-toriums, said Judy McAuliffe of Libke

Insurance Associates in Twisp. “All of the Highway 97 corridor got it.”

Now, as the fire season is winding down, most companies appear to be accepting new applications. However, homeowners seeking insurance for houses in some specific areas of the Methow Valley may find they have to shop around and pay a higher premium.

“A lot of companies have decided they’re just not going to write in specific

areas, so it’s a lot harder to get insur-ance,” said Melinda Bourn, owner of Melbourn Insurance Agency. “Some are declining to write [policies] altogether, and others are choosing to write at a higher price.”

The changes appear to be specific to a couple of housing developments in the Methow Valley at this point, Bourn said.

“The two areas that are getting diffi-cult that I’m seeing in the last few weeks

are Pine Forest and Edelweiss,” she said.“I’m not saying you can’t get any

insurance at all, it just may not be as cost-effective as before,” Bourn said. “We can find a market, but it may not be what people want to pay.” In some cases insurance premiums are two or three times higher than in the past, she said.

Bourn said she’s spoken with

Forest Service closing roads to ATVs — againBy Marcy Stamper

In another reversal, the U.S. Forest Service plans to close roads in the Okan-ogan-Wenatchee National Forest that had been opened to wheeled all-terrain vehicles (ATVs) for the past few months, according to Karl Forsgaard, president of the Alpine Lakes Protection Society.

The Forest Service opened 350 miles of roads to ATVs in all seven ranger dis-tricts in the forest at the end of June.

Forsgaard was one of a group of rep-resentatives of environmental organiza-tions, ATV rider groups, county road departments and the governor’s office who participated in a conference call on Friday (Sept. 25) with Jason Kuiken, the deputy forest supervisor for the Okano-gan-Wenatchee National Forest.

“Recently there have been develop-ments regarding the WATV [wheeled ATV] routes that we would like to share with all of you who have been involved throughout the process,” wrote Kuiken

in the email notifying the parties about the phone meeting.

In the conference call, Kuiken explained that they need to evaluate the new ATV routes under the National Environmental Policy Act before the Forest Service can change which vehi-cles are allowed to travel on the roads, said Forsgaard. Before June, ATVs had not been permitted to use these roads.

The Forest Service is still work-ing on a press release explaining the ATV developments, according to Cathy Dowd, public affairs officer with the Okanogan-Wenatchee National Forest.

The Okanogan-Wenatchee Forest has been working on its travel management rule for the past decade, which, when complete, will include a detailed map showing all roads and trails open to motorized travel, according to Jennifer Zbyszewski, recreation program man-ager for the Methow Valley Ranger Dis-trict. The map will also show the types of vehicles allowed on them.

Forest managers had been hoping to have a draft of the environmental analy-sis on the travel management changes for public review this fall, but it was delayed because staff had to be diverted to wild-fires this summer, according to Forsgaard’s account of the phone conference.

Wheeled ATVs are a special class of ATVs that must have certain safety fea-tures, including lights, mirrors, and a special license.

The Alpine Lakes Protection Society was a plaintiff, along with the Kittitas Audubon Society and the Sierra Club, in a lawsuit filed against the Forest Service in June. The lawsuit claimed that the Forest Service failed to follow environmental laws that require public input and an analysis of which roads or trails would be open to any motorized use, including by off-road vehicles and wheeled ATVs.

Kuiken did not mention the lawsuit in his remarks during last week’s confer-ence call, said Forsgaard.

Photo courtesy of the Lyon family Daniel Lyon was severely burned in the Aug. 19 fire that killed three other firefighters.

See REFLECTIONS, A3

Fair games

See LYON, A2

See INSURANCE, A2

This contented-looking hen, raised by Sage

McFetridge of Winthrop, was the grand

champion in the poultry division at the

Okanogan County fair.

The fair not only featured live horses

and other livestock, but there were also

blazing-fast carousel horses, fun for a

quick spin between exhibits.

Photos by Marcy Stamper

Page 2: Methow Valley News, Sept. 30, 2016

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Page A2 Wednesday, September 30, 2015 Methow Valley News

LYONFrom Page A1

Forest thinning promoted as effective way to reduce fire risksBy Ann McCreary

The case for thinning for-ests to improve their health and reduce fire risk was made last week by a panel of four people offering different perspectives.

The discussion featured private landowners, a conservationist and a small lumber company repre-sentative, who told an audience at the Twisp Valley Grange that selectively cutting trees plays an important role in protecting the dry forests of eastern Washington.

The panel discussion on Sept. 22 was sponsored by the National Forest Foundation, a nonprofit forest conservation organization, and the North Central Washing-ton Forest Health Collaborative, formed in 2013 to promote forest restoration.

Vicki Simmons of Mazama described how she evolved from a property owner who planned her house “so as not to take out any trees” to a community activ-ist who has advocated for thinning trees and removing fuels in her for-ested neighborhood.

After the Needles Fire in 2003

came within one-quarter mile of her Lost River home, Simmons began working to obtain grant money to reduce forest fire risk on private property in Lost River, and then held discussions with the U.S. Forest Service about the fire threat from overgrown for-ests on adjacent federal lands.

Due in part to strong commu-nity support, the Forest Service allocated $1 million for a project that will thin smaller understory trees in forests near Driveway Butte, Sandy Butte, Lucky Jim Bluff and Lost River Road.

The “Lost Driveway Hazard Fuels Thinning Project” will thin trees on almost 1,500 acres that abut private properties in the first phase of a larger project.

“Humans have changed the course of nature” by suppressing fires that are a natural part of the dry forest ecosystem, Simmons said. “Thinning and fuels reduc-tion is what gets us back to what Mother Nature intended.”

Another private landowner, Ross Frank of Leavenworth, has been involved for several years with the Chumstick Wildfire

Stewardship Coalition (CWSC), a grassroots organization formed by local citizens to address wild-fire issues in the Leavenworth community.

The coalition has received grants to plan and implement wildfire risk reduction programs, and Frank advocated the grass-roots approach to protecting pri-vate property.

“It’s citizens taking care of our own neighborhood and empow-ering ourselves to take care of our own destiny in dry for-ests. It’s making a real physical change to your home and your woodlot and a change in your culture and how we live in dry forests,” Frank said.

“The effective work done today is at the grassroots level. In the public arena you have to hold on to your shorts and get ready for a long ride.”

The federal government is not adequately addressing the extreme fire risk in national forests where fires have been suppressed for decades, he said. “We’re out of scale … we treat 3,000 acres and have 300,000 acres that need treat-

ment,” Frank said.“We need a clear, concise

mandate from Congress to make a change in the physical landscape. Until there is a clear mandate for acres to be thinned, we’re not going to accomplish anything of real substance,” he said.

Change in mindsetMike Anderson, a 30-year

member of The Wilderness Soci-ety, described a similar change in mindset from his early days of involvement in the spotted owl controversy and “fighting timber companies.”

Over time, he said, “it became clear that just protecting forests from logging or creating wilder-ness wasn’t doing it, especially for the dry east side” of the Cas-cade Mountains.

Anderson said he became involved forest restoration initia-tives in Oregon to thin trees and conduct burning on thousands of acres. “The thought of taking a chainsaw to these [forests] bites into people’s sensitivity about what is right for the landscape

environmentally,” he said.He commended a forest resto-

ration strategy developed in 2010 for the Okanogan-Wenatchee National Forest as “science-based.”

“It looks at the historical land-scape and tries to restore the nat-ural resilience of the landscape,” Anderson said. The forest resto-ration strategy is proposed for a 50,000-acre project in the Libby and Buttermilk creek water-sheds, he said.

While cutting trees to thin forests may be objectionable to many conservationists, “the threat to forests is not the timber companies, it’s climate change,” Anderson said.

A challenge to carrying out forest restoration projects is making the work economically feasible, Anderson said. In Ore-gon, for example, a lumber mill that had previously processed old growth timber retooled the mill to be able to process small trees that were thinned as part of the forest restoration work.

“Thinning is not going to make anyone rich. It’s at best a

break-even proposition,” he said.Matt Scott, of Vaagen Broth-

ers Lumber in Colville, said the company adjusted the mill to be able to work with small diameter trees harvested through restora-tion projects.

The company collaborates in many forest stewardship projects, conducting thinning and grind-ing slash in forests to improve fire resilience, Scott said. Vaagen is also able to process biomass to sell to generating plants, he said.

He said Vaagen’s collaboration with environmental groups has resulted in no appeals of their timber sales in the past decade.

Having a local company that is able to utilize and sell the byproducts of forest restoration projects improves their viability, the panelists noted.

“The choke point in our area is we can’t move the product out of our area economically,” Frank said. He said a small dimensional saw mill in the Leavenworth area closed after the Forest Ser-vice said it could not commit to providing the needed volume of wood over the long term.

col leagues in other a reas impacted by wildfire, such as Chelan and the Okanogan Val-ley, who report similar problems finding insurance for homes in areas deemed at higher risk from wildfire.

“Every company is review-ing outlying areas to determine if this is an area they want to continue writing in,” Bourn said. “Certain areas are not profitable due to the wildfire threat.”

Insurance underwriters have told her their companies use information provided by firms that analyze wildfire risk for spe-cific areas and even individual properties. One of the firms that conducts these analyses is called Verisk Analytics, which evalu-ates insurance risks.

The company uses remote

sensing and digital mapping technology to “determine the impact of three factors that con-tribute to wildfire risk: fuel, slope and access,” according to the Verisk Analytics website. That information is available “at the address level,” the company said.

“I’m aware of two companies using something very much like this. They’re adopting this in many states, primarily the West Coast,” Bourn said.

A senior underwriter for Safeco Insurance, one of the principal companies used by Bourn, explained to her in an email how the company is han-dling policies in some wildfire-prone areas.

“Rather than stop doing busi-ness in some of the areas where we have a high wildfire potential, they have implemented an expo-sure assessment in the quoting system to manage the business

we are writing in those areas. “It impacts a small percentage

of the business (no more than 5 percent), so you will likely not see it happen frequently, but you may quote some risks that won’t be offered a market to help man-age the new business we are acquiring in those areas,” the underwriter said.

Unprecedented experience

Bourn said the scale of disas-ter and loss experienced during the past two summers is unprec-edented in her experience. “I’ve never gone through what we’re going through, and I’ve been in insurance since 1979.” She said insurance companies are proba-bly responding to a second sum-mer of devastating wildfires in north central Washington.

“After two years they’re going to analyze and look at the losses they’ve experienced. It’s going to

make it a lot more difficult for sure, this second wildfire year,” Bourn said. She is the insur-ance agent for two homeowners whose houses were completely destroyed in the Twisp River Fire, both of whom are collect-ing insurance.

Insurance companies are also looking at the bigger picture, Bourn said. “There were 1,400 homes lost in California. They’re not just looking at our area but looking at the West Coast and everything we’ve been experi-encing,” she said.

The temporary moratorium on new policies and the decision by some companies not to write pol-icies in certain areas means that acquiring new insurance policies has been slower in some cases, which has impacted some real estate transactions.

“People can’t get financ-ing unless they get insurance. They’ve got deadlines for clos-

ing dates. In some cases this is the last piece of the puzzle” in a real estate deal, Bourn said.

“My office had some slowings in closings because of the mor-atorium, but nothing that was a tremendous problem. It was a short-lived issue,” said Dave Thomsen of Coldwell Banker Winthrop Realty.

Safeco and other companies have initiated new proactive pro-grams to protect the properties they insure by developing wildfire defense programs, Bourn said.

Safeco began its defense pro-gram last year. In an announce-ment of the program, the company noted that more than twice as many acres of land in the United States were con-sumed by wildfire in the first three months of 2014 compared to 2013.

The Wildfire Defense Program provides crews to remove over-grown vegetation, fuel tanks and

trash from property insured by Safeco. The crews may also use temporary sprinkler systems or fire engines, and will even apply fire-blocking gel to protect homes, according to a company release.

The crews are contracted through Wildfire Defense Sys-tems Inc., a company that pro-vides insurance companies with wildland firefighting crews and equipment for fire prevention and suppression.

“During the wildfires when they were getting really close to town, I probably had 10 calls from the Wildfire Defense Pro-gram trying to reach owners,” Bourn said. A Gold Creek cli-ent insured through Safeco “had three to four trucks each year” at their property when the fires were threatening.

“The companies feel if they have one home they can save, it will save them money,” Bourn said.

sedated, he has been more con-scious in the past few weeks and, as his lungs heal, he can talk in a whisper. During the first month, Daniel didn’t know who or where he was. But doctors ask every morning, and 75 percent of the time Daniel knows who he is and that he’s in the hospital, said Dan.

Severe burns are so painful that without the sedation Dan-iel would not be able to endure them, said Dan. The sedatives also help him not remember the accident, which is important at this stage of recovery, said Dan.

While sometimes Daniel asks for more painkillers, he often describes the pain as “tolerable.” “He doesn’t like the medica-tions because they make you so loopy,” said Dan.

Finding skin for the grafts has been difficult because the burns were so extensive, covering 60

percent of Daniel’s body. Dan-iel’s feet and ankles, which were protected by his boots, were the one area to escape injury. His helmet protected his head and his sunglasses protected his eyes and eyelids, which suffered only minor burns. Daniel’s vision is still blurry, but doctors do not see any permanent eye damage, said Dan.

Daniel’s hands were so badly burned that surgeons had to remove the fingertips on all but one of his fingers last week, said Dan. He will also require surgery to repair damaged tendons.

“The goal is to get him out of here and start rehab,” which will be possible once Daniel’s wounds are sufficiently healed and he is able to feed himself, walk and take care of other basic needs, said Dan. The next phase of recovery will include one to two years of intensive physical therapy and follow-up surgeries.

“It’s quite a long process, a long road. But we’re gaining, so

we’re happy,” said Dan. Physicians have explained that

Daniel will most likely have a lifetime of related conditions that could necessitate more grafts as his skin stretches, said Dan.

Doctors are not able to make predictions about the extent of Daniel’s recovery, which can depend on the individual. “One person may say it’s not possible to do something, but others will figure out a way,” said Dan.

Daniel was the only one of four firefighters to survive the accident in the fast-moving fire on Woods Canyon Road. Tom Zbyszewski, Andrew Zajac and Rick Wheeler were killed when the fire burned over their engine, which had apparently gone off the steep, winding road.

Emergency responders found Daniel some distance from the engine. He was airlifted to Harborview that afternoon. It appears the firefighters had got-ten into the engine to escape the fire after the wind shifted

180 degrees about two and a half hours after the fire started, according to the preliminary investigation into the incident.

Three firefighters with the Washington Department of Nat-ural Resources, who were higher on the road, sustained less-seri-ous burns in the fire. The acci-dent and cause of the fire are still under investigation.

Daniel remembers he was in a fire, but has no recollection or idea of how badly he was burned, said Dan. He also doesn’t know that his fellow firefighters died. Daniel hasn’t asked about that, but they expect those questions will come soon, so they have been working with psychologists about how to handle them, said Dan.

‘His calling’Daniel’s job with the U.S.

Forest Service was his first as a firefighter. He received his fire-fighting training this spring and moved to the Methow Valley for the summer from Puyallup.

Daniel had just finished his classes at the reserve police acad-emy a few months before joining the Forest Service firefighting crew. He was a reserve offi-cer — a volunteer position — with the police force in Milton, near Tacoma. “It’s been his goal to be a first responder. It’s his calling,” said Dan.

The Lyon family spent many vacations camping and hiking in the Methow. Dan and Barb, Dan-iel’s mother, now live in Mon-tana, but the Forest Service has arranged for them to stay in an apartment in Seattle so they are near Harborview. Dan said the Forest Service had been cordial and supportive and described the agency liaison as “a true angel.”

Because of the danger of infection, Daniel is still not able to have visitors other than his family, but many people, includ-ing Gov. Jay Inslee, have stopped by to pay their respects, said Dan.

Dan and Barb have been read-

ing Daniel the thousands of let-ters that have poured in from around the country. “But Daniel has no idea of how many people are praying for him and sending thoughts,” said Dan. “He’s going to be overwhelmed by that.”

Right now, sending thoughts and letters is the most helpful thing people can do for Daniel, since he cannot watch movies or TV or wear earphones yet.

“Tell the community we appreciate their thoughts and well wishes. Daniel is going to appreciate them,” he said.

Dan has visited the accident site, where a spontaneous memo-rial has grown as a tribute to the firefighters. He said he’d like to help erect a permanent memorial to them.

Letters and cards can be sent to Daniel Lyon, care of Har-borview Medical Center, Medic One, 325 Ninth Ave., Room 2 CT99, Box 359727, Seattle, WA 98104.

INSURANCEFrom Page A1

Page 3: Methow Valley News, Sept. 30, 2016

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1331 2ND AVE. N., OKANOGAN, WA

PLEASE JOIN US

To celebrate the benefits of public power, customers of Okanogan County PUD are invited to enjoy light refreshments and request their choice of an energy

conservation item for the home. Customers may also stop by their local PUD branch office October 5th through the

9th to make their request for an energy conservation item.

Naked eye

In space, everything is ‘ far, far away’On a clear, dark October eve-

ning you can still see the Milky Way stretching across the sky from north-east to southwest. Look for a pale, glowing band of light and, if you see it, you have spotted the galaxy in which we live, our home in the vast cosmos. Our sun is one of several hundred bil-lion in this immense conglomeration. It is difficult for us to imagine how large the Milky Way galaxy really is. Astronomers tell us it is 100,000 light years across, but that does not begin to convey the enormous size of that glow of light in the sky.

The space probe Voyager 1 is the farthest man-made object from Earth. Launched in 1977 and traveling at a speed of 35,500 miles per hour, it is currently about 12,276,000,000 miles from Earth. In another 80,000 years, the probe will be at about the same distance as the nearest star other than the sun. That is a start on a journey across the galaxy, but not much of one, because in 80,000 years Voyager 1 will only have completed one part in 25,000 of the vast distance across our galaxy. What all this means is that our galaxy is really, really big and that our favorite science fiction characters like Captain Kirk and Mr. Spock, who hopped from star to star like they were running errands on their way home from work, were going really fast.

But wait, there is something else out there that is even bigger. With a little patience and a dark, clear night away from distracting lights, you, too, may be able to see it. It will not be easy because it is a long ways away and it is quite dim, but those of us who are blessed with the dark skies of the Methow Valley have a shot at it.

Andromeda strainGo outside and give your eyes a

few minutes to adjust to the dark first. That way they will be sensitized to see

the dimmest objects up there. Then find the constellation Cassiopeia up in the northeast. It looks like the let-ter “W” on its side. Notice that one of the points of the W is sharper than the other. Early in the evening that is the upper point. Use it to point to the southeast about one length of Cassio-peia. Look for a pale, oblong, fuzzy spot in the sky. Cannot find it? Try again using binoculars. It will stand out a lot better.

What is that fuzzy-looking thing anyway? It is another galaxy, called Andromeda, and it is the biggest one in our corner of the cosmos. No one is sure exactly how big it is, but it is prob-ably about twice the size of our own Milky Way. If you do manage to see it, you can be sure that it is the most gigantic thing you have ever seen.

Remember all that nonsense in science fiction stories about “trac-tor beams?” Han Solo’s space ship got sucked into the evil Death Star by one in the first Star Wars movie. Maybe you thought, like I did, that it was pretty foolish. Actually, it is all real and it is called gravity. The Andromeda galaxy, being a lot bigger than our galaxy, has a lot more gravity and it is sucking us in like a giant trac-tor beam. Another way to look at it is that we are falling into Andromeda at over 1 million miles per hour and there is nothing anyone can do about it. Do not worry, you do not have to rush out

and buy collision insurance tomorrow. It will be a while before we get there, like several billion years.

Long tripYou may wonder if we are falling

so fast why it will take so long to get there. But I bet you guessed that it is a long ways away. The Voyager 1 would take about 50 billion years to make the trip. That is a time span far longer than the age of the universe. What all this means is that little fuzzy spot is not only the biggest but also the most distant thing you have ever seen.

Early in the evening you may still catch a glimpse of Saturn low in the southwest. That is the star Antares, the heart of the scorpion, to the left. The brightest planets are seen in the early morning just before sunrise. Look for dazzling Venus high in the east. You cannot miss it. Lower and a little bit to the left, not-so-bright Jupi-ter is pretty easy to pick out. Between the two, much dimmer Mars is more difficult to spot in the brightening twilight.

Remember Captain Kirk calling down to chief engineer Scotty to rev up the Enterprise to warp 10 because they had to get there before those nasty Klingons? Warp 10 is 10 times the speed of light and I wonder how feasible it is to go that fast. Albert Einstein told us that the speed of light is the speed limit in this universe. Nobody, nothing, nohow is going to travel through space faster than that. Recently two physicists, Yurtsever and Wilkinson, have calculated what would happen if a space ship travel-ing at almost the speed of light ran into a speck of dust floating around out there. The impact would be so catastrophic that it would be like the explosion of 5,000 pounds of dyna-mite, Think about that the next time you are watching old Star Trek reruns.

Methow Valley News Wednesday, September 30, 2015 Page A3

REFLECTIONSFrom Page A1

David Ward

around to friends and family. I love it when people say, “Don, thank you for what you have been doing!”

Exceeded our goalWe had a goa l and we

exceeded that goal, went way beyond. By sharing our personal journeys, we have been able to give knowledge to others fac-ing the same challenges. In the process, I really wanted to thank the people who have helped me, put humor into the whole topic and help other families under-

stand what the person with AD is going through.

Jerry and I are determined not to let Alzheimer’s ruin the rest of our lives. We want to live a good life, and we want to tell others with the disease: Continue enjoy-ing your life.

One thing I think I have con-tributed is getting people with AD to start exercising and con-tinue being active. I can tell you without a doubt that every time I go outdoors to work on our farm I feel better — way different than when I just sit around. When I do just sit around, I feel awful. With exercise, I sleep really well. That’s been really good to realize and to help other people under-

stand.The hardest thing about the

project was the frustration I had around misunderstandings with my project partners. We had different ideas about two of the chapters that Ms. Walsh and Dr. Raleigh thought should be com-bined and I thought were distinct. Writing the chapters together has not been easy!

As my disease has progressed the later part of the project was simply harder. It took me hours to work on each chapter. And it was harder to bring humor into the later chapters.

I am clearly having more chal-lenges with many sorts of things, especially technical things. It

is important to be open about what’s going on with myself. Trying to finish the project before my disease progressed too far was really hard. I learned from my doctor last week that I am beginning the mid stage of Alzheimer’s. Ginger and I will keep on going.

Great feedbackOne of the best things is when

people I don’t even know stop me and tell me how much they like the series. I ran into somebody I didn’t even know at the kids’ swim meet who said, “I want to thank you.”

The Wenatchee World has been publishing the series as well, and World reporter Don

Seabrook came to our home to photograph Ginger and me. This was great! The Alzheimer’s Association of Washington is also publishing several chapters of Living with Alzheimer’s on its blog, alzwa.wordpress.com.

People have come up to me with so much wonderful appre-ciation and feedback. I have had people call from Wenatchee who read it in the World; we’re even helping people back on the East Coast. I had no idea there would be so many thank yous.

Alzheimer’s disease is big. One out of every nine people will get the damned disease. I hope these chapters can help people before the disease becomes over-

whelming for them.Jerry and I thank you for read-

ing this series. So many people have approached me and Ginger, wanting more information, want-ing a book that they can send to family members. Dr. Raleigh and I are committed to turning Liv-ing with Alzheimer’s into a book so that it can reach even more people. Stay tuned for updates in the Methow Valley News about the book’s progress in the com-ing months.

This is not goodbye, but many new hellos!

Our thoughts are with you.

Don Reddington and Jerry Bristol, AD League

TwispWorks board names new executive directorDon Linnertz takes over for Amy Stork

Don Linnertz will be the new executive director of TwispWorks, the organization’s board of directors announced this week.

Linnertz will replace Amy Stork, who recently resigned after four years in the job to join a Portland-based con-sulting firm.

TwispWorks, a nonprofit center for creative enterprise that houses more than 30 business and educational pro-grams in several buildings, is now over-seen by a private foundation that took over operation of the campus in 2014. It came in to existence as the Twisp Pub-lic Development Authority in 2008.

The campus, site of the former U.S. Forest Service Twisp Ranger Station, became known as TwispWorks in 2010. Stork was its second executive director.

Linnertz takes over effective Oct. 19. His background includes more than 20 years of executive management, planning, administration and develop-ment experience in the for-profit and nonprofit sectors.

Linnertz formerly worked for Adobe Systems Inc. overseeing global partner operations, Holland America Line leading sales and marketing efforts, and The Market Foundation’s Pike Market Child Care Center where he was development director. He also served as board chair for Bread for the Journey, a community-based micro-granting organization with more than 25 national chapters.

Linnertz has served on the Twisp-Works Foundation board of directors. He currently is on the board of direc-tors for Methow Recycles.

“We are very pleased to announce Don’s appointment to executive direc-tor of TwispWorks,” said Ray Johnston,

board president of the TwispWorks Foundation, in a press release. “Twisp-Works has emerged as an important part of the cultural and economic vital-ity of the Methow Valley,” Johnston said. “With the exceptional work of our staff and past leadership, Twisp-Works is ready to move forward in its mission helping businesses and youth achieve more through programs in education, agriculture, technology, art and culture.”

“The Methow Valley is truly a unique and special place to live and work,” Linnertz said in the release. “I look forward to serving our commu-nity and helping strengthen and build partnerships that support economic development for the region. I am hon-ored to work with such a dedicated staff, board and broad group of sup-porters and know that together we will achieve truly great things for the com-munity we care so deeply about.”

In addition to providing space for a variety of tenants, TwispWorks often hosts community events on its cam-pus. In 2013, TwispWorks launched Methow Made, a collaborative mar-keting program to help producers of Methow Valley products reach new customers.

Don Linnertz

Page 4: Methow Valley News, Sept. 30, 2016

Page A4 Wednesday, September 30, 2015 Methow Valley News

OpinionBox 97:

Letters to the editor

By Tania Gonzalez Ortega

Display advertising deadline for this newspaper is on the Friday previous to publi-cation at 5 p.m. Classi� ed advertising deadline is Monday at noon. The deadline for news items is Monday at noon.

THE METHOW VALLEY NEWS (USPS Publication No. 343480) is published weekly by MVN Publishing, LLC, 101 N. Glover St., Twisp, WA 98856. Subscription rates: $33 inside Okanogan County, $44 outside of Okanogan County and $55 outside of Washington state per year (in advance). Periodical class postage paid at Twisp, Washington, and additional mailing o� ces. POSTMASTER: Send address changes to THE METHOW VALLEY NEWS, P.O. Box 97, Twisp, WA 98856.

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PUBLISHED WEEKLY SINCE 1903

Methow Valley News

Don Nelson, PUBLISHER/EDITOR

Marcy Stamper, REPORTER

Ann McCreary, REPORTER

Laurelle Walsh, REPORTER•PROOFREADER

Darla Hussey, PUBLICATION DESIGN

Rebecca Walker, OFFICE MANAGER

Sheila Ward, SALES ASSOCIATE

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Dana Sphar, AD DESIGN•PRODUCTION

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CONTRIBUTORS:

Erik BrooksSally Gracie

Tania Gonzalez OrtegaJim & Jane Hutson

Rosalie HutsonAshley Lodato

Joanna BastianBob Spiwak

Solveig TorvikDave Ward

Power grabDear Editor:

After running on a platform touting small government, our county commissioners want to expand government by taking over our health district and making it a county health department.

Currently there are six members of the Board of Health comprised of the three commissioners and three members repre-senting incorporated cities and towns. The commissioners want to reduce the board to five members to include themselves and two other members appointed by them. There will be no specific term of office for the commissioners.

If this happens, current employees of our health district will be laid off. If they are rehired, they will lose all seniority, current health benefits, and accrued vacation and sick leave. There is no guarantee they will be rehired.

The reason given by the commission-ers for this shameful power grab is as fol-lows: The health district “is in poor financial condition and ... a change in the governing structure is necessary to streamline opera-tions and restore financial stability.” Read “streamline” as “cutting programs.”

The county allocates $120,000 a year to the health district. That is the same as was allotted 20 years ago. Of that, $40,000 goes back to the county for computing sup-port, audit fees, etc. Considering the under-funding of our county health district, it’s a wonder they do as well as they do.

In short, the commissioners are using county under-funding of the health district as the primary excuse to take it over. It would be a good idea to attend health district board meetings.

P. StantonOkanogan

Think about thinningDear Editor:

On Sept. 22, the North Central Washing-ton Forest Health Collaborative (NCWFHC) and the National Forest Foundation (NFF) sponsored a public forum, “Thinning and the Future of the Forest.” All of the panelists and all of the tables in the back of the room with literature presented the exact same point of view: logging (thinning) our public lands on a massive scale is not only the answer to our wildfire and forest health woes, it is a slam dunk. Their proposal: thousands of acres

of logging in the Libby Creek/Twisp River headwaters.

Not one panelist spoke to any concerns or possible negative impacts from large, landscape-level thinning, which is what the U.S. Forest Service and their advisory board, the NCWFHC, see as the answer to how to restore forest health. This completely one-sided presentation was yet another example of the pre-set agenda the collaborative is working from. Even lip service was not paid to an unbiased evaluation of thinning.

Thinning on private lands is a vital tool for structure protection, primarily within 200 feet of the buildings themselves. To assume that it would benefit thousands of acres of public land is irresponsible (numbers as high as a million acres to be thinned on the Okan-ogan-Wenatchee National Forest were tossed out). Yet, this program is being accelerated. The public is being taken for a ride with the current hysteria over forest restoration and fire. What is really called for is a reassess-ment of our entire firefighting and prescribed burning program.

Rash management decisions pushed through in the wake of another traumatic fire season will not contribute to long-term sustainable forestry. Thousands of acres of landscape-scale thinning will have irreparable damage — a sad legacy for future generations.

Please stay informed about what the NCWFHC is doing and their recommenda-tions to the Forest Service. Come decision-making time, let’s protect these Methow Valley drainages.

Donna Pema BresnahanLibby Creek Watershed Association

Seeing things as they areDear Editor:

Which color grass?From what I can see, the grass is brown

and dry, we had no useful rain in many months, though much too much in other parts of the country; the global temperature is ris-ing to record levels; wildfires are raging and getting worse the last couple of years — in short, the climate and the atmosphere is totally out of whack. Globally environmen-tal matters are deteriorating in a frightening way. What I see, and what Mr. Aspenwall (letters to the editor, Sept. 23) sees are quite different, to say the least.

It is fascinating to see how our human minds respond in such different ways to what happens around us. We all see or hear the same events, the same words, but our minds’ response tends to go in two separate direc-tions. For one, we can see things as they, in fact, are. For another, we can see things the way we wish they were. The way we see and process things in our minds is easily swayed by our beliefs. And a fixed belief system, often called an ideology, often trumps prag-matism, which is a way of dealing with facts and actual occurrences. William F. Buckley, often considered the father of modern Amer-ican conservatism, famously said: “Idealism is fine, but as it approaches reality, the costs become prohibitive.”

If the worsening droughts, floods, heat, fires and storms don’t wake us up, if these actual events don’t tell us that we urgently need to become better stewards of our planet

Solveig Torvik

Don Nelson

See LETTERS, A5

Hello?Give me your tired, your poor

That lady holding up the beckoning torch at the entrance of New York harbor symbol-izes America’s pride in being the most wel-coming of people who seek freedom.

But a funny thing’s been happening on the way to that free-dom. Newcomers are rushing not to the United States, but to Germany. Germany? Seriously? Well, not that Germany. This Germany. If you’re not inclined toward optimism regarding the probabilities of improving human behavior, you may have overlooked Germany.

In contrast, it seems our nation’s pledge to welcome “the huddled masses yearning to breathe free” is being read as false advertis-ing. Last year, 626,000 refugees applied for asylum in Europe. Only 134,600 bothered to apply to the United States.

So much for our celebrated narrative that everyone is beating down the doors to get to America. Was it something we said? Hello?

After four years of war in Syria, we’ve accepted 1,500 Syrian refugees. Shamed into it, the Obama administration recently announced that the United States this year will accept 15,000 more refugees, mostly Syrians, and 30,000 more in 2017. The United States has been accepting a total of 70,000 refugees per year, so that total eventu-ally will rise to 100,000.

But Germany, a nation of 80 million, says it can absorb at least 800,000 refugees, per-haps one million. Aside from Sweden, the rest of Europe is balking. Xenophobia is by no means dead in the new, improved Europe, not even in Germany.

Nearly 400,000 refugees from Africa, Afghanistan and Syria have washed up on the European Union’s Mediterranean shores so far this year. Yet these staggering num-bers are small potatoes. Today, 59.5 million human beings are displaced worldwide.

Blame, some of it well earned, is being laid at President Obama’s feet for the Syr-ian portion of the current human migration debacle. Four million Syrians live in foreign refugee camps; 250,000 have been killed.

Obama publicly threatened Syria’s Presi-dent Assad, who used chemical weapons on his own citizens. But Obama failed to follow up and bring Assad to heel. He’s still there, thumbing his nose at Obama. Vladimir Putin, eager to keep a Russian toehold in the Middle East, has rushed to Assad’s side under the jus-tification that he’s fighting ISIS terrorists.

How much responsibility for the plight of the Syrian refugees you assign to Obama’s failure to get tough with Assad may depend on what you think we’ve learned from our Middle Eastern misadventures. It’s hard not to notice that deposing one despot seems to open the door for another. And in Syria, some-thing exceptionally bestial is slouching its way to power by trying to oust Assad: ISIS.

Latest scourgeISIS is the latest inhumane scourge blos-

soming in a profoundly dysfunctional region that’s long been in thrall to theological thug-gery and civic rot. These problems are the Middle East’s to solve, not the West’s. But we, alas, made the Middle East’s problems our own the day we signed up for its oil. That selfsame oil now is altering climate and, ironically, promises to trigger ever more human migration to a better address. Clever!

Did Obama’s determination to get Iran — another ally of Syria’s — to agree to stop producing nuclear weapons over-ride his concern for the Syrians? If so, it’s the sort of lesser-of-evils choice that presi-dents are hired to make. Only time will tell if Obama made the right call in overlooking the humanitarian crisis in Syria today to avoid a much wider one tomorrow from a bellicose, nuclear-armed Iran.

The refugees meanwhile are bypassing nations such as the suddenly unwelcoming socialist paradise of Denmark or less para-disiacal Hungary, where a fence was built

with the government’s stated aim of keeping “non-Christians” out. The refugees vastly prefer Germany. But why Germany, with its history of horrific treatment of “The Other”?

Because Chancellor Andrea Merkel invited them to come. And — here the Trump-traumatized mind reels — she bluntly told her fellow citizens to expect that the influx of newcomers will change Germany.

Germany certainly isn’t opening its doors out of altruism only. There’s a quid pro quo: Germany needs young workers if its econ-omy is to remain successful. It’s a time-tested trade-off for nations smart enough to know that newcomers strengthen their countries.

Factoid: The European Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development tracks the economies of 34 nations. It found that in almost all of them, immigration between 1990 and 2000 had a positive effect on wages of native workers, even those with low income.

Still, no one should assume that integrat-ing Muslims into godless Europe will be painless. The results so far have been unim-pressive. It’s harder for immigrants to get jobs in Europe than in other rich countries, and it remains harder for their European-born children. France has perhaps the most glaring record of failure in helping newcom-ers thrive; many of its immigrants remain dangerously stuck in ghettos. Legal sta-tus granted to Muslim women throughout Europe has caused the most intense conflicts.

This European effort to absorb a massive number of “aliens” bears watching. Why? Because the United Nations now says Earth’s population will reach nearly 10 billion in 2050 and 11 billion by 2100.

Asked to deal with mass displacement from places where human life becomes unbearable, it seems wealthy nations have two reasonable choices: Either we help fix the problems at their miserable source — think Syria — or we learn how to accommodate lots of newcomers.

An immigrant from Norway, Solveig Torvik lives in Winthrop.

No Bad Days

Sharing the spaceReturning to the valley after a few days in the big city always

feels like being released from a pressure cooker to me, as much as I like Seattle and what it offers. It doesn’t take much time back in the

Methow to remind you where you are and what that means.

Open range, for one thing. The week-end before last I returned to my cabin, a ways up West Chewuch Road, to find ample evidence that my yard had been grazed by a small herd of cattle. Trained professional observer that I am, I couldn’t help but notice that the grass was munched down and the visitors had left substantial organic mementos dec-orating the landscape. It looked like a

section of the Chisholm Trail, with less dust.It wasn’t the first time I’ve been a temporary rancher. Wandering

livestock are pretty common in my neighborhood and the owners eventually round them up. Yippee ki-yay ki-yo. I didn’t mind. I won’t have to mow the big yard for a while, if at all, before fall is firmly established. The cattle are pretty amiable, and while they aren’t espe-cially dainty in their waste disposal habits, it’s biodegradable and easily stepped around. Besides, it’s kind of fun to watch cows from your front porch now and again with a cup of coffee in hand.

Lately, a young buck deer has been hanging around, munching apples under the ancient tree out by the road and wandering through the yard. A few days ago, it walked right up to the porch and stood there in stare-down mode, oblivious to the irony of a big rack of deer antlers mounted on the storage shed a few feet away. I think it was seeking shade on what was a very hot day. The buck doesn’t even look up any more when I pull my truck into the driveway. I guess we’re used to each other.

I’ve also been keeping an eye on a covey — I think that’s the word — of quail growing up in the cover of heavy brush along the driveway. It’s been interesting to watch what I assume are the parents lead the little featherballs out into the driveway to peck away at who knows what. The slightest noise or disturbance sends them skitter-ing back into cover. A squawking, swooping jay gets them moving pretty quickly.

The other day, as a bunch of the young ones were bobbing away under the protective eyes of the elders, one of the fledglings came charging out of the brush and began aggressively chasing another one with what seemed to be angry intent. For cryin’ out loud, I thought, they’re quail — what possible issues could they have with each other that would prompt such discord? Some kind of avian sibling rivalry must have been at work.

I ran into my next-door neighbor at the Methow Conservancy’s Cider Squeeze last weekend and we compared wildlife notes. He confirmed that I had bovine visitors while I was gone, and is also familiar with the buck and the quail. I guess we’re just one collegial group of critters, trying to get along.

It doesn’t always work out that well for all of the wild and the domesticated around here. The previous tenants of the cabin told me that one of their cats was snatched off the front porch during a winter evening some years back, and the tracks they followed in the snow the next day were of a much bigger feline: a cougar. And I know there are bear nearby, up Cub Creek to be sure and, on at least one occa-sion, ambling across the road in front of my truck.

In Seattle people think it’s exotic — and annoying — to have rac-coons ransacking the garbage cans, crows constantly screaming their territorial warnings or, as happened a few years ago, a fox wander-ing into the county courthouse. I think they feel the pressure of an urban environment too. Their country cousins don’t seem nearly as agitated.

Exercise your freedomLetters must be fewer than 350 words and may

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or drop by 101 N. Glover St., Twisp

Page 5: Methow Valley News, Sept. 30, 2016

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Methow Valley News Wednesday, September 30, 2015 Page A5

(a more exalted person spoke these words recently), then we, that is all of humanity and nature, deserve, sadly, what is coming. And even if we are not fully convinced of the threat that climate change poses, if we are inclined to think the likelihood of catastrophic future events is small, is it not prudent for us to at least take preventive measures? Let us see things as they indeed are, incon-venient though true as this may be, and remember the words of that sage Ameri-can, Benjamin Franklin: “An ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure.”

Herbert WimbergerWinthrop

Many concernsDear Editor:

I went to a meeting at the Twisp Val-ley Grange on Sept. 22 and heard from a panel of ICO enthusiasts. ICO stands for “individuals, clumps, and open-ings” which, according to the North Central Washington Forest Health Col-laborative, is the answer to the valley’s fire management problems. They pro-pose to begin with the Libby Creek/Buttermilk watershed. Even though they were so very excited about this concept, I couldn’t share their gung-ho enthusi-asm. It sounds to me like the forest will be all carved up by the highest bidder. I

left with plenty of concerns.I want to believe that every one of

those folks had the greatest good in mind. But what if ICO isn’t the right treatment for our valley? Are engineered forests what we wish to see here? With all due respect to Dr. Churchill, ICO’s creator, what if this does no more good than the last best strategy applied — fire suppression — which has gotten us into the trouble we’re in now?

The collaborative’s aim is a healthy forest. No argument with that — but roads and ruts creating “moon dust” from heavy equipment is a fact. The microorganisms are killed, the earth turns to dust and then is susceptible to mudslides. How can our precious wild-life live in a clump of trees? What plea-sure or soul renewal will be available to outdoor enthusiasts in this man-made environment?

ICO is pure science, it’s logical, neat and clean. This isn’t Mother Nature’s style. And I’m not convinced that this treatment/prescription doesn’t have too many contra-indications. Let’s not rush into this out of fear and desperation and be sorry later. Can’t we come up with a better strategy? Ask questions, do research, find alternatives.

Joanne CooperCarlton

Great campoutDear Editor:

I would like to share my gratitude for the Methow Valley sixth-grade campout.

This campout has been taking place for nearly 30 years. It was spearheaded by Steve Dixon, and many, many oth-ers that I do not know the names of, but would like to express my gratitude. Howard Sonnichsen has provided the most amazing kitchen setup all these years, with water truck, grills, pots, pans and I understand, actually did the cook-ing for many campouts.

This year there were so many people to thank: Thomson’s Meats donated all the meat. As always, Hank’s Harvest Foods generously gave us cases of good food, from pancake mix to hot choco-late. Local farmers Cammy Green and Eric Wittenbach of Willowbrook Farms gave us tomatoes, onions and potatoes. Watershine Woods at Okanogan Pro-ducers Market filled up boxes of fruit, and Elisa Jumars of Plow Horse Greens filled an entire cooler with gourmet salad greens. Katie Bristol from Cin-namon Twisp Bakery supplied us with the best granola in the valley and we ate garlic bread from the Mazama Store, baguettes that Missy and Rick Leduc donated. It was quite the week of feast-ing on amazing local foods.

The sixth-grade class learned about setting up a box tent, fire ecology, canoeing, archery and storytelling. They hiked the 7-mile loop of Maple Pass and completed a service project with the U.S. Forest Service at the Falls Creek campsite.

What a unique experience. I am

grateful to the individuals who began this tradition some 30 years ago and am grateful to our teachers, administration and school board who continue to make it happen. I am especially grateful to the parents who showed up and worked long hours and to Jeff Monahan, who was our steady leader, but mostly, I am grate-ful for the experience to engage with this group of kids. I have never been so proud. To all those parents that were not able to attend: Wow, what a polite, hard-working, engaged and — above all — fun group of kids we have. You should be very proud.

Molly PattersonTwisp

Camp cook/sixth-grade parent

Legacy of liesDear Editor:

I. F. Stone, one of the most famous journalists of the 20th century, observed that, “Every government is run by liars and nothing they say should be believed.” Most of us would agree that governments lie, but the more interest-ing fact is that we want to be lied to. We want to be told that we are the good guys, and that some other group is the bad guys. Somehow this seems to com-fort us, even though it is a lie

The Vietnam War is the most glaring example, but there are many others. Ho Chi Minh read from the U.S. Declara-tion of Independence in proclaiming Vietnamese independence at the end of WW II. The United States ignored him

and sent money and weapons to support the French effort to forcefully retake their colony of “Indochina.”

When the French were defeated in 1954, the United States divided Viet-nam into North and South. Somehow all the “bad guys” ended up in the north and the “good guys” in the south. The United States flew in a dictator, Ngo Dinh Diem, who had been living in the west, to run South Vietnam. There was supposed to be a reunification election in 1956 but the United States blocked it because it was obvious that Ho Chi Minh would win. As a result, 58,000 American soldiers died fighting — for a lie.

There was no North and South Korea until the United States created them in August 1945. Again somehow all the “bad guys” ended up in the north and all the “good guys” in the south. The United States flew in a dictator, Syng-man Rhee,who had been living in the west, to run South Korea. Anybody see a pattern here? Another 36,000 Ameri-can soldiers died — for a lie.

We have been at war in Iraq since 1990. That country has been destroyed; 2 million Iraqis have died; 5 million are homeless; 5,000 Americans have been killed. For what? As Mark Twain noted, “It is much easier to fool people, than to convince them that they have been fooled.”

Dana VisalliTwisp

LETTERSFrom Page A4

My turn

JBLM’s empire building doesn’t help the Methow ValleyBy Melanie Rowland

In his My Turn column (Sept. 16), Jim Pigott chided the editor of the Methow Valley News and others who object to the U.S. Army’s proposal to conduct moun-tain helicopter training in the North Cascades. While many believe that the proposal is bad for the land and bad for our recreation-based economy, Mr. Pigott says we are ignoring the critical work — and need for training — of the helicopter pilots who were instrumental in fighting our recent wildfires and who rescue injured hikers in our mountains.

Not true. Helicopter pilots — both military and civilian — currently get training in other mountain areas, such as Colorado, and can continue to do

so. Yes, Joint Base Lewis-McChord (JBLM) has to wait its turn for train-ing at an established facility. But is the wish for a new Mountain Training Area (MTA) in the North Cascades enough to outweigh the environmental, economic, and social impacts to residents of, and visitors to, the Methow Valley? And how useful would it be, anyway, when the stated training need for helicopters is for 14,000 feet, and the highest proposed landing zone is under 8,000 feet?

The real impetus behind the current proposal seems to be a desire to fur-ther enhance the influence of JBLM in the military hierarchy by giving it its own MTA. JBLM has recently become home to the 16th Combat Aviation Bri-gade, formerly based in Alaska, making

it the West Coast’s largest Army base. This achievement is considered quite a coup. With the bonus of an MTA under its control, it could rent out any training slots it didn’t use to other military units, making money and further establishing its prominence and, incidentally, assur-ing that we live and recreate in what sounds like a war zone much of the time.

Apparently JBLM made a big mis-take when the new brigade arrived from Alaska. It sent them flying off base in the local area (Tacoma and surround-ings) without any environmental review or public notice. This led to vehement protest by the people who were sub-jected to ear-shattering flyovers night after night. The Army belatedly realized that it had failed to conduct the public

notice and review process required by law (News Tribune, Aug. 4, 2013). Hence, the current scoping document, starting the process to make these fly-overs legal.

It looks to me like they decided to add an MTA while they’re doing the required public process for establishing the close-in training areas. Witness the selection criteria in the scoping docu-ment: training areas should be “20 min-utes flight time” from the base. That makes sense if the flights will be near Tacoma. But the proposed landing zones in the North Cascades MTA are an hour or more away. Oops.

Getting the former Alaska brigade has resulted in both enhanced funding for the base and indirect economic ben-

efits to Tacoma and surrounding areas. In contrast, the Methow Valley will not get a penny of this money and will suf-fer a major threat to our economic base and the tranquility that drew many of us here.

I, for one, do not want to be a victim of JBLM’s empire-building effort. And I’m not worried that rejecting this pro-posal would hinder training of the heroic pilots who protect us, our homes, and our visitors. I cannot believe that what we need to assure future helicopter fire protection and mountain rescues is a highly disruptive aircraft training zone in one of the most revered natural areas in the state.

Melanie Rowland lives in Twisp.

Sage grouse decision reveals a law’s cloutBy Jodi Peterson Writers on the Range

On Sept. 22, the U.S. Fish and Wild-life Service made a landmark decision, declaring that the greater sage grouse, that icon of the Western High Plains, does not warrant federal protection. The chicken-sized bird’s numbers have dwindled from a historic high of perhaps 16 million to about 400,000, as its sage-brush range has been transformed into oil and gas fields, wind farms, ranches and subdivisions.

The federal decision is a favorable verdict on one of the biggest conser-vation experiments ever undertaken. To avoid an Endangered Species Act listing, which could put the brakes on many human activities across 11 West-ern states, local and regional partner-ships and collaborative efforts poured immense amounts of money and effort into trying to save the bird.

People working at every level of gov-ernment, along with ranchers, energy

companies, utilities, mining companies and others, came up with action plans. They’ve done everything from placing conservation easements to halt develop-ment, to changing how cattle are grazed, to setting up shipping containers around drill rigs to create buffers that shield breeding grounds from disruptive noise.

“I believe this is the way to do conser-vation,” says Brian Rutledge, vice presi-dent of the national Audubon Society, referring to the compromises that have been made. “We’re engaging every tier of society that’s making a living in sage-brush. (But) we’re not stopping develop-ment, and everybody’s a little unhappy.”

Many of those collaborative efforts had been going on at some level for decades. But everything got kicked into high gear in 2010, when the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service first announced that the sage grouse warranted pro-tection under the Endangered Species Act — although other vanishing species took higher priority.

Surprisingly, many seemed to argue

that doing nothing was best; if we just left the bird alone, everything would turn out fine. True, nature is resilient, and often recovers on its own when we quit try-ing to fix things. But we can’t just leave the bird alone, because we are not leav-ing its habitat alone. We continue to drill and mine and ranch and build in the open spaces the bird needs to survive. We’ve now intervened so drastically in the sage-brush range — less than 10 percent is still untouched, say biologists — that doing nothing is not an option.

Other vanishingsClait Braun, a biologist who’s spent

his life studying sage grouse, predicts that within 30 years the birds will per-sist only in small isolated populations. And that’s even with all the massive conservation efforts that have been undertaken. But if the grouse vanishes, we’ll suddenly realize that pretty much every other species of wildlife that the sagebrush habitat supports has also van-ished — including quintessential West-

ern wildlife like mule deer and elk, as well as 350 other kinds of creatures.

To avoid that outcome, the federal agencies that control two-thirds of sage grouse range, the U.S. Forest Service and the Bureau of Land Management, put restraints on fossil fuel development, mining and wind farms in areas key to grouse. On the private-land side, the Sage Grouse Initiative and other partner-ships have been giving ranchers incen-tives to improve their properties, which host 80 percent of the wetland areas the birds need, and to protect big chunks of undisturbed habitat from development.

The big question: Will all this turn out to be enough to keep sage grouse around for our grandkids’ grandkids to see? Because the bird is long-lived and its populations tend to fluctuate, we won’t know until years from now how this experiment turns out. If it isn’t working, we’re going to have to give more, sacrifice more, and restrain our urge to develop and exploit even fur-ther — or the federal government will

step back in and finally put the bird on the endangered species list.

That’s an outcome very few want to see. The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, in announcing that the grouse doesn’t need protection, is signaling that it’s confident that the decision will stand up to the inevitable court challenges. The greater sage grouse may well end up showing us that some laws function best when they don’t go into effect at all. A listing under the Endangered Species Act would have pushed a lot of anti-federal Westerners away from the voluntary incentives and collaboration that the mere threat of that listing has encouraged.

The Endangered Species Act, notes Rutledge, “is almost always better used as a motivator as opposed to an outcome. It moves people to get the work done — and it’s very effective in that light.”

Jodi Peterson is a contributor to Writers on the Range, the column ser-vice of High Country News, where she is a senior editor.

Page 6: Methow Valley News, Sept. 30, 2016

HEALTH & SERVICE DIRECTORIES Deadline for ad placement & changes is Friday at 5pm

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Page A6 Wednesday, September 30, 2015 Methow Valley News

USFS decision on Flagg Mountain copper drilling proposal due in NovemberBy Ann McCreary

Wildfires have once again delayed completion of a U.S. For-est Service environmental study of a proposal to conduct explor-atory drilling for copper on Forest Service land near Flagg Mountain in Mazama.

Forest Service staff have been busy dealing with sum-mer wildfires and their after-math, pushing the anticipated completion of a decision on the Mazama Copper Project to Nov. 30, said Laurie Dowie, special uses and mineral coor-dinator for the Methow Ranger District.

That means that work on the

project, if it receives Forest Ser-vice permission to go forward, can’t begin on site until late next summer. Goat Creek Road, which provides access to the pro-posed drilling site, is closed on Nov. 30 for grooming as a snow-mobile trail.

Drilling can’t begin until after Aug. 1, because the Flagg Moun-tain area is habitat to North-ern spotted owls, protected as a threatened species under fed-eral law. The owls’ nesting sea-son extends until August and the birds can’t be disturbed during that critical time.

“We have most of the reports from specialists” examining impacts on groundwater, vegeta-

tion, wildlife, etc., Dowie said. The reports need to be completed and compiled.

Dowie said she does not know where Blue River Resources Ltd., the Canadian firm propos-ing the project, plans to acquire water that would be trucked up to the site during drilling. The Town of Winthrop turned down a request from the company ear-lier this year to purchase water from the town.

The company is currently working with regulatory agen-cies including the state Depart-ment of Ecology, Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife and National Marine Fisheries Service to obtain the necessary

approvals for the proposed proj-ect, Dowie said.

Delayed by firesThe project’s environmental

study was delayed last summer as well because Forest Service personnel working on it were diverted to work on the Carlton Complex Fire.

Blue River Resources first approached the Forest Service with the Mazama Copper Proj-ect proposal in 2013. The proj-ect would involve drilling up to 15 holes, up to 980 feet deep, to determine if there are mineral resources worth extracting in the Flagg Mountain area.

The proposal generated sub-

stantial public interest and almost 800 public comments last year that required analysis by the Forest Service.

In order to expedite the anal-ysis of the project, Blue River Resources entered into a cost-sharing agreement with the For-est Service to pay for staff time on the project.

According to documents obtained by the Methow Val-ley News through a Freedom of Information Act request, Blue River Resources agreed to pay $23,091 for staff time involved in the study.

The exploratory drilling is proposed as a short-term min-eral exploration that will last less

than a year, with no new road construction. Based on those criteria, the project qualifies as “categorically excluded” from more detailed environmental review.

After analysis is complete, a decision memo will be issued by District Ranger Mike Liu.

When a project receives For-est Service approval under the categorical exclusion designa-tion, there is not provision for administrative appeal of the decision, unlike an Environmen-tal Assessment or Environmen-tal Impact Statement. The only recourse for citizens who object to the decision would be to file a lawsuit.

Lamprey release seeks to re-establish the ancient fish in the Methow RiverBy Marcy Stamper

Pacific lamprey are hardy crea-tures — they have been found in fossil records more than 400 million years old — but in recent years their numbers in the Methow River watershed have dropped by 90 percent.

Hoping the fish will spawn here in the spring and begin to reestablish the pop-ulation, biologists with Yakama Nation Fisheries released 75 adult lamprey in the Methow River near Winthrop on Wednesday (Sept. 23).

Ralph Lampman, a Pacific lamprey project biologist with Yakama Nation Fisheries, said this release is a stop-gap measure to prevent lamprey from becoming extirpated in the Methow River watershed. They released another group in the lower Methow River the week before.

Lampman and his colleagues col-lected the wild fish at several lower Columbia River dams earlier this sum-mer, and all the fish have been tagged so scientists can track their movements. Biologists expect some may travel to the Twisp or Chewuch rivers, and will base future releases on where the fish travel, said Lampman.

“I really like salmon — but I love lam-prey,” said Lampman. In fact, Lampman is such an enthusiast of the slithery fish that he has written a rap song about them, which he performed for the 50 adults and children who came to help with the release last week.

Lampman composed the rap in grad-uate school, when he was working on a research project on lamprey at a dam. After the dam was dewatered, Lamp-man would find thousands of dead lam-prey in the dried-out sediment. He felt so helpless that he went home one night and wrote the lyrics.

Many of the children at the lamprey

release were eager to help collect water in buckets to transport the lamprey down to the river, but transferring them from two large vessels into the buckets — which required dexterity to nab the serpentlike fish — was not for everyone. Some kids relished the chance to reach a gloved hand into the water, but others recoiled as the lamprey wriggled around.

John Crandall, monitoring coordina-tor with the Methow Restoration Coun-cil, has been tracking and counting lamprey juveniles at numerous sites in the Methow River watershed since 2008. While there were hundreds of juveniles when he started keeping track, there are now some sites with no larvae at all, he told the group.

Crandall said many factors have contributed to the lamprey’s precipi-tous decline. Their habitat has been decreased by residential and agricultural development. Lamprey also have a hard time getting through the fish ladders at the nine dams on the Columbia. While 90 to 95 percent of salmon typically make it over the ladders, only half of the lamprey do, said Lampman.

Blind, then parasiticLamprey have an unusual life cycle.

The juveniles, which are blind, spend five to eight years in the sand and silt of freshwater rivers near where they are

born, where they filter out microscopic particles for food, cleaning the water at the same time. They function sort of like earthworms in the river, said Crandall.

The fish then develop eyesight and migrate to the ocean, where they spend two years before returning to fresh water to spawn. In the ocean phase of their life, lamprey are parasitic, latching onto salmon, halibut, cod and killer whales with their mouths to suck blood and pro-teins. While the lamprey do some harm to the other fish, they don’t kill them, said Crandall.

With all the attention and resources directed toward salmon recovery, lam-prey can seem overlooked. While native residents in the Columbia Basin ate them, European settlers saw lamprey as parasites, not as food. “They suck blood — that doesn’t necessarily translate to a warm, fuzzy feeling,” said Crandall.

Lamprey are among the oldest-liv-ing vertebrates on earth, said Crandall. “They were probably sucking on the legs of brontosaurus,” he said. “They’re really amazing fish. They’re very strange — they look like eels, but aren’t.”

Lamprey survived numerous mass extinctions and catastrophic changes, including ice ages, volcanic eruptions and meteorites. But accelerated human development in the past 150 years poses a unique threat to the fish, said Lampman.

While there were half-a-million lam-prey in the Columbia River in the last century, populations crashed about 50 years ago and now there are only 10,000 to 30,000, said Crandall. There are probably not enough adults returning to replenish the local population, he said.

The Yakama biologists hope the lam-prey releases will start rebuilding the

population in the Methow watershed. While lamprey do not necessarily return to the same stream to spawn, the adults can smell chemicals released by the lar-vae, which scientists believe will encour-age them to spawn in the vicinity.

The lamprey released over the last few weeks will find a protected place to over-winter and will spawn next June or July.

An excerpt from Lampman’s lamprey rap:I’m a vampire, bloodsucker, parasite, and many people want us simply “out-of-sight”But we have a right to fight the plight, and hope down the road, you’ll see the light We’ve been around for 450 million years, so stop the smear and don’t you mis-hear We were up here long before the dinosaurs appeared, can’t say this without a tear You know, I’m a sucker naturally, but don’t you dare judge me I have a function on this planet, now can’t you try to understand it? We bring back the ocean’s rich nutrients to serve our fellow constituents.Can I get a big “yes!” now for lamprey revival?

Photo by Marcy StamperFrank Spillar, with the Pacific Lamprey Project (wearing hat), got help from a budding fish biologist moving this lamprey to its new home in the Methow River.

Page 7: Methow Valley News, Sept. 30, 2016

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Methow Valley News

Methow Valley News File photo by Laurelle WalshJuggler John Crandall put on a fiery show at last year ’s inaugural Phoenix Festival at TwispWorks.

Methow Valley News Wednesday, September 30, 2015 Page A7

Arts & CultureA r ts brief s

Reddington exhibit at Mazama

Country InnWorks by local ar tist

Ginger Reddington are on dis-play at the Mazama Country Inn through Dec. 30 Redding-ton’s paintings can be seen in the dining room and lobby whenever the inn is open. For more about her work, visit www.gingerreddington.com. The exhibit is sponsored by Confluence Gallery. For more information, call 997-2681.

 Inspired weavingMaster weaver Ma r y

Berent will talk about “Inspi-ration, Color and Design” in a free presentation on Oct. 11 from 6:30 – 8:30 p.m. at the Education Station on the TwispWorks campus. The event is sponsored by the Methow Valley Spinners

and Weavers Guild. For more information, call 996-2297.

‘Diabolical’ event at The Merc

The Merc Playhouse is get-ting ready for its next pro-duction, “Diabolical Elixir, or Choose Your Poison,” described as a live radio show and gothic melodrama “mash-up” that opens on Oct. 23. The show is adapted and directed by Ki Gottberg, The Merc’s artistic director.

“Diabolical Elixer” runs through Oct. 31. Showtimes are 7 p.m. on Thursday and Friday, 9 p.m. on Saturday and 2 p.m. on Sunday. Tick-ets are $15, or $5 for students 18 and younger, and can be ordered online at www.brownpapert ickets. com/event/2304151. For more information, call 997-7529.

Photo courtesy of Confluence GalleryPurple Shades of Barn is one of the works that will be on display.

PUD must replace burned power poles before winterOutages will be required to make repairsBy Marcy Stamper

Although the Okanogan County Public Utility Dis-trict (PUD) was able to restore power fairly quickly after the August wildfires, 280 of the utility’s poles were so badly damaged that they have to be replaced before winter. The repairs will require one or two daytime power outages to make the repairs safely, according to General Manager John Grubich.

The unstable power poles include six on the Loup Loup transmission line that carries power to the Methow Valley. “We did the bare essential to get power back to the Methow,” said Grubich.

Another 48 poles on the Con-conully Highway were also severely burned. Damage to the PUD’s infrastructure occurred “all over the place,” but the biggest impact was in the area between Conconully and Tunk Mountain in the eastern part of the county, said Grubich.

The condition of the poles still constitutes an emergency because they could threaten life or property. “Those six poles on the Loup will fall down if we don’t replace them before the snow flies,” said Grubich.

In addition to the poles, the fires burned 241 miles of dis-tribution line, 4 miles of the

Loup Loup transmission line near Okanogan, and 8,000 feet of fiber-optic cable. In all, the PUD estimates it will cost $3.5 million to $5 million in mate-rials and labor to repair infra-structure.

State and county officials conducted preliminary damage assessments last week — which include the PUD’s losses — for a possible application to the Fed-eral Emergency Management Agency (FEMA) for a disaster declaration. Washington emer-gency managers are still ana-lyzing their findings to decide whether the damage warrants an application for aid, according to Karina Shagren, communi-cations director for the Wash-ington Military Department. A FEMA disaster declaration could reimburse the county and utilities for three-quarters of the cost of losses to public infra-structure.

The fiber-optic cables pro-vide broadband Internet service throughout the county through leases to Internet providers. The Methow Valley’s service has not been affected because the PUD has a redundant fiber network along the valley floor from Pateros to Twisp, but they need to replace the cables over the Loup to ensure uninterrupted service, said Grubich.

The power outages have not been scheduled yet, but Gru-bich estimated repairing the Loup Loup transmission line would necessitate one or two eight-hour shifts during daylight hours.

Photo by Laurelle WalshScores of square dancers hit the street in downtown Winthrop on Satur-day during the annual Barn Dance sponsored by Sheri’s Sweet Shoppe. The 2015 Barn Dance attracted dancers and clubs from around the Pacific Northwest and callers and cuers from Washington, Oregon and British Co-lumbia for two days of celebrating Washington’s official state dance.

Celebrate authentic Carnaval at Phoenix Festival on Saturday

Experience an autumnal Brazilian Carnaval with music, Brazilian dance and colorful costumes and Capoiera arts interwoven with local musicians, artisans, and art-making at the Phoenix Festival on Saturday (Oct. 3). The free event will be from 4 – 9 p.m. at TwispWorks

The festival, launched last year, celebrates the resilience of the Methow Valley. It is spon-sored by TwispWorks, Methow Arts Alliance and Confluence Gallery.

Local food vendors and a beer garden will be available throughout the event. There will also be a giant piñata for kids and adults alike, fire dancing,

juggling and open art studios.Eduardo Mendonça, Show

Brazil’s organizer, is a singer, guitarist and percussionist. He brings four multi-instrumen-talists, four dancers and two Capoeira artists. They mix tra-ditional rhythms with contem-porary styles from across Brazil.

“[We use] many traditional drums mixed with horns, elec-tric guitar and bass. That’s an unusual combination for those that know only the real Carna-val,” says Mendonça.

Tickets are $19 in advance at www.brownpapertickets.com/event/2111820, or $25 at the door; and $5 for ages 5-15. For more information, call 997-4004.

Swing your partnerColville Tribes get contract for salmon restoration in Methow

The Colville Tribes’ Fish and Wildlife (CTFW) Depart-ment was recently awarded a contract for over $417,000 from the Bonneville Power Adminis-tration to continue habitat res-toration work in the Methow Sub-basin. The restoration work will benefit Chinook salmon, summer steelhead, bull trout and Pacific lamprey.

The new award will allow fish biologists to install fenc-ing to keep livestock out of the Methow River, develop an alter-native water source for live-stock, install a well, and replace an undersized culvert on Frazer

Creek with a bridge to improve fish passage, according to a press release.

“Since there are already substantial existing restoration efforts in the Methow, I see our role at this point as to coordinate with these efforts, provide sup-port where needed, and imple-ment projects that will have the greatest biological benefit for the cost,” said Paul Wagner, fish biologist for CTFW. “Fish pas-sage projects and livestock fenc-ing projects are good examples of project types that have a rela-tively high biological benefit for a modest cost.”

Page 8: Methow Valley News, Sept. 30, 2016

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[email protected]

Wednesday 9/30 AWANA: Games, songs and story time for 3-year-olds to 6th graders, at Cascade Bible Church, Twisp. 977-8312. 7-8:30pm

Thursday 10/1WOMEN, INFANTS & CHILDREN: WIC help with nutrition, health care and food. Room One, 315 S. Lincoln, Twisp. 997-2050. Call for hoursSPINNERS & WEAVERS: Meets at 137 Old Twisp Highway. 997-5666. 1pmFOOD BANK: “More than just food” at The Cove, 128 Glover St., Twisp. 997-0227. 1-4pmFIREFIGHTERS DISTRICT 6: Training and meetings at local fire halls. 997-2981. 6:30pmMV BACKCOUNTRY HORSEMEN: Meeting at MV Senior Center, Twisp. 997-4802. 7pmATV CLUB: ATV recreation, trail & camp-site maintenance, and roads discussed at Eagles Hall, Twisp. 996-3321. 7pm

Friday 10/2DOCTOR: Free health care to uninsured people 18 and under at The Country Clin-ic, Winthrop. Appointment: 996-8180.PILOTS' POTLUCK: At Twisp Airport. 997-8141. 5:30pm BINGO: Play at Eagles Hall, Twisp. 997-8133. 6pm

Monday 10/5COUNT Y COMMISSIONERS: Open meeting, Okanogan County Admin. Bldg., 123 Fifth Ave. N., Okanogan. 422-7100. 9am-5pmSPEAK FRENCH: Revive or improve your French in Hank's deli. 997-6242. 4:30-5:30pmGAME NIGHT: Darts, cards and free pool at Eagles Hall, Twisp. 997-8133. 5:30pmWINTHROP BARN: Board meeting. Info: 996-2117. 6pmBEAVER CREEK CEMETERY: Board meeting at Cascade Center, 125 Hwy. 20, Rm. 2. 997-3569. 6:15pm

Tuesday 10/6WINTHROP KIWANIS: Meets at the Winthrop Barn. 997-1086 or 997-5666. 6:30-7:30amTOPS: Take Off Pounds Sensibly at MV United Methodist Church, between Twisp and Winthrop. 997-2242. 8:30-10amCOUNT Y COMMISSIONERS: Open meeting, Okanogan County Admin. Bldg., 123 Fifth Ave. N., Okanogan. 422-7100. 9am-5pmLADIES GOLF CLUB: Meets at Bear Creek Golf Course. 341-4228. 9am

Wednesday 10/7 WOMEN RECOVERING FROM AD-DICTION: Support group at Room One. 997-2050. Call for timeCLOSET QUILTERS: Open studio, 309 Highway 20, Twisp. Free. 997-7020. Noon-5pmFAMILY PLANNING CLINIC: At Room One, 315 S. Lincoln St., Twisp. 997-2050. 1-5pmPRAYER SHAWL MINISTRY: at Twist-ed Knitters in TwispWorks. 997-0233. 2-5pmAWANA: Games, songs and story time for 3-year-olds to 6th graders, at Cascade Bible Church, Twisp. 977-8312. 7-8:30pmEAGLES AUXILIARY: Meeting at Eagles Hall, Twisp. 322-3341. 7pmWINTHROP TOWN COUNCIL: At Win-throp Barn Hen House. 996-2320. 7pmEASTERN STAR: Meets at Masonic Hall in Okanogan. 997-2071. 7:30pm

Thursday 10/8WINTHROP CHAMBER: Meets at Win-throp Barn. 996-2125. 8:30amFOOD BANK: “More than just food” at The Cove, 128 Glover St., Twisp. 997-0227. 1-4pmSPINNERS & WEAVERS: Meets at 137 Old Twisp Highway. 997-5666. 1pmFIREFIGHTERS DISTRICT 6: Training and meetings at local fire halls. 997-2981. 6:30pmTWISP LIBRARY FRIENDS: Meets in the library. 997-4681. 7pmAMERICAN LEGION: Regular meeting at the Legion Hall, 626 Bridge St., Twisp. 997-4481. 7pmMV MASONIC LODGE #240: Meets at Masonic Hall, Twisp. 997-5423. 7:30pm

Friday 10/9DOCTOR: Free health care to uninsured people 18 and under at The Country Clin-ic, Winthrop. Appointment: 996-8180.PILOTS' POTLUCK: At Twisp Airport. 997-8141. 5:30pm

BINGO: Play at Eagles Hall, Twisp. 997-8133. 6pm

Saturday 10/10GENEALOGY CLUB: Meets at the MV United Methodist Church. 997-0698. 10am

Monday 10/12COUNT Y COMMISSIONERS: Open meeting, Okanogan County Admin. Bldg., 123 Fifth Ave. N., Okanogan. 422-7100. 9am-5pmMETHOW VALLEY COMMUNICA-TIONS DISTRICT: Meets at TwispWorks conference room. 322-4038. 3:45pmSPEAK FRENCH: Revive or improve your French in Hank's deli. 997-6242. 4:30-5:30pmGAME NIGHT: Darts, cards and free pool at Eagles Hall, Twisp. 997-8133. 5:30pmTRANSIT: Okanogan County Transit Authority public board meeting in council chambers at Omak City Hall. 557-6177. 6pmMV IRRIGATION DISTRICT: Meeting at Riverbank building, Twisp. 997-2576. 7pmFIRE DISTRICT 6 COMMISSIONERS: Public meeting at Twisp Fire Hall, 434 W. 2nd Ave., Twisp. 997-2981. 7pmCOMMUNIT Y CENTER BOARD: Room 4, MV Community Center, Twisp. 7pm

Tuesday 10/13MENTAL HEALTH: Counselor for un-insured adults at Room One. 997-2050. All day WINTHROP KIWANIS: Meets at the Winthrop Barn. 997-1086 or 997-5666. 6:30-7:30amTOPS: Take Off Pounds Sensibly at MV United Methodist Church, between Twisp and Winthrop. 997-2242. 8:30-10amCOUNT Y COMMISSIONERS: Open meeting, Okanogan County Admin. Bldg., 123 Fifth Ave. N., Okanogan. 422-7100. 9am-5pmLADIES GOLF CLUB: Meets at Bear Creek Golf Course. 341-4228. 9amTWISP TOWN COUNCIL: Meets at Town Hall. 997-4081. 5pm

Wednesday 10/14 WOMEN RECOVERING FROM AD-DICTION:: Support group at Room One. 997-2050. Call for timeCLOSET QUILTERS: Open studio, 309 Highway 20, Twisp. Free. 997-7020. Noon-5pm FAMILY PLANNING CLINIC: At Room One, 315 S. Lincoln St., Twisp. 997-2050. 1-5pmPRAYER SHAWL MINISTRY: at Twist-ed Knitters in TwispWorks. 997-0233. 2-5pmMV SCHOOL BOARD: Meeting in the school district office. See agenda: www.methow.org, click “school board and staff.” 996-9205. 5:30pm TWISP VALLEY GRANGE: Potluck (5:30pm) and meeting (6:30pm) at the Grange Hall. 997-8050 or 997-4841.AWANA: Games, songs and story time for 3-year-olds to 6th graders, at Cascade Bible Church, Twisp. 977-8312. 7-8:30pmMV EAGLES AERIE #2584: Meeting at Eagles Hall, Twisp. 997-8133. 7pm

Thursday 10/15WOMEN, INFANTS & CHILDREN: WIC help with nutrition, health care and food. Room One, 315 S. Lincoln, Twisp. 997-2050. Call for hoursFOOD BANK: “More than just food” at The Cove, 128 Glover St., Twisp. 997-0227. 1-4pmSPINNERS & WEAVERS: Meets at 137 Old Twisp Highway. 997-5666. 1pmMETHOW WATERSHED COUNCIL: Discuss implementation of plan at 206 Glover St., Twisp. 341-4260. 5-7pm FIREFIGHTERS DISTRICT 6: Training and meetings at local fire halls. 997-2981. 6:30pm

Friday 10/16DOCTOR: Free health care to uninsured people 18 and under at The Country Clin-ic, Winthrop. Appointment: 996-8180.PILOTS' POTLUCK: At Twisp Airport. 997-8141. 5:30pm BINGO: Play at Eagles Hall, Twisp. 997-8133. 6pm

Saturday 10/17AMATEUR RADIO: Anyone interested in ham radio invited to a meeting at Hometown Pizza, Twisp. 996-2545. 5pm

Sunday 10/18FAMILY CAREGIVERS: Support group meets at Room One. 997-2050. 3-4:30pm

WedneSday SePT. 30MUSIC: The Apostles at Mick & Miki's Red Cedar Bar, Twisp. Free. 997-6425. 7-9pm

THURSday OCT. 1IMPROV: RightNow Improv theater group practice for all levels at the Interpretive Center at TwispWorks. By donation. 341-4900. 5:30pm COUNTRY/COWBOY MUSIC: The Notable Exceptions at Sun Mountain Lodge. Free. 996-2211. 6pm FIRE ACTION REVIEW: Okanogan County commissioners host a review of recent firefight-ing actions at Agri-Plex Annex, Okanogan County Fairgrounds. 422-7206. 6:30pmHELICOPTER TRAINING PROPOSAL: Public meeting to discuss the U.S. Army’s proposal to conduct helicopter training exercises in the North Cas-cades, at Twisp Valley Grange. Free. 997-0888. 7-9pm

OCT. 2 – 3RUMMAGE SALE: Community Cultural Center of Tonasket hosts its fall rummage sale. 486-2061. 9am-4pm each day

FRiday OCT. 2MUSIC: Rico Stover and Joe Marver perform at Twisp River Suites. Free with reservation. 997-0100. 5:30-7:30pm FREESTYLE DANCE: Open to anyone who loves dancing, at The Studio, Twisp. $5. 996-2017. 5:45-6:45pmSHEILA BRANDENBURG RETIREMENT PARTY: At the Winthrop Barn, with music by Wild Mountain Nation. By donation. 996-4417. 7pmOPEN MIC: Hosted by Danbert Nobacon at Old Schoolhouse Brewery, Winthrop. Free. 996-3183. 7pm

SaTURday OCT. 3FARMERS MARKET: At MV Community Center, Twisp. Free. 996-2747. 9am-noonKIDS’ PUMPKIN FEST: Pumpkin patch, games, prizes, hayride, refreshments and country store, at 233 Gold Creek Loop Road, Carlton. Free. 923-2399. 10am-4pmMUSIC: Local musician Marc Holm at Methow Valley Ciderhouse, Winthrop. Free. 341-4354. 3-6pmPHOENIX FESTIVAL: Arts, music, food and more at TwispWorks. $5-$25. 997-4004. 4-9pmAMERICANA/ROCK: Matthew Szlachetka at Old Schoolhouse Brewery, Winthrop. Free. 996-3183. 7pm

SUnday OCT. 4HARVEST CARNIVAL: Bouncy house, bob-bing for apples, potato cannon, cider press, face painting, caramel apples, hot dog roast and more, plus a soup cook-off with prizes, at Mazama Com-munity Church on Highway 20. Free. 996-2089. 2-4pm

MOnday OCT. 5LINE DANCING: With the High Country Kickers at Twisp Valley Grange. 429-2064. 6pm

TUeSday OCT. 6TWISP LIBRARY: Story time and craft project. Free. 997-4681. 1:30pm

WedneSday OCT. 7 WINTHROP LIBRARY: Story time. Free. 996-2685. 1:30pmHISTORY OF FRUIT BUSINESS: Methow Conservancy presents “Ripe for the Telling:  Sur-prising Stories of Washington Fruit” at The Merc Playhouse, Twisp. Free. 996-2870. 7pm MUSIC: The Apostles at Mick & Miki's Red Cedar Bar, Twisp. Free. 997-6425. 7-9pm

THURSday OCT. 8IMPROV: RightNow Improv theater group practice for all levels at the Interpretive Center at TwispWorks. By donation. 341-4900. 5:30pm

OCTOBERFEST: Open mic and authentic German food at Twisp River Suites. Free with res-ervation. 997-0100. 6-8:30pm

FRiday OCT. 9SENIOR DANCE: Hottell Ragtime Jazz Band at MV Senior Citizens Center, Twisp. Free. 997-7722. 12:30-2pmMUSIC: Rico Stover and Joe Marver perform at Twisp River Suites. Free with reservation. 997-0100. 5:30-7:30pm FREESTYLE DANCE: Open to all, at The Studio, Twisp. $5. 996-2017. 5:45-6:45pmROCK AND ROLL: Stubborn Son at Old School-house Brewery, Winthrop. Free. 996-3183. 7pmDOCUMENTARY FILM: Jeff Lowe’s award-win-ning film Metanoia, an account of legendary climber Lowe’s life with ALS, at Sun Mountain Lodge. $15-$20, brownpapertickets.com. 996-2211. 7pm

SaTURday OCT. 10FARMERS MARKET: At MV Community Center, Twisp. Free. 996-2747. 9am-noonFOLK/PUNK/BLUES: Antonette Goroch at Old Schoolhouse Brewery, Winthrop. Free. 996-3183. 7pm

SUnday OCT. 11FIBERARTS DESIGN: Master weaver Mary Berent talks about “Inspiration, Color and Design,” sponsored by MV Spinners & Weavers Guild at The Education Station, TwispWorks. Free. 996-2297. 6:30–8:30pm

MOnday OCT. 12LINE DANCING: With the High Country Kickers at Twisp Valley Grange. 429-2064. 6pm

TUeSday OCT. 13TWISP LIBRARY: Story time and craft project. Free. 997-4681. 1:30pmMV GARDEN CLUB: Exchange gardening info at the Twisp Valley Grange Hall. 997-0515. 1:30pm

WedneSday OCT. 14 CHILD PASSENGER SAFETY CHECK: Have your child's car seat checked, or recycle old car seats, at Hank’s Harvest Foods parking lot in Twisp. Free. 997-4013. Noon-4pmWINTHROP LIBRARY: Story time. Free. 996-2685. 1:30pm PREPAREDNESS TRAINING: Neighborhood leader preparedness training for natural disasters and other events, at Aero Methow Rescue Service, Twisp. Free. Register at 449-5590 or at [email protected]. 5:30-7:30pm

COUNTRY MUSIC: Nicole Unser at Sun Moun-tain Lodge. Free. 996-2211. 6pmMUSIC: The Apostles at Mick & Miki's Red Cedar Bar, Twisp. Free. 997-6425. 7-9pm

THURSday OCT. 15IMPROV: RightNow Improv theater group practice for all levels at the Interpretive Center at TwispWorks. By donation. 341-4900. 5:30pm

FRiday OCT. 16MUSIC: Rico Stover and Joe Marver perform at Twisp River Suites. Free with reservation. 997-0100. 5:30-7:30pm FREESTYLE DANCE: Open to all, at The Studio, Twisp. $5. 996-2017. 5:45-6:45pmJAZZ/FOLK/POP: The Ginger Ups at Old School-house Brewery, Winthrop. Free. 996-3183. 7pm

SaTURday OCT. 17FARMERS MARKET: At MV Community Center, Twisp. Free. 996-2747. 9am-noonFLEA MARKET/VINTAGE SALE: At the Win-throp Barn. Free. 996-2188. 9am-3pmCOUNTRY: Jessica Lynne at Old Schoolhouse Brewery, Winthrop. Free. 996-3183. 7pm

MOnday OCT. 19LINE DANCING: With the High Country Kickers at Twisp Valley Grange. 429-2064. 6pm

TUeSday OCT. 20TWISP LIBRARY: Story time and craft project. Free. 997-4681. 1:30pm

WedneSday OCT. 21WINTHROP LIBRARY: Story time. Free. 996-2685. 1:30pmMUSIC: The Apostles at Mick & Miki's Red Cedar Bar, Twisp. Free. 997-6425. 7-9pm

THURSday OCT. 22IMPROV: RightNow Improv theater group practice for all levels at the Interpretive Center at TwispWorks. By donation. 341-4900. 5:30pm

OCT. 23–25LIVE RADIO SHOW/GOTHIC MELODRAMA: Diabolical Elixir, or Choose Your Poison, at The Merc Playhouse, Twisp. $15 adults; $5 for 18 and under. 997-7529. 7pm Friday, 9pm Satur-day, 2pm Sunday

FRiday OCT. 23 FREESTYLE DANCE: Open to all, at The Studio, Twisp. $5. 996-2017. 5:45-6:45pm

What’s HappeningMeetings, etc.

and other weekly things

Page a8 Wednesday, September 30, 2015 Methow Valley news

File photo by Darla Hussey

Pumpkins, plus other stuffThe Kids’ Pumpkin Fest opens Saturday at 10 a.m. on

Gold Creek Loop Road.

*ALL PHONE NUMBERS ARE 509 AREA CODE ExCEPT WHERE NOTED

Submit events to: [email protected] include the name of event, a short description,

date/time, address, cost and phone number.

Deadline: Fridays at 5pm

FOR AN EXTENDED CALENDAR, VISIT www.methowvalleynews.com

FOR AA, NA & SIMILAR MEETINGS, SEE HEALTH DIRECTORY

Page 9: Methow Valley News, Sept. 30, 2016

Sports & Recreation

Section

BMethow Valley NewsWednesday, September 30, 2015

SportS thiS week10/1: Girls soccer@ Okanogan, 4:30 p.m.10/1: Volleyball @ Manson, 5 p.m.10/2: Football @ Pateros, 7 p.m.10/3: CAN-AM XC Invitational @ Kettle Falls, tba10/6: Girls soccer@ Brewster, 4 p.m.10/6: Volleyball hosts Lake Roosevelt, 5 p.m.10/6: Chelan State Park XC meet, at Chelan State Park, tba

*Game dates and times often change. Please check the school website, www.methow.org, for the most up-to-date information.

Spor ts brief swDFw seeks

comments on deer plan

The Washington Depart-ment of Fish and Wildlife (WDFW) is seeking public comments through Oct. 31 on a draft plan to guide man-agement of the state’s mule deer populations.

Key objectives in the plan include maintaining stable mule-deer opportu-nities for both hunters and wildlife-watchers. It also covers strategies for reduc-ing damage caused by deer to crops and personal prop-erty. The plan is available online for review at http://wdfw.wa.gov/conservation/mule_deer. An online form for the public to submit comments is available on the webpage.

The plan wi l l go to WDFW’s director for final approval later this year. It will be updated as needed in the future.

Burn ban lifted in North Cascades National park

Effective immediately, the burn ban on all lands within Nor th Cascades National Park Service Com-plex is lifted, the National Park Service said Friday (Sept. 25). This includes all national park service lands and campgrounds in Ste-hekin, along State Route 20 and the Ross Lake area. Campfires are allowed in designated areas only. The burn ban lift complements similar lifts in Chelan, Skagit, and Whatcom coun-ties.

Liberty Bell XC teams sweep to first-place finishes at MansonBy Don Nelson

Liberty Bell High School’s resurgent varsity girls’ cross-country team won a trophy for the first time in 10 years with a first-place finish on Saturday (Sept. 26) at the Trojan Invite in Manson.

And the girls did it with four freshmen and a senior, suggest-ing that they are just beginning to realize their potential, said coach Craig Herlihy.

It was a clean sweep for the Mountain Lions, as the boys’ varsity and junior high teams, and the girls’ junior high team, also took first place.

For the varsity girls, freshman Athena Milani led the way with a second-place finish over the 5,000-meter course. She was followed by senior Ella Hall in fourth, and freshmen Ava Mott, Icel Sukovaty and Sage Borgias in fifth, sixth and eighth respectively.

On the boys’ side, senior

Ben Klemmeck took his third straight victory of the season, winning by more than 40 sec-onds. He was followed by soph-omore Eli Nielsen in fourth, freshman Emerson Worrell in eighth, junior Carter Dornfeld in 10th, and sophomore Tim Haley in 20th. Junior Cameron Quinn finished just out of the scoring, a few seconds behind Haley.

For the junior high teams, Walker Hall, Ian Delong and Travis Grialou finished first, second and third, and the junior high girls also swept the top three spots with Novie McCabe first, Rivers Leeman second and Liv Aspholm in third.

“Everybody took care of busi-ness,” Herlihy said. He said the race was also an opportunity for runners to see if they could earn one of the top seven spots in the varsity lineup. Freshman Lazo Gitchos finished seventh among the Mountain Lion boys’ varsity runners at Manson.

Herlihy said he was pleased with the varsity girls’ progress, singling out Milani as a runner who has the potential to be in the Liberty Bell record books.

“We’re where we want to be in mid-season,” Herlihy said.

On Saturday (Oct. 3), the Mountain Lions will travel to Kettle Falls for the Can-Am Invi-tational, where 17 teams including

seven from B league schools are expected to compete. “It’s a good litmus test for us,” Herlihy said.

Liberty Bell will be with-out Klemmeck, Hall and Geza Sukovaty, seniors who will be taking the SAT this weekend, Herlihy said. However, Cade Quigley will be running for the first time this season for the boys, the coach said.

Photo courtesy of Christine Mulliethe Liberty Bell varsity girls’ winning team: Athena Milani, left, icel Sukovaty, Sage Borgias, Ava Mott and ella hall.

Liberty Bell high School finishers, trojan invite

VArSitY BoYS, 5,000 MeterS1. Ben Klemmeck, senior, 15:51.274. Eli Nielsen, sophomore, 16:46.978. Emerson Worrell, freshman,

17:58.9610. Carter Dornfeld, junior, 18:19.0820. Tim Haley, sophomore, 19:34.2621. Cameron Quinn, junior, 19:38.5436. Lazo Gitchos, freshman, 20:34.7340. Peter Aspholm, freshman, 20:54.26

46. Simon Studen, freshman, 21:22.4054. Michael Mott, freshman, 22:55.3555. Zach Strong, freshman, 24:27.12

VArSitY GirLS, 5,000 MeterS2. Athena Milani, freshman, 19:55.944. Ella Hall, senior, 21:11.065. Ava Mott, freshman, 21:34.666. Icel Sukovaty, freshman, 21:56.388. Sage Borgias, freshman, 24:15.78

Mountain Lions ramble to 52-22 victory on the roadBy Don Nelson

The Liberty Bell High School football team bounced back from a home-field defeat with a convincing 52-22 victory at Columbia/Hunters on Friday (Sept. 25).

Coach Steve White said that Enrique Whites got the Moun-tain Lions off to a quick start by returning a kickoff for a touch-down, and Liberty Bell never looked back.

Derek Alumbaugh powered the Mountain Lion offense with two touchdown passes and two running touchdowns. Tanner White also threw a touchdown pass and ran for another score, Coach White said.

The touchdown passes went to Finley Holston, Seth Stevie and Andrew Reggiatore. The

Mountain Lions added five two-point conversions, White said.

Owen Hedly picked off a pass in the fourth quarter to stymie any late-game comeback ideas the home team had, White said.

Liberty Bell is on the road again this weekend, but trav-els only as far as Pateros for a 7 p.m. game on Friday (Oct. 2). Once again, White said, it’s “uncharted territory” to pre-pare for a team the Mountain Lions haven’t seen before in their first season of eight-man football. A few offensive adjustments were necessary in last week’s game, the coach said.

Liberty Bell came out of the Columbia/Hunters game with-out any injuries, White said, and the entire squad got plenty of playing time.

Lady Lions win one of two shoot-out soccer matchesBy Don Nelson

The Liberty Bell High School girls’ soccer team played to two regulation-time ties last week, win-ning one of the games in a shoot-out while dropping the other.

At Bridgeport on Thurs-day (Sept. 24), the Lady Lions stood at 1-1 after regulation play, thanks to a penalty kick by

Cassidy Butler. But while goal-keeper Lauren Ochoa defended well in the shoot-out, Liberty Bell “didn’t shoot well” and Bridgeport prevailed, said coach Lincoln Post.

“We didn’t play well in the first half, but showed definite improvement in the second half,” Post said.

The Lady Lions played a

consistently better game when they hosted Omak on Satur-day (Sept. 26), Post said. “They [Omak] have a strong defense and goaltender,” the coach said.

Ochoa kept Omak out of the net while the Lady Lions couldn’t connect for a score, so regulation play ended at 0-0. In the shoot-out, Stella Gunnip-Hunter, Aden Jones and Cece

Odell scored in the best-three-out-of-five contest while Ochoa stopped Omak, giving Liberty Bell the victory.

“Overall, we’re doing well,” Post said this week. “We’re get-ting better, and the young play-ers are really stepping up.”

Liberty Bell hosted Oroville on Tuesday (Sept. 29), and travel to Okanogan on Thursday (Oct. 1).

LBHS splits volleyball games with Brewster, Bridgeport

The Liberty Bell High School volleyball team lost on the road but rebounded with a home win in games last week.

The Lady Lions fell, 3-1, at Brewster on Sept. 22, Game scores were 16-25, 10-25, 25-22 and 20-25 for Liberty Bell.

On their home court, the Lady Lions bested Bridgeport, 3-2, on Thursday (Sept. 24). Game scores were not available.

Coach Tim Boonstra said the team is playing well this year and that the overall level of play in the league has improved. Mean-while, powerhouses Brewster and Okanogan are not as strong as last year, the coach said, so

teams like Liberty Bell have a better shot at being competitive with them.

“It’s been a lot of fun volley-ball,” Boonstra said. “We have been playing close games all year.”

Veterans Erin Schue and Lauren Fitzmaurice, both outside hitters, are both having a good year, the coach said. “They’ve played great all year, with more experience and a better understanding of the game,” Boonstra said.

The Lady Lions hosted Okan-ogan on Tuesday (Sept. 29) and travel to Manson on Thursday (Oct. 1) before returning home next Tuesday (Oct. 6) to face Lake Roosevelt.

Winner’s reward

Photo by Don NelsonSara otepka of Bainbridge island, the first woman finisher in Sunday’s winthrop Marathon (and fourth overall), gets a congratulatory hug from her husband, Matt. First place went to John kercher of Spokane, who fin-ished in just under 3 hours.

Photo by Lori NorthcottVolunteer crews worked last weekend tying together rebar for the new surface being installed at the winthrop ice and Sports rink, which will have ice-making equipment this fall. More help is needed this week — 10 to 12 people thursday through Sunday for the next round of rebar “mesh” before concrete can be poured next week. No experience is necessary. Call (509) 341-4416 to sign up.

Under the ice

Page 10: Methow Valley News, Sept. 30, 2016

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Page B2 Wednesday, September 30, 2015 Methow Valley News

Walking off the war … in 2,650 milesVeteran takes advantage of Warrior Hike programBy Marcy Stamper

Participants in the Warrior Hike program set out to “walk off the war,” but Anne Dios said hiking from Mexico to Can-ada — over 57 mountain passes and through deserts and old-growth forests — made her a dif-ferent person.

“It’s going to separate my life — before the PCT [Pacific Crest Trail] and after,” said Dios.

With less than 100 miles till she reaches the Canadian border, Dios spent two days this week in the Methow Valley as the guest of American Legion Post 143 in Twisp. Tristan Gilbert, adjutant of the post, organized her visit, and local vets donated two nights in area hotels.

Dios was one of six veterans selected from a pool of more than 200 to hike the PCT, but she is the only one who will complete the 2,650-mile-long hike. The others had to cut short the journey because of injuries or family issues.

The Warrior Hike program sponsors combat veterans who have the motivation and need to

hike off the war. “It’s about vets getting into the wild to put them-selves back together,” said Dios.

Dios, age 31, had done day hikes but hadn’t done any back-packing until she began train-ing for the expedition. “I was so motivated, I planned on hiking the PCT either way,” even if she hadn’t been selected for the War-rior Hike program, she said.

Warrior Hike connects the vets with hosts — most associated with the Veterans of Foreign Wars or American Legion — in towns along the way. The hosts orga-nize informal events so the hikers can meet others in the commu-nities they pass through. Dios said meeting people like Gilbert helped keep her motivated.

Dios, who started at the Mexi-can border on April 13, took her time on the hike. “I wasn’t in any big rush,” she said. “If I can do it, anyone with motivation could,” she said.

Now, just days from Canada, Dios is contemplating life after her momentous journey. “It will be so different to find a job, and to have to go out of my way to stay physically and mentally healthy. On the trail, it’s just a default — it’s easy to be happy when you fall asleep to moon-light and always hear birds chirp-ing,” she said.

Individual reasonsThe Warrior Hike program

was founded in 2012 by a veteran of the Iraq and Afghanistan wars who hiked the Appalachian Trail to heal his wartime experiences. He was inspired by a WWII vet-eran who made the same trip in 1948. The program supports hikers on seven National Sce-nic Trails, helping with gear, a food stipend, and connections in towns.

Warrior Hikers have individ-ual reasons for needing to walk off the war. “There are so many different jobs in the military,” said Dios. “We’re not all running around with guns, but there’s still room for bad experiences and trauma.”

Dios, who served in the U.S. Army Reserve for eight years, was deployed to Kuwait in 2008, her final year of service. In Kuwait, she spent 12-hour days in a windowless room analyzing top-secret reports on deaths and injuries of troops who were sup-plying forces in Iraq. The only woman in the facility, she expe-rienced unrelenting harassment by members of her own unit.

“Maybe it doesn’t sound like much to vets who’ve been shot at or lost friends, but if you don’t feel safe even walking into the coffee room …,” she said. “The ideal is that nobody ever harasses anybody else. The Army is get-ting better at trying to prevent bad results,” but the military experience is still often glorified

by Hollywood, which depicts everyone working together, said Dios. “That wasn’t my experi-ence at all,” she said. “It was really demoralizing.”

After her deployment, Dios went straight to college, where she didn’t feel comfortable talk-ing about her experiences in the war. “I left the military with upsetting memories and distrust. I wasn’t sure how to integrate that with what the average per-son on the street thinks of a vet,” she said.

Gilbert, who served two years in the U.S. Navy on two differ-ent ships, was able to relate to the stress Dios experienced. The two months he spent on a ship with a crew of both men and women, where morale was high, was the high point of his military career. But his regular assignment, where he worked 120 hours a week with minimal sleep, was degrading and humiliating, he said.

Hiking the PCT restored Dios’ faith in humanity and in the mili-tary. “I met so many good people on the trail that it brought me out of my bubble,” she said. Dios said she had been “very, very introverted” before setting out on the hike. “You’re almost forced to trust people on the trail, and to appreciate the small things,” she said.

When she finishes the hike, Dios plans to return home to Los

Angeles and begin looking for a job that uses her degree in envi-ronmental studies. Her pack was already brimming with bags of

potato chips and caramel pop-corn for her celebration when she reaches the Canadian border. “It’s been so enjoyable,” she said.

Photo by Marcy StamperAnne Dios walked off the war by hiking from Mexico to Canada. She said the hike had restored her faith in humanity and in the military.

Braving the elements

Photos courtesy of Natalie KuehlerLast weekend, more than 20 volunteers turned out on Saturday and Sun-day for the National Forest Foundation and Methow Valley Ranger District’s “Plant-and-Camp” volunteer event at Maple Pass Trail. The volunteers worked through rain, sleet, snow and, finally, sunshine to plant 3,500 plants like those shown below— flown in Saturday by helicopter — and rehabilitate countless user trails at Heather Pass and Maple Ridge.

Photo courtesy of Kim BondiSixth-graders celebrate their ascent to Maple Pass last week.

Photo courtesy of Jeff MonahanStudents took time to look around from the Maple Pass vantage point.

Sixth-graders carry on tradition of annual campout

Methow Valley sixth-grad-ers hiked up to Maple Pass last week (Sept. 23 – 25) as part of the annual class campout, a tradition started more than 25 years ago by retired teacher Steve Dixon.

The students also spent three days camping at Falls Creek

Campground near the Chewuch River, partaking in outdoor edu-cation activities, learning how to work together in camp, and completing a project for the U.S. Forest Service.

Local retailers, farmers and restaurants contributed food for the campers.

Page 11: Methow Valley News, Sept. 30, 2016

HEATING & COOLING

AUTO PARTS/TOWING

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BUILDING DESIGN

BUILDING SUPPLIES

CONTRACTORS

ELECTRICIANS

SAND & GRAVEL

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PROPANE SALES

ROOFING

TIRE SERVICE

B & B Excavating, Inc.

Service the Methow Valley for Over 30 Years

BackhoeDozer

Dump TruckExcavator

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TREE SERVICE

EXCAVATION TIRES • WHEELS

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ELECTRICIANS, Cont.

EAST SLOPEELECTRIC, LLC.Residential • Commercial

509-846-6358Contractor # EASTSSE861MZ

(509) 997-5420(509) 997-2572 cell

RebuildRestoration

Radiant Floor Heat

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gary phillips 509-996-2835 [email protected]

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WILDFIRE RESISTANT DESIGNS

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Pacific Pride/carwashPrecision Exhaust • Custom Tire1421 MV Hwy E, Twisp 997-2513

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Quality Work at a Fair Price

gary Mitchell - owner509-449-6622

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WELL DRILLING

Service Directory

MILSTEADT ELECTRICMILSTEADT ELECTRIC

Rich MilsteadtOWNER

509-322-5087milsteadtelectric.com

P O Box 1317Winthrop, WA 98862

lic # MILSTEI999DE

SURVEYING

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GUTTERS

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Heat Pumps & Geo-Thermal Heat PumpsNew Installations & Retrofits

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• • 30+ Years Experience • •Custom Log Stairs & Railings

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Service & Health Directories ~ Deadline for ad placement & changes is Friday at 5 pmfor insertion in the next Wednesday’s paper. Directory ads are $8 per column inch.

Additional charges may apply for color. To have your service listed please call 997-7011.

AD DEADLINES

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FINANCIAL, CONT.

Methow Valley News Wednesday, September 30, 2015 Page B3

From Back Issues Compiled by

Laurelle Walsh

Young Man Has Close Brush With Cougar Saturday

Spence Watson, 16, son of Mr. and Mrs. John Watson, had a rather excit-ing experience on Saturday. He was out

grouse hunting with his dog, Saber.Above Vern Strickland’s place, west

of Twisp, the dog discovered a partly eaten deer alongside the road. Spence decided something must be wrong so he loaded his 20 gauge shotgun.

While loading the gun he noticed an

animal about 30 feet away and sound asleep in the middle of the road. It awoke just as the last shell went into the gun, and started walking toward Spence.

As the space between them narrowed Spence pulled the trigger and shot three times; stopping the cougar in its tracks, thus not only bagging his first cougar but the first one he had ever seen.

He is now in the process of having a rug made from the skin for his future den, where no doubt many big game tro-phies will be hung in the future, after his accidental start.

80 years ago, Sept. 27, 1935

LAMBS TO MARKETCaravan of double deck trucks and

trailers are keeping up the dust on the Methow Valley highway in transporting great numbers of lambs to the markets. Great loads are being picked up from every part of the valley, and many cars have already been forwarded from Pate-ros, shipping point for this section.

Too Many Measles for Any Yellow Jacket this Week

Members of the journalism class of the high school not yet stricken with measles or flu colds, dropped in this a.m. to say that the class was down and out for the week, so far as appearance of the school section of the News, “The

Yellow Jacket,” was to make in this number. It is hoped to make up for the time off next week.

PICNIC DINNERPicnic and dinner was enjoyed by

some fifty invited families at the hos-pitable home and surrounding shade of the premises of Senator and Mrs. W. A. Bolinger at Methow last Sunday.

The picnic was just another number of the several that have been held through-out the valley, representatives of each community in the entire valley getting together to enjoy the cream of the valley in the culinary line, and to take a day of rest while visiting on “good of the Methow valley.” The affair was enjoy-able with Senator and Mrs. Bolinger as host and hostess, and with the delicious food that twice as many couldn’t have comfortably consumed.

100 years ago, Sept. 29, 1915

Hurrah for the Fair!Get into line and not only boost but

work for the coming fair. This call goes out to every man, woman, boy and girl throughout the broad expanse of the beautiful Methow valley. The fair needs your help; you need the help of the fair to keep you in tune with the times.

Don’t conclude that you have raised the best products and let it go at that,

your neighbor has come to the same conclusion and, no doubt, like yourself is making all sorts of wild statements rela-tive thereto. Prove it! Bring your choic-est products to the fair which opens on beautiful Fair Island October 14th and closes upon the evening of the 16th. Three wonderful days of sight-seeing, of education and satisfaction with all the pleasure thrown in.

You’ll find out from neighbor Jones what method he employed in raising such wonderful pumpkins, how he came to produce such wonderful onions; and those apples of Perkins’! Did you ever see the like of it in your life. Why I swear to goodness they’re too beautiful to be real! No wonder we pull down the sweepstakes wherever we show.

And then wifey will tug you by the arm and you turn to catch the soul of pleasure radiating from her face. You are perplexed. She leads you by the arm past rows upon rows of beautiful exhibits — such as you have never seen before — then brings you up with a halt. You stare vacantly before you to divine her pride.

“Wake up,” she says, “don’t you see the blue ribbon upon my loaf of bread!” Yes, it’s there, sure enough. Then you sneak back to Jones and win his confi-dence. You are determined that next sea-son you are going to tuck away a few of the blues yourself.

20 years ago, Oc t. 5, 1995

Photos by Toni DaltonB U B B L E S F O R A L L A G E S . Gwen Cooper (left) and Mari-lyn Redmond enjoy bubbly beer, while kids are enter-tained by bubbles of anoth-er kind at the Octoberwest celebration in Winthrop.

50 years ago, Sept. 30, 1965

Page 12: Methow Valley News, Sept. 30, 2016

SATURDAY, OCTOBER 3RD, 9AM-2PM. Tools, books, furni-ture, art and more. 606 Canyon St., Twisp. 21MULTI-FAMILY YARD SALE- 2 14” wheel snow tires, garden cart, yard stuff, 4 horse Mercury motor, chainsaw, men’s large winter jackets and much more. October 2nd and 3rd, Friday and Saturday, 8:30am-? Sun Mountain Ranch Club, 58 Star Flower Rd., Winthrop. 21MOVING SALE LOTS of stuff. 8am-4pm, Saturday, Oc-tober 3rd, only. 19852 Hwy 20. TWISP. 21YARD SALE- MISCELLA-NEOUS household furniture, clothing, barn stuff and tools. Saturday, October 3rd, 8-4, 6 Beaver Pond Road, 2.7 miles south on Twisp Carlton road. 21

SUN MOUNTAIN LODGE has immediate positions available for Dining Room AM and PM Food Servers and Wolf Creek Bar and Grill Food Servers. Come by the front desk for an employment application, or to find a printable employment application see our website at www.sunmountainlodge.com on our employment page. Call Leslie for more information or an appointment. 509-996-4720. 22CLASSIC TOWING & CLAS-SIC Mt. Cabby are looking for a part time driver for towing and shuttle service. Most of the driving will be on an “on call” schedule, however, most shuttles are prearranged. Towing experi-ence preferred, but willing to train. Great part time job! Must have clean driving record and pass a WSP background check. To obtain an application, please call Classic Towing at 509-997-2333 and ask for Ty or Jeremy. 23METHOW VALLEY SCHOOL district is accepting applications for the following positions: JH assistant wrestling coach, HS head wrestling coach, HS assistant wrestling coach, HS head baseball coach, HS assistant girls’ basket-ball coach, HS assistant softball coach and HS assistant boys’ soccer. Please apply using Fast Track online application program at www.methow.org/employment. Methow Valley School District, 18 Twin Lakes Rd. Winthrop WA 98862, (509) 996-9205. Positions open until filled. EOE. 22J O I N O U R T E A M : T h e Methow Valley News is in need of a sharp-eyed, detail-orient-ed, analytic proofreader to carefully read and correct our pages before they go to press. Ideal candidate can balance the micro details with a macro page view. Proficiency in writ-ing and editing preferred; knowledge of Methow Valley communities and personalities is a huge plus. Adherence to deadlines and ability to work under pressure are required, as is the ability to tolerate (and hopefully participate in) weird newsroom humor. Can you re-cite the entire Associated Press Style Guide? No? How fast can you learn it? This part-time job requires about 8 hours on Tuesdays, typically 11 a.m. – 7 p.m. Other proofreading tasks (like special publications) have a more flexible schedule as long as we beat the dead-line. The potential exists for other duties and more hours, depending the successful ap-plicant’s abilities and inter-ests. The previous proofreader expanded her contributions to include reporting, writing and photography. We’d love to hear what you’ll bring to the team. Send resume, cover letter and appropriate work samples to [email protected], or to P.O. Box 97, Twisp, WA 98856. No phone calls, please. 25JAMIE’S PLACE AFH is seek-ing individuals who would like to join a great team of caregivers. HCA or CNA license preferred but not necessary for initial hire. Some costs to be covered for committed team members obtain-ing HCA or CNA certifications. Immediate evening and night shift openings. Please call 509-996-4417 or visit www.jamies-placehomes.org to download an application from our employment page or to view our video. 23

3 BEDROOM HOME for rent on Burger St., in Twisp. Call 509-429-5845 or 509-429-2004 for details. 21COZY 3 BEDROOM, 2 bath rancher, on one acre. Two car garage, pets allowed. $1150 per month. Michelle 509-322-1580. 24HOUSE FOR RENT near Twisp. 2BD, 1BTH, W/D. 208-985-0406. 23CONFLUENCE GALLERY AND Art Center: office space available for rent. Perfect for non-profits, professionals such as attorneys, therapists, massage practitioners, artists and others seeking a quiet space with natu-ral light. Office 206 is 135 sq. ft., asking $165/month, utilities included. Request 1-year-lease (negotiable). For additional de-tails and viewing, contact David Wright 509.996.3681 or Salyna Gracie, 509.997.2787. 21RENT ROOM 7 OFFICE SPACE in MV Community Center. $410 per month includes utilities, w/one year lease. 509-997-2926. 21

1976 DOUBLE WIDE manufac-tured home, approx. 1500 square feet, 3 bedroom, 2 bath. Ready for you to move to your location immediately. Call for more info (509) 679-8693. 24

GOOD ALFALFA HAY, large bales approximately 1300lbs/bale @ $175.00 a ton. There are 200 tons available. Contact: Ben Adams @ 509-681-0181 or Joyce Adams @ 509-989-0411. 22

Classifieds

DirectoryFOR SALE ......................................10

YARD SALE ...............................14AUCTIONS ................................16

REAL ESTATE ................................20MOBILE/MFD. HOMES .............22FOR RENT .................................24WANTED TO RENT ...................25

BUSINESS OPPORTUNITIES .......30EMPLOYMENT ...............................31

WORK WANTED .......................32SERVICES .................................34

CARS & TRUCKS ..........................40RVS ............................................42

ANIMALS-PETS, HORSES, LIVESTOCK ................. 50MISCELLANEOUS .........................70WANTED.........................................75THANK YOU ...................................80COMMUNITY EVENTS ...................83PERSONALS ..................................85FREE ..............................................90LOST & FOUND .............................95

CLASSIFIED ADVERTISING - 997-7011E-MAIL TO [email protected]

All classifieds to be prepaid. Deadline: Monday, Noon.Weekly: $6.75 for 15 words or less. $8.75 with email or web site address.

20 cents for each additional word.CLASSIFIED SPECIAL:

Buy 3 weeks, get 4th week free. No refunds or changes please.Prepayment required to qualify.

Classified display ads: $10.00 per column inch.Deadline for CLASSIFIED DISPLAYS & LEGAL NOTICES: Thursday, 5 p.m.

Kristin Devin Real Estate Broker

30 Years of Real Estate Experience in the Methow Valley

509-996-4400www.kristindevin.com

14.............................YARD SALE

PUBLISHER'S NO TICE:All real estate advertising in

this newspaper is subject to the Fair Housing Act which makes it illegal to advertise “any preference, limitation or discrimination based on race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status or national origin, or an intention, to make any such preference, limitation or discrimination.” Familial status includes children under the age of 18 living with parents or legal custo-dians, pregnant women and people securing custody of children under 18.

This newspaper will not know-ingly accept any advertising for real estate which is in violation of the law. Our readers are hereby informed that all dwellings advertised in this newspaper are available on an equal opportunity basis. To complain of dis-crimination, call HUD toll-free at 1-800-669-9777. The toll-free telephone number for the hearing impaired is 1-800-927-9275.

20......................... REAL ESTATE

STATEWIDE ADS

10............................... FOR SALE

24............................... FOR RENT

LEGAL ADS

LEGAL ADS, Cont.24................... FOR RENT, Con’t.

20..............REAL ESTATE, Cont.

31........................ EMPLOYMENT

Methow Valley News (509) 997-7011

LEGAL ADS, Cont.

Miller & Associates Realty

Lee G. Miller, Broker

Member NWMLS

[email protected]

A F F O R D A B L E , S W E E T HOME for sale in Heckendorn. 2 BD, 1 BA, W/D. 800sf, energy efficient. $179,000. Call Mike at 996-2155. 21OFFICE SPACE AVAIL. in Chewuch Professional Bldg., Winthrop. High-speed inter-net, fiber optics, conference room, PLUS gorgeous river views and common kitchenette. 509.996.2820. 25

22............MOBILE/MFD. HOMES

MAZAMA COUNTRY INN- Needs a front desk person. Full-time, year round position. Experience preferred. 509-996-2681. Email resume to [email protected]. 22FREESTONE INN, LOCATED in Mazama, WA is currently seeking Guest Services and Jack’s Hut staff. This is a full time position with benefits and a starting wage of $12/hr. Previous retail or Front Desk experience is a plus, but not required. Ap-plicant must be flexible, creative, and have the ability to work as a team as well as independently. Shared housing options may be available as well. Please apply in person, or forward resumes to [email protected]. 503-996-3906. 22PATIENT REGISTRATION REPRESENTATIVE- Full-Time. Three Rivers Hospital is in immediate need of a full-time Patient Registration Rep. Col-lects required patient information and enters into computer data-base for in-patient & out-patient services. Candidate must have good computer skills & excellent customer service, interpersonal & office skills. High school diploma required. Spanish bi-lingual (pre-ferred). Interested Candidates may apply in person or by mailing their resume to: Three Rivers Hospital, Anita Fisk, Director of Human Resources, PO Box 577 Brews-ter, WA 98812. (509) 689-2517 x 3343, www.threerivershospital.net. Or for quicker submission: Send resume to: [email protected]. EOE. 21

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EVENTS-FESTIVALSPROMOTE YOUR REGIONAL EVENT for only pennies. Reach 2.7 million readers in newspapers statewide for $275 classified or $1,350 display ad. Call this newspaper or (360) 515-0974 for details.

MISCELLANEOUSSAWMILLS from only $4,397.00- MAKE & SAVE MONEY with your own bandmill- Cut lumber any dimension. In Stock, ready to ship! FREE Info/DVD: www.NorwoodSawmills.com 1-800-578-1363 ext. 300N

LEGAL SERVICES DIVORCE $155. $175 with children. No court appearances. Complete preparation. Includes custody, support, property division and bills. BBB member. (503) 772-5295. www.paralegalalternatives.com [email protected]

ADOPTIONCollege Professor & At-Home-Parent, Music, World Travel, Laughter, LOVE awaits your baby. Expenses paid 1-800-933-1975 *Patti & Andrew*

LEGAL NOTICETHIS COMMUNICATION IS

AN ATTEMPT TO COLLECT A DEBT AND ANY INFORMATION OBTAINED WILL BE USED FOR THAT PURPOSE.

If you � led bankruptcy or have been discharged in bankruptcy, this communication is for informational purposes only and is not intended as an attempt to collect this debt from you personally.

NOTICE OF TRUSTEE’S SALE(INCLUDING GUARANTOR

NOTICE, IF APPLICABLE)TO: GRANTORS/

BORROWERS/GUARANTORS, OCCUPANTS OF THE PREMISES, AND ALL OTHER INTERESTED PARTIES:

Frank Austin, Deceased, 1081 Twisp River Road, Twisp, WA 98856.

Frank Austin, Deceased, P.O. Box 754, Bridgeport, WA 98813

Frank Austin, Deceased, through his heirs: Debra Lynn Waymire, P.O. Box 763, Bridgeport, WA 98813; Harvey Leroy Austin, 2308 Monroe Street, Bridgeport, WA 98813; Ralph William Austin, 2308 Monroe Street, Bridgeport, WA 98813; Henry Abraham Austin, P.O. Box 754, Bridgeport, WA 98813

Occupants: 1081 Twisp River Road, Twisp, WA 98856.

Okanogan County Treasurer, P.O. Box 111, Okanogan, WA 98840.

State of WashingtonDepartment of Social and

Health Services, O� ce of Financial Recovery, PO Box 9501, Olympia, WA 98507-9501

INOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN

that the undersigned Trustee, Peg R. Callaway, will on the 9th day of October, 2015, at the hour of 10:00 o’clock a.m. at the front entrance of the Okanogan County Courthouse, 149 North 3rd Avenue, in the City of Okanogan, County of Okanogan, State of Washington, sell at public auction to the highest and best bidder, payable at the time of sale, the following described real property, situated in the County of Okanogan, State of Washington, to-wit:

A TRACT OF LAND COMPRISING A PORTION OF THOSE CERTAIN H.E. SURVEYS NO. 70 AND NO. 225 AS DESCRIBED IN THE PATENT THEREOF RECORDED IN BOOK I OF PATENTS, PAGE 68, RECORDS OF THE AUDITOR OF OKANOGAN COUNTY, WASHINGTON, LOCATED WITHIN UNSURVEYED SECTIONS 10 & 15, TOWNSHIP 33 NORTH, RANGE 20 EAST, W.M., MORE PARTICULARLY DESCRIBED AS FOLLOWS: COMMENCING AT CORNER NO. 1 OF SAID H.E.S. NO. 225, BEING COINCIDENTAL WITH CORNER NO. 2 OF SAID H.E.S. NO. 70; THENCE NORTHWEST 39°11’00” ALONG THE WESTERLY BOUNDARY LINE OF H.E.S. NO. 225 FOR 192.16 FEET TO THE POINT OF BEGINNING; THENCE FROM SAID POINT OF BEGINNING, CONTINUING ALONG SAID WESTERLY BOUNDARY LINE NORTHWEST 39°11’00” FOR 217.19 FEET TO A POINT ON THE CURVE ON THE SOUTHERLY

RIGHT OF WAY LINE OF THE TWISP RIVER ROAD, SAID POINT HAVING A RADIAL BEARING TO THE CENTER OF THE CURVE OF NORTHWEST 23°59’29”; THENCE LEAVING SAID WESTERLY BOUNDARY LINE ALONG SAID RIGHT OF WAY LINE, ALONG A CURVE TO THE LEFT IN A NORTHEASTERLY DIRECTION HAVING A DELTA ANGLE OF 04°58’33”, A RADIUS OF 2013.00 FEET, FOR A LENGTH OF 174.82 FEET; THENCE LEAVING SAID RIGHT OF WAY LINE SOUTHEAST 39°03’26” FOR 119.59 FEET; THENCE SOUTHWEST 24°18’22” FOR 132.55 FEET; THENCE SOUTHWEST 50°49’00” FOR 51.61 FEET TO THE POINT OF BEGINNING; SITUATED IN THE COUNTY OF OKANOGAN, STATE OF WASHINGTON;

Assessor’s Tax Parcel Number: 9802250003. The commonly known as address of which is 1081 Twisp River Road, Twisp, Okanogan County, Washington, which is subject to that certain Deed of Trust dated September 22, 2004 and recorded September 29, 2004, Okanogan County Auditor’s File No. 3080263, records of Okanogan County, Washington, from Frank Austin, as Grantor, to Baines Title Co., Inc., a Washington corporation, as original Trustee, to secure an obligation in favor of Farmers State Bank, a Washington corporation, as Bene� ciary (Lender) (hereinafter “Bene� ciary”), and in which the Bene� ciary substituted Peg R. Callaway as Trustee pursuant to a Substitution of Trustee recorded with the Okanogan County Auditor on April 20, 2015, under Auditor’s File No. 3199294.

IINo action commenced by

the Bene� ciary of the Deed of Trust is now pending to seek satisfaction of the obligation in any Court by reason of the Borrower’s or Grantor’s default on the obligation secured by the Deed of Trust.

IIIThe defaults for which

this foreclosure is made are as follows: FAILURE TO PAY WHEN DUE THE FOLLOWING AMOUNTS WHICH ARE NOW IN ARREARS:

Failure to pay balance of principal that was due in full September 5, 2014 in the amount of $8,383.53.

Failure to pay balance of interest due in the amount of $513.35 as of April 7, 2015.

Failure to pay interest (per diem of $2.53 per day) from April 8, 2015 through April 24, 2015 of $43.01.

Failure to pay interest (per diem of $2.53 per day) from April 25, 2015 through July 6, 2015 of $184.69.

TOTAL MONTHLY PAYMENTS AND INTEREST: $9,124.58

Default other than failure to make monthly payments:

E. Failure to pay and keep current the real property taxes for the subject real property – Okanogan County Assessor Tax Parcel #9802250003, as follows (which amounts include interest, penalty, and statutory foreclosure costs, as applicable, through July 2015): 2015 $239.81 (� rst half), 2014 $532.15, 2013 $592.27, 2012 $ 25.67 (paid by Bene� ciary/ Lender directly) for a total of $1,389.90 (through July 2015).

TOTAL REAL PROPERTY TAXES: $1,389.90.

Plus all attorney’s fees and costs, and foreclosure fees and costs incurred.

Other Defaults: Allowance of a Notice and Statement of Lien to be � led by the State of Washington, Department

of Social and Health Services, against Frank H. Austin recorded October 17, 2013, Recording No. 3186606, records of Okanogan County, Washington.

IVThe sum owing on the

obligation secured by the Deed of Trust is: Principal $8,383.53, together with interest as provided in the Note or other instrument secured from September 22, 2004, and such other costs and fees as are due under the Note or other instrument secured, and as are provided by statute.

VThe above-described real

property will be sold to satisfy the expense of sale and the obligation secured by the Deed of Trust as provided by statute. The sale will be made without warranty, express or implied, regarding title, possession, or encumbrances on the 9th day of October, 2015. The defaults referred to in paragraph III must be cured by the 28th day of September, 2015, (11 days before the sale date), to cause a discontinuance of the sale. The sale will be discontinued and terminated if at any time on or before the 28th day of September, 2015, (11 days before the sale date), the defaults as set forth in paragraph III are cured and the Trustee’s fees and costs are paid. The sale may be terminated any time after the 28th day of September, 2015, (11 days before the sale date), and before the sale by the Borrower, Grantor, any Guarantor, or the holder of any recorded junior lien or encumbrance paying the entire principal and interest secured by the Deed of Trust, plus costs, fees, and advances, if any, made pursuant to the terms of the obligation and/or Deed of Trust, and curing all other defaults.

VIA written Notice of Default

was transmitted by the Bene� ciary or Trustee to the Borrower and Grantor at the following addresses: Frank Austin, Deceased, 1081 Twisp River Road, Twisp, WA 98856

Frank Austin, Deceased, P.O. Box 754, Bridgeport, WA 98813; Frank Austin, Deceased, through his heirs: Debra Lynn Waymire, P.O. Box 763, Bridgeport, WA 98813; Harvey Leroy Austin, 2308 Monroe Street, Bridgeport, WA 98813; Ralph William Austin, 2308 Monroe Street, Bridgeport, WA 98813; Henry Abraham Austin, P.O. Box 754, Bridgeport, WA 98813 by both � rst-class and certi� ed mail on April 29, 2015, proof of which is in the possession of the Trustee; and the written Notice of Default was posted in a conspicuous place on the real property described in paragraph I above on April 29, 2015, and the Trustee has possession of proof of such posting.

VIIThe Trustee whose name

and address are set forth below will provide in writing to anyone requesting it, a statement of all costs and fees due at any time prior to the sale.

VIIIThe e� ect of the sale will be

to deprive the Grantor and all those who hold by, through, or under the Grantor of all their interest in the above-described property.

IXNOTICE TO GUARANTORS,

BORROWER, AND/OR GRANTORS OF A COMMERCIAL OBLIGATION SECURED BY THE DEED OF TRUST (IF APPLICABLE):

A. THE GUARANTOR MAY BE LIABLE FOR A DEFICIENCY JUDGMENT TO THE EXTENT THE

(509) 997-7011

Inside Okanogan Co. $33Outside Okanogan Co. $44

Outside WA State $55

Methow Valley NewsAdvertising Deadlines

Display Ads: Friday @ 5pmClassified Display Ads

Friday @ 5pmClassified Listings

Monday @ NoonService & Health

Directories: Friday @ 5pmQuestions? Call your advertising

rep! 997-7011 or e-mailadvertising@

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Page B4 Wednesday, September 30, 2015 Methow Valley News

Page 13: Methow Valley News, Sept. 30, 2016

LEGAL ADS, Cont.LEGAL ADS, Cont.LEGAL ADS, Cont.LEGAL ADS, Cont.LEGAL ADS, Cont. LEGAL ADS, Cont.

SALE PRICE OBTAINED AT THE TRUSTEE’S SALE IS LESS THAN THE DEBT SECURED BY THE DEED OF TRUST.

B. THE GUARANTOR HAS THE SAME RIGHTS TO REINSTATE THE DEBT, CURE THE DEFAULT, OR REPAY THE DEBT AS IS GIVEN TO THE GRANTOR IN ORDER TO AVOID THE TRUSTEE’S SALE.

C. THE GUARANTOR WILL HAVE NO RIGHT TO REDEEM THE PROPERTY AFTER THE TRUSTEE’S SALE.

D. SUBJECT TO SUCH LONGER PERIODS AS ARE PROVIDED IN THE WASHINGTON DEED OF TRUST ACT, CHAPTER 61.24 RCW, ANY ACTION BROUGHT TO ENFORCE A GUARANTY OR, IF APPLICABLE, SEEK A DEFICIENCY JUDGMENT, MUST BE COMMENCED WITHIN ONE YEAR AFTER THE TRUSTEE’S SALE, OR THE LAST TRUSTEE’S SALE UNDER ANY DEED OF TRUST GRANTED TO SECURE THE SAME DEBT.

E. IN ANY ACTION FOR A DEFICIENCY, THE GUARANTOR WILL HAVE THE RIGHT TO ESTABLISH THE FAIR VALUE OF THE PROPERTY AS OF THE DATE OF THE TRUSTEE’S SALE, LESS PRIOR LIENS AND ENCUMBRANCES, AND TO LIMIT ITS LIABILITY FOR A DEFICIENCY TO THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN THE DEBT AND THE GREATER OF SUCH FAIR VALUE OR THE SALE PRICE PAID AT THE TRUSTEE’S SALE, PLUS INTEREST AND COSTS.

XAnyone having any objection

to the sale on any grounds whatsoever will be afforded an opportunity to be heard as to those objections if they bring a lawsuit to restrain the sale pursuant to RCW 61.24.130. Failure to bring such a lawsuit may result in a waiver of any proper grounds for invalidating the Trustee’s sale.

XINOTICE TO OCCUPANTS OR

TENANTSThe purchaser at the trustee’s

sale is entitled to possession of the property on the 20th day following the sale, as against the Grantor under the Deed of Trust (the owner) and anyone having an interest junior to the Deed of Trust, including occupants who are not tenants. After the 20th day following the sale, the purchaser has the right to evict occupants who are not tenants by summary proceedings under the Unlawful Detainer Act Chapter 59.12 RCW. For tenant-occupied property, the purchaser shall provide a tenant with written notice in accordance with RCW 61.24.060.

DATED: July 7, 2015, (SUBSTITUTE) TRUSTEE: CALLAWAY & DETRO PLLC By: /s/ Peg R. Callaway; WSBA #13786, 700-A Okoma Drive, Omak, WA 98841, (509)826-6316

Published in the Methow Valley News September 2 and 30, 2015

LEGAL NOTICEIN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTONIN AND FOR THE COUNTY OF

OKANOGANTIMOTHY W. BURKE, D.O.P.C.

PENSION PLAN DATED JANUARY 1, 1991, TIMOTHY W. BURKE, TRUSTEE, Plaintiff, -vs- RANDY M. MARTIN, a single person, Defendant, No. 15-2-00360-9.

SUMMONS BY PUBLICATION

The State of Washington to the said Defendant to be served by publication: RANDY M. MARTIN, a single person:

YOU ARE HEREBY SUMMONED to appear within sixty (60) days after the date of the first publication of this Summons, to wit: within sixty (60) days after the 9th day of September, 2015, and defend the above-entitled action in the above-entitled Court, and answer the Complaint of the Plaintiff, and serve a copy of your answer upon the undersigned attorney for Plaintiff, Peg R. Callaway of the Law Office of Callaway & DeTro PLLC at the address below stated; and in the case of your failure to do so, Judgment will be rendered against you according to the demand of the Complaint, which has been filed with the Clerk of said Court. The object of this action is to reform the real estate contract between the parties to correct the legal description of the contract pursuant to boundary line adjustment and to correct scrivener’s errors for real property located in Okanogan County, Washington, and legally described as: commonly known as The Blue Spruce Motel, 1321 Methow Valley Hwy, Twisp, WA 98856; Abb. Legal Desc.: TAX 104 SW NE SE C#86-3-00152-8 33-22-17; TAX 258 PT NW SE C#86-3-00152-8 33-22-17, Okanogan County Assessor’s Acct. Nos.: 3322170104 & 3322170258.

DATED this 2nd day of September, 2015.

CALLAWAY & DETRO PLLC: By: /s/ Peg R. Callaway, WSBA #13786, Attorney for Plaintiff, 700-A Okoma Drive, Omak, Washington 98841

Published in the Methow Valley News September 9, 16, 23, 30, October 7 & 14, 2015.

LEGAL NOTICENOTICE OF INTENT TO

FORFEIT PURSUANT TO THE REVISED CODE OF WASHINGTON CHAPTER 61.30.

Grantor: Hope, Jr. Everett W.Grantee: Kent, Brian K.Legal Description (abbr): LOT

11, BLOCK 15, TOWNSHIP OF HECKENDORN

Additional legal(s): Page 2Assessor’s Tax Parcel ID:

2820151100Reference Nos. of Related

Documents: 3042268TO: The Estate of Brian K.

Kent, Deceased, and the Known and Unknown Heirs of Brian K. Kent, deceased.

TO: Brian K. Kent c/o Michael Kutz, PO Box 225, Winthrop, WA 98862

TO: Tamare Kent, 806 Castle Ave., Winthrop, WA 98862

TO: Brian Keith Kent, Jr., 806 Castle Ave., Winthrop, WA 98862

TO: Therisa Kent, 765 Rt. 44-55 Lot 2, Highland, NY 12528

TO: Jennifer Cook, 1052 Angora St., Deltona, FL 32725

TO: Jessica Kazolias, 49 Bilmar Blvd., Pleasant Valley, NY 12569

TO: State of Washington Department of Social and Health Services, Office of Financial Recovery, PO Box 9501, Olympia WA 98507-9501

TO: State of Washington DSHS Division of Child Support, PO Box 11520, Tacoma, WA 98441-5520

TO: Inland Professional Title,

LLC, PO Box 2118, Omak, WA 98841

TO: All Persons Claiming Any Interest in the Subject Property Described Herein

You are hereby notified that the Real Estate Contract described below is in default, and you are provided the following information with respect thereto:

(a) The name, address, and telephone number of the seller and, if any, the seller’s agent or attorney giving the notice:

Seller’s Name - Agent’s or Attorney’s Name:

Everett W. Hope, Jr. - David Ebenger

7122 126th Dr. NE - Attorney at law

Lake Stevens, WA 98258 - PO Box 217, Winthrop WA 98862

(425) 377-0437 - (509) 996-2206

(b) Description of the Contract: Real Estate Contract dated 19, 2001, executed by Everett W. Hope, Jr. and Carolyn J. Hope, both single people, as seller, and Brian K. Kent, a single person, as buyer, which Contract or a memorandum thereof was recorded under Auditor’s File No. 3042268 on 8, 2002, records of Okanogan County Auditor, Washington.

Seller’s interest in the real estate contract is now held by Everett W. Hope, Jr as his separate property, by instrument recorded on April 14, 2015 under Okanogan County Auditor’s File No. 3199186.

(c) Legal description of the property:

Lot 11, Block 15, Town of Heckendorn, as per plat thereof recorded in Volume A of Plats, page 398, records of the Auditor of Okanogan County, Washington, together with a 1960 Nashua 10x55 mobile home, VIN NTB3XXFK8407.

(d) Description of each default under the Contract on which the notice is based:

1. Failure to pay the following past due items, the amounts and an itemization for which are given in (g) and (h) below:

a. Contract payments in the amount of $200.00 or more at the buyer’s option on or before the 8th day of February, 2002, including interest from January 8, 2002, at the rate of 10% per annum on the declining balance thereof; and a like amount or more on or before the 8th day of each and every month thereafter until paid in full;

b. Late charges in the amount of $10.00 for each contract payment in arrears;

c. Okanogan County Real Estate Taxes for 2015 in the amount of $589.08, plus contract late charge of $29.45 and Okanogan County Real Estate Taxes for 2014 in the amount of $664.83 plus contract late charge of $33.24 and Okanogan County Real Estate Taxes for 2013 in the amount of $748.69 plus contract late charge of $37.43 and Okanogan County Real Estate Taxes for 2012 in the amount of $771.23 plus contract late charge of $38.56 and any taxes which become due and payable before either reinstatement or forfeiture of the contract occurs;

d. Failure to pay a contract payment in the amount of $3,000.00, due on or before July 8, 2002.

2. Other defaults: Failure to keep insurance on the property

(e) Failure to cure the default on or before filed date, will result in the forfeiture of the Contract.

(f) The forfeiture of the Contract will result in the following:

1. the buyer’s right, title, and interest in the property will be terminated;

2. the right, title, and interest in the property of others whose interests are subordinate to the buyer will be terminated;

3. the buyer’s rights under the Contract will be canceled;

4. all sums previously paid under the Contract will be kept by and belong to the seller or other person entitled to them;

5. all improvements made to, and unharvested crops and timber located on, the property will belong to the seller; and

6. the buyer and all other persons occupying the property will be required to surrender possession of the property, improvements to the property, and unharvested crops and timber located on the property to the seller on December 30, 2015, if their interests have been forfeited.

(g) The following is a statement of payments of money in default (or, where indicated, an estimate thereof) and, for any defaults not involving the failure to pay money, the action(s) required to cure the default:1. Monetary delinquencies:Item, AmountContract balance: $6,354.92Accrued interest: $275.09Late Payments: $70.002015 Okanogan County Real Estate Taxes: $589.082015 Contract Late Charge $29.452014 Okanogan County Real Estate Taxes $664.832014 Contract Late Charge $33.242013 Okanogan County Real Estate Taxes: $748.692013 Contract Late Charge $37.432012 Okanogan County Real Estate Taxes: $771.232012 Contract Late Charge: $38.56Plus interest and penaltiesTOTAL: $9,612.52

2. Action(s) required to cure any nonmonetary default:

Acquire insurance on property as required by the contract

(h The following is a statement of other payments, charges, fees, and costs (or, where indicated, an estimate thereof) to cure the default:Item, Amount1. Cost of title report: $432.402. Service/posting of Notice of Intent to Forfeit (estimated) $100.003. Copying/postage $50.004. Attorney’s fees: $4,000.005. Recording fees: $150.006. Publication fees (est) $600.00TOTAL: $5,332.40

The total amount necessary to cure the default is the sum of the amounts in (g)(1) and (h), which is $14,944.92 plus the amount of any payments and late charges which fall due after the date of this Notice of Intent to Forfeit and on or prior to the date the default is cured. You must cure the default prior to December 20, 2015. Monies

required to cure the default may be tendered to David Ebenger, Attorney at Law at the following address: PO Box 217, Winthrop, Washington 98862

If default includes a default other than payments of money when due, then you must cure such other defaults as specified in paragraph (g)(2) by December 20, 2015.

(i) You have a right to contest the forfeiture or seek an extension of time to cure the default, or both. If you wish to exercise this right, you must file a summons and complaint on the seller or seller’s agent or attorney before a declaration of forfeiture is recorded.

NO EXTENSION OF THE TIME FOR CURE CAN BE GRANTED FOR DEFAULTS THAT ARE A FAILURE TO PAY MONEY. However, you may not be in default if you have a claim against the seller that would release, discharge, or excuse the default.

(j) You have a right to request a court to determine whether a public sale of the property should be ordered. A public sale may be ordered if the court finds that the fair market value of the property substantially exceeds the sum of the debt owed under the contract and all liens on the property that have priority over the seller’s interest. The excess, if any, of the highest bid at the sale over the amount owed on your contract will be applied to the liens eliminated by the sale and the balance, if any, paid to you. If you wish to request that a court make this determination, you must do so by filing and serving a summons and complaint before a declaration of forfeiture is recorded. If you make such a request, the court will require you to deposit the anticipated sales costs with the clerk of the court.

(k) The contract requires that notices shall either be personally served or shall be sent certified mail, return receipt requested and by regular first class mail to the Buyer c/o Michael Kutz, PO Box 225, Winthrop, WA 98862 and to the Seller at 7122 126th Dr. NE, Lake Stevens, WA 98258 or such other addresses as either party may specify in writing to the other party. Notices shall be deemed given when served or mailed. Notice to Seller shall also be sent to any institution receiving payments on the Contract. Seller’s interest in the contract is now held by Everett W. Hope, Jr. whose address is 7122 126th Dr. NE, Lake Stevens, WA 98258.

EVERETT W. HOPE, JR. Published in the Methow

Valley News September 30 and October 7, 2015.

LEGAL NOTICETOWN OF TWISP Notice of Public HearingIsabella Ridge Long Plat #1

Street Design VariancePublished Notice Date:

September 30, 2015 Public Hearing Date:

Wednesday October 14, 2015 at 5:00 p.m.

Public Hearing Location: Twisp Town Hall, 118 South Glover Street, Twisp, WA

Proponent: Vaughn Jolley Proposal Location: Isabella

Ridge Long Plat #1, May Street

Proposal Description: The Town of Twisp Planning Commission will conduct an open record public hearing to consider written and/or oral comments prior to reviewing and submitting a recommendation to the Town of Twisp Council for a proposal for a street design variance for the Isabella Ridge Long Plat #1. The Town Council is the final decision making authority for this proposed action.

Comment Submittal: This may be your only opportunity to submit written and/or oral comments. Written comments on the proposal may be submitted to the Town of Twisp, Attn: Kurt Danison, Town Planner, P.O. Box 278, 118 South Glover Street, Twisp, WA 98856 until the conclusion of the open record public hearing on Wednesday, October 14, 2015.

Further Information: To view and/or obtain copies of the proposed variance request, please contact Kurt Danison, Town Planner at Town of Twisp, P.O. Box 278, 118 South Glover Street, Twisp, WA 98856 or at (509) 997-4081.

Accommodation: Any person requiring a disability accommodation should contact the Town of Twisp at (509) 997-4081 in advance for more information. Each request will be considered individually according to the type of the request, the availability of resources, and the financial ability of the Town of Twisp to provide the requested services or equipment.

Published in the Methow Valley News September 30, 2015.

LEGAL NOTICEMETHOW VALLEY IRRIGATION

DISTRICT - EQUALIZATION MEETING NOTICE

Notice is hereby given that the MVID Board of Directors will conduct the District’s annual equalization meeting on Monday October 26, 2015 at 7:00 p.m. at the Methow Valley Senior Center in Twisp, Washington. The purpose of the meeting is to equalize assessments for the 2016 irrigation season.

Upon the day specified in this notice, the Board of Directors, which is hereby constituted a board of equalization for that purpose, shall meet and continue in session from day to day as long as may be necessary, not to exceed ten days, exclusive of Sundays, to hear and determine such objections to the assessment roll as may come before them; and the Board may change the same as may be just.

Any member who cannot attend the meeting is encouraged to submit a letter stating his or her grievance to the Board on or before October 22, 2015. Letters may be sent to the District office, P.O. Box 860, Twisp, WA 98856.

All lands will be fully assessed unless the parcel owner petitions the Board to hear and determine if a reduced assessment is warranted. No lands will be equalized after this date. Questions may be directed to the District office at (509) 997-2576. /s/ Sandra Strieby.

Published in the Methow Valley News September 30, 2015.

Methow Valley News Wednesday, September 30, 2015 Page B5

News of Record Compiled by Don Nelson

Okanogan County Sheriff’s OfficeSept. 21

CIVIL MATTER: Caller on Russian Hills Road, Methow, reported that a neighbor had done some clearing on the caller’s prop-erty, cut trees and took timber.

THREATENING BEHAVIOR: Caller on Libby Creek Road, Carlton, reported that a man was intoxicated and threatening to cut stuff with a chainsaw.

ACCIDENT: A non-injury accident was reported on Twisp-Winthrop Eastside Road. A driver struck a deer.

DOMESTIC ISSUE: Caller on Autumn Lane, Twisp, reported that they were involved in a domestic argument and a shoving match ensued, and children were present.Sept. 22

SUSPICIOUS ACTIVITY: A deputy reported that a vehicle appeared to be trying to elude the officer on Twisp Airport Road, but no crime was evident.Sept. 24

CHECK ON WELFARE: Caller asked that officers check on a potentially suicidal per-son on Twisp-Winthrop Eastside Road.

THEFT: Caller at Nordang Road and Highway 153, Twisp, reported some miss-ing items.Sept. 25

ILLEGAL BURNING: Illegal burning was reported on West Lupine Drive, Winthrop. A person at that location had a campfire and was cited for violation of the burn ban.

ILLEGAL BURNING: A possibly illegal fire was reported on Twisp-Winthrop Eastside Road.

ANIMAL NOISE: Barking dogs were reported on Ross Road, Twisp.Sept. 26

NOISE COMPLAINT: Caller on Lightning Pine Road, Methow, said law enforcement was not doing enough to enforce regula-tions about muffler noise from motorcycles.Sept. 27

DOMESTIC ISSUE: A domestic dispute was reported on West Chewuch Road involving separated partners.

TRESPASS: Caller on Airport Heights Road, Winthrop, reported that a woman broke into the residence, then backed out of the driveway and crashed into an embankment.

POSSIBLE DUI: A vehicle was reported in the ditch on Twisp-Carlton Road.

Twisp Police DepartmentSept. 21

MALICIOUS MISCHIEF: It was reported that a woman damaged the women’s bathroom door at a location on Riverside Avenue.

HARASSMENT: Caller on Canyon Street reported that their estranged spouse was harassing the caller over the phone.Sept. 23

INJURED ANIMAL: An injured deer was reported in the roadway on Highway 20 near Winthrop.

VEHICLE PROWL: Someone was possibly prowling vehicles on Lincoln Street.

ASSAULT: A person on Canyon Street was bleeding from the nose and needing aid. A suspect was at the police department.

NOISE COMPLAINT: Caller on East Second Avenue said an apartment tenant was agi-tated, loud, and pacing around, and appar-ently had been drinking.Sept. 24

INJURED ANIMAL: Caller reported that a dog had been hit on East Methow Valley Highway.Sept. 25

NOISE COMPLAINT: A noise complaint came from West Twisp Avenue.

ANIMAL NOISE COMPLAINT: Caller on Ross Road reported that five dogs were barking continuously.Sept. 26

TRAFFIC HAZARD: Debris was reported on the roadway on Highway 20, Winthrop.Sept. 27

ILLEGAL BURNING: Possible illegal burn-ing was reported on East Second Avenue.

Winthrop Marshal’s OfficeSept. 21

EXTRA PATROL REQUESTED: Workers at a business on Riverside Avenue were con-cerned that a couple of people were possi-bly scoping out the business, and asked for extra patrols.Sept. 26

DOMESTIC ISSUE: A verbal dispute was reported on Riverside Avenue.

Okanogan County District Court

Justin Edward Schamel, 32 of Winthrop, pleaded guilty to third-degree Driving While License Suspended. He was sen-tenced to 90 days with 89 suspended and

fined a total of $818.00.Eric Edward Hough, 44, of Winthrop,

pleaded guilty to two counts of Reckless Driving. He was sentenced to 364 days with 363 days suspended and fined a total of $1,058.00.

Okanogan County Superior Court

Harlan Curtis Thompson, 27, of Twisp, pleaded guilty to second-degree Theft. He was sentenced to 36 days and fined a total of $1,110.50.

Christopher Brian Durgin, 31, of Twisp, pleaded guilty to Harassment, two counts of Unlawful Display of a Weapon, Disorderly Conduct and Resisting Arrest. He was sen-tenced to three months on count one, 364 days with 274 days suspended on counts two and three, and 90 days on counts four and five. He was fined a total of $1,260.50.

The court found probable cause to charge Justin Edward Schamel, 32, of Winthrop, with Possession with Intent to Manufacture, two counts of Possession of a Controlled Substance and Sale Delivery or Possession with Intent to Sell or Deliver a Legend Drug. Bail was set at $15,000.

The court found probable cause to charge Jillian Yoakum, 25, of Winthrop, with Possession with Intent to Manufacture, two count of Possession of a Controlled Substance and Sale Delivery or Possession with Intent to Sell or Deliver a Legend Drug. Bail was set at $15,000.

The court found probable cause to charge Marc Alan Layne Jefferson, 24, of Winthrop, with two counts of Possessing a Controlled Substance and use of Drug Paraphernalia. Bail was set at $50,000.

The court found probable cause to charge Tina Meria Leduc-Lane, 34, of Twisp, with two counts of Possessing a Controlled Substance and use of Drug Paraphernalia. Bail was set at $1,000.

Marriage licensesKathleen Armstrong, 56, Twisp, and Ralph

Eugene Chartrand, 58, Tacoma.Jessica Ashley Sheehan, 33, Winthrop,

and Jason David Robinson, 30, Winthrop.Kassandra Nicole Ledesma, 26, Twisp, and

Jeremy Worthington Lemont, 36, Twisp.Crystal Marie Smith, 24, Twisp, and Justin

Wayne Calvin, 30, Twisp.

W W W.MethoW ValleyNeWS.coM

Page 14: Methow Valley News, Sept. 30, 2016

Real EstatePUB LISH ER'S NO TICE: All real estate ad ver tis- ing in this news pa per is subject to the Fair Hous-ing Act which makes it illegal to advertise "any pref er ence, lim i ta tion or dis crim i na tion based on race, col or, re li gion, sex, hand i cap, fa mil ial status or national or i gin, or an in ten tion, to make any such

pref er ence, limitation or dis crim i na tion." Fa mil ial sta tus in cludes children under the age of 18 living with par ents or legal cus to di ans, pregnant wom en and peo ple se cur ing cus to dy of children under 18.

This newspaper will not know ing ly ac cept any advertising for real estate which is in violation of the law. Our read ers are here by informed that all dwell ings ad ver tised in this news pa per are avail able on an equal op por tu ni ty ba sis. To com plain of dis crim i na tion call HUD toll-free at 1-800-669-9777. The toll-free tele phone num ber for the hear ing im paired is 1-800-927-9275.

www.fassencr.com (509) 996-3700 [email protected]

PRICE REDUCED100 Acre Homestead near Methow (land can be divided).

867 sq ft home, large timber barn, spring water rights.MLS 692354 $375,500

Fasse North Cascade Realty

Coldwell Banker Winthrop Realty.com

ColdwellBankerWinthropRealty.com

509-996-2121

#1 Real Estate Firm in the Methow Valley

SECLUDED PARADISE RETREAT!4 BR 3 BA, 20 Acres - Wolf Creek

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Page B6 Wednesday, September 30, 2015 Methow Valley News

Harts Pass By Erik Brooks

News brief sNew group formed to promote strong leaders for county

commissionerAlthough three dozen can-

didates are vying to be the next U.S. president, there are only a handful of contested races in this November’s local elections. Okanogan County Commissioner Jim DeTro ran unopposed for his second term in 2014.

A new organization — called Represent Okanogan County, or ROC ON 2016 — has set out to change that. The group’s mis-sion is “to identify, encourage and elect qualified individuals to run as candidates for Okano-gan County commissioner.”

Next year, when the terms of Okanogan County com-missioners Ray Campbell and Sheilah Kennedy expire, ROC hopes to find “strong leaders who will truly represent the people in November 2016.”

According to its organizers, ROC does not represent any political party. They are look-ing for effective county leaders who will make thoughtful, well-informed decisions for the future. “We seek those who are dedi-cated to transparent and respon-sive government,” they say.

The group, with countywide membership, is concerned that the current board of county commissioners has made public participation difficult, devoted time and financial resources to criticizing the state and federal government, and engaged in expensive lawsuits.

For more information about the group and position papers on topics such as agriculture, wildfire, land use and public health — or to assist with their efforts — visit ROC’s website at www.rocon2016.org or email [email protected].

Learn about Army’s proposed

helicopter trainingThe Methow Valley Citi-

zens’ Council (MVCC) is holding a meeting on Thursday (Oct. 1) for those interested in learning more about the U.S. Army’s proposal for train-ing combat-helicopter pilots at high elevations in the North Cascades.

Speakers will help people understand the proposal, cov-ering both specific local issues and the larger picture of the military’s plans for its heli-copter program, according to MVCC. The meeting will be from 7 – 9 p.m. at the Twisp Valley Grange.

The information can help inform comments to the Army about the proposal. The Army is soliciting input as part of its scoping process, which will help it determine what envi-ronmental impacts should be addressed in its analysis.

Joint Base Lewis-McChord (JBLM), near Tacoma, pro-posed seven new high-alti-tude training areas in June. If approved, pilots would learn to take off and land at high altitudes, on pinnacles and on ridgelines. Other maneuvers include hovering several feet above the ground and control-ling the helicopter so that only a portion — such as a single wheel — would touch down on the ground.

Aircraft traveling to and from the training areas would fly at 500 feet and above to minimize noise complaints and disruption to populated areas, according to the Army’s proposal.

The proposed mountain training area runs from south and west of Wenatchee to the Canadian border, west to the

North Cascades, and east to the Okanogan Highlands. JBLM says the new training area is needed to simulate conditions in Afghanistan at up to 14,000 feet. Training would take place 24 hours a day, 365 days a year, but the majority of the training would be at night to simulate flight and combat conditions.

The U.S. Forest Service would have to issue a special-use permit to the Army for the training.

For a copy of the scoping document or more information, visit http://www.lewis-mcchord.army.mil/publicworks/sites/envir/eia_HTA.aspx or call JBLM at (253) 967-1110.

The Army has extended the comment period twice. The deadline for comments is Nov. 3.

Comment on land-use changes and variances

A property owner on East Chewuch Road has applied to Okanogan County for a vari-ance to allow an existing shed and deck cover that are too close to neighboring property lines. Kimberley Vande Griend has a shed that is 3 feet from one property line and 30 feet from another, although county zoning requires a 50-foot set-back, according to the applica-tion.

The Vande Griend property is on Cottonwood Lane. This is one of several parcels whose owners have petitioned the county for variances or special permits from floodplain and setback restrictions and septic regulations to allow existing structures to continue to be used.

The Cottonwood Lane appli-cations are a result of code enforcement by the county’s Building and Planning depart-

ments in response to a com-plaint letter, according to Anna Randall, a planner for Okano-gan County. The county’s enforcement is driven by com-plaints, she said.

Property owners in the Lost River Airport development have requested a variance from county zoning requirements governing the portion of a lot that can be occupied by devel-opment.

James and Abby Brousseau want to construct a deck on an existing residence that would exceed the allowable lot cover-age by 3 percent, covering 13 rather than 10 percent, accord-ing to the application.

The Okanogan County hear-ing examiner will hold a pub-lic hearing on the two variance requests on Nov. 12 at 10 a.m. in the commissioners’ hearing room in Okanogan.

For more information or to comment on either one, contact Randall at (509) 422-7117 or [email protected].

An application to modify a planned development near the Mazama core has been sub-mitted to rezone and subdivide part of Chechaquo Ranch to accommodate future develop-ment. The development would include lodging and tourist-residential and seasonal hous-ing. The amended plan would also create six lots and an area designated as open space. The property is 2.67 acres.

Okanogan County is accept-ing comments on the environ-mental impact of the changes. The county will schedule a public hearing on the proposed changes in the future.

For more information or to comment, contact senior plan-ner Ben Rough at (509) 422-7122 or [email protected].

County commissioners to review plan for five-member health boardBy Marcy Stamper

After considering the com-position of the county’s Board of Health, which has had two vacancies for several months, the Okanogan County commis-sioners are proposing a smaller board with five members — the three commissioners, a mayor or city council member, and a representative from the medical or environmental health com-munity.

The current board charter, in effect since 1992, provides for six members — the com-missioners and three elected city officials. When the Board of Health was first established in 1986, it had just five mem-bers — the commissioners and two city officials.

In a draft resolution accom-panying the proposed charter, the commissioners say that restructuring the board would recognize that accountability for the cost of public health services has been assigned exclusively to the counties.

The commissioners point to a change to state law in the mid-1990s that eliminated direct financial contributions from cit-ies and towns to Public Health, instead requiring the county to pay that portion of the budget.

At a meeting about the charter on Sept. 14, Commissioner Jim DeTro raised the issue of financial accountability. Since cities no lon-ger contribute to Public Health, DeTro said it was important to ensure that the board members “have skin in the game.”

In addition to the county con-tribution, the Public Health dis-trict receives state and federal dollars and license fees. In 2014, the largest chunk of the district’s $1.25 million budget — 42 per-cent — came from license and permit fees (for programs such as restaurant inspections and septic permits), according to Ella Rob-bins, administrative coordinator for the health district.

Another 28 percent of the health budget came from the state, 20 percent from the fed-eral government, and about 10 percent from the county, accord-ing to Robbins. A portion of that is returned to the county for rent and accounting services. The 2016 budget is $1.16 million.

Washington’s contribution to public health districts across the state was increased in the 1990s to make up for a drop in city revenue after voters approved an initiative that lowered car-registration fees, according to

Ralph Malone, who served on the Okanogan County Board of Health from 2002 until July of this year.

Malone’s seat is one of the vacancies that has to be filled. He had to step down from the board after a review of the cur-rent charter determined that, as Omak city administrator, he was no longer eligible to serve. Malone first joined the board when he was the clerk for the city of Okanogan, which was an eligible position. (The cur-rent charter allows city clerks to be on the board; the proposed charter would restrict mem-bership to mayors and council members.)

As a district and not a county department, Public Health has a status similar to junior tax-ing districts such as fire or hospital districts, but no taxes are levied expressly for public health — instead, the county’s contribution comes out of its cur-rent-expense budget, said Malone.

The current-expense fund receives property-tax revenue from all county residents, regard-less of where they live, said Malone. In addition to public health, the current-expense bud-get pays for county functions such as the sheriff and the court.

The Board of Health has administrative and fiscal over-sight of the Public Health district. The board approves the Public Health budget and fee-for-service contracts with state agencies. Oversight of medical matters, such as quarantines, is handled by the district’s health officer.

Under the amended char-ter, the county commissioners would serve as long as they are in office. The representatives from the cities and the medical community would have four-year terms. Any elected offi-cial would be removed from the board immediately if he or she vacated the office.

A countywide coalition of mayors would select the city representatives; the commis-sioners would appoint the medi-cal representative. The board meets at least once a month.

The commissioners are hold-ing a public hearing on the pro-posed charter on Monday (Oct. 5) at 1:30 p.m. in their hearing room in Okanogan. People can testify at the hearing or submit comments in advance to Laleña Johns at [email protected].

For a copy of the amended charter, contact Perry Huston at (509) 422-7118 or [email protected].

WWW.MEthoWvALLEyNEWs.CoM

Page 15: Methow Valley News, Sept. 30, 2016

Don’t delay: Advertising deadline is October 16th

(509) 997-7011 • [email protected]

Let the winter visitors knowthat you are open for the seasonand waiting to greet them!

Now’s the time to line up youradvertising in Methow Valley Winter.

509.996.3183 www.oldschoolhousebrewery.com 155 Riverside, Winthrop, WA

Monday -Thursday 4pm to 9pmFriday & Saturday 12pm to 10pm

Sunday 12pm to 9pmKitchen closes daily at 9pm

Old SchOOlhOuSe B r e w e r y

Friday October 2nd

Danbert Nobacon

7pm • No Cover

Open Mic

Saturday October 3rd

Matthew Szlachtka

7pm • No Cover

Americana/Rock

Hosted by

Upcoming Events to Inspire People to Care for the Land

For more info call 509-996-2870www.methowconservancy.orgConservancy

Methow

photo by Emily Lints

WednesdayOctober 7th7:00 – 8:30pm

the Merc Playhouse

Ripe for the Telling: Surprising

Stories of Washington Fruit

with Julia Harrison Free and open to all!

Methow Valley News Wednesday, September 30, 2015 Page B7

Obituary

Communit y brief sNeighborhood leader training for disaster

preparednessMethowReady, a project

of the Methow Valley Long Term Recovery Organization, is offering two more sessions of neighborhood leader pre-paredness training for dealing with natural disasters, on Oct. 14 and Oct. 27.

The free training sessions will be from 5:30 – 7:30 p.m. at Aero Methow Rescue Service in Twisp. Pizza and dessert will be provided.

The workshops are based on the Map Your Neighborhood program, designed to help families and neighborhoods prepare for disasters.

Register at (509) 449-5590 or at [email protected].

Annual dinners for nonprofit

board membersThe Community Foundation

of NCW is now taking reser-vations for the sixth annual

Nonprofit Board Celebration Dinners. The events are open to volunteer board members serving nonprofits in Chelan, Douglas and Okanogan coun-ties. The dinners will be on Oct. 14 at Pybus Public Mar-ket in Wenatchee, and Oct. 15 at Sun Mountain Lodge. Both dinners begin at 5:30 p.m. and include a presentation by Nancy Long, executive direc-tor of 501 Commons.

Online reservations are required along with a $75 refundable deposit to reserve a seat. The deposit is returned at the event. Attendees are welcome to bring a guest who does not serve on a board for a $75 non-refundable fee.

Reserve online before Oct. 9 at www.cfncw.org.

Wildfire summit in Wenatchee

A “Wildfires and Us Sum-mit” will be held on Nov. 9 at the Performing Arts Cen-ter in Wenatchee to discuss a regional approach to reducing

the risks of wildfire loss. The free event will be from 4 – 8 p.m. and will be followed by a reception. For more informa-tion, call (509) 679-2043.

Gift drive for veterans begins

American Legion Auxiliary Unit 120 will begin planning its annual Christmas gift drive for the Spokane VA Medical Center and Spokane Veterans Home at its monthly meeting on Monday (Oct. 5) at noon in the Winthrop Barn.

Every fall, the club shops at local businesses for gift items for veterans and their fami-lies that will be wrapped and shipped in time for Christ-mas. Auxiliary members will drop off flyers about the pro-gram at Winthrop and Twisp businesses and begin shop-ping later this month, accord-ing to auxiliary member Janet Verkuyl.

The auxiliary also wel-comes contributions of new, unbreakable gifts or home-

made items, Verkuyl said.For more information,

contact Verkuyl at 996-3522 or auxiliary president Gail Surette at 996-2154.

History of Washington fruit

“Ripe for the Telling: Sur-prising Stories of Washing-ton Fruit” will be presented by the Methow Conservancy on Wednesday (Oct. 7) at The Merc Playhouse in Twisp. The free event begins at 7 p.m. Learn about the messy and juicy history of Washington’s produce business. The program is co-sponsored by Humanities Washington. For more informa-tion, call 996-2870.

Flea market at The Barn

A flea market and vintage sale will be held on Oct. 17 at the Winthrop Barn from 9 a.m. – 3 p.m. Admission is free. Vendors pay $10-$12 for a table. For more information, call 996-2188.

School Lunch MenuTHURSDAY, OCT. 1: Harvest lunch with locally sourced foods — grilled hamburger, tomatoes, greens, grilled union. Fresh vegetable wrap, her-bed potato salad deli option.FRIDAY, OCT. 2: Muffin, cheese stick; nacho bar; soup with homemade roll deli option.MONDAY, OCT. 5: Blue bagel, yogurt; pancakes with sausage patty; ham pesto wrap deli option.TUESDAY, OCT. 6: Breakfast pizza; twisted chicken Alfredo, homemade breadstick; turkey sandwich deli option.WEDNESDAY, OCT. 7: Granola, yogurt; stromboli with marinara sauce; BLTC wrap deli option.THURSDAY, OCT. 8: Breakfast pizza bagel; teri-yaki dippers, brown rice; ham sandwich deli op-tion.FRIDAY, OCT. 9: muffin, cheese stick; cheese or pepperoni pizza; soup with homemade roll deli option.All breakfasts include fruit, juice and milk. The breakfast burrito is subject to change but will always be an egg dish. All lunches include a trip through the fruit and vegetable bar. Milk is 1 percent or non-fat.

Methow Valley Senior CenterNotes

Clarence McCorckle was the winner of the door prize gift basket on Friday. Hope you enjoyed all the goodies in the basket, Clarence.

Dance day will be on the second Friday in October (Oct. 9) for that month only.

Lloyd Bjerge’s memorial is on Saturday (Oct. 3) at the Methow Valley United Meth-odist Church at 2 p.m., with a potluck to follow.

The Winter Sale is wrapping up, and all the leftover things will be moved to the rum-mage room. The Halloween Sale will be moving in the next day. It starts Oct. 12, and as soon as that sale is over, Christmas moves in. Can you believe it? Summer is over — it seems like we were just waiting for it to start.

Our new asphalt will be laid soon. It will get rid of all the cracks, chips and holes, and

will make it easier and safer to walk on.

I love fall — pretty leaves, crisp mornings, and all those great apples and fall veggies.

Now just for a little nice, gentle rain.

The Thrift Store is open on Saturdays during Farmers Market hours. The shop is also open Monday, Thursday and Friday from 9 a.m.–3:30 p.m.

The Senior Center is lo-cated next to the Methow Valley Community Center on Highway 20 in Twisp. Lunch is served at noon by the Okanogan County Transporta-tion and Nutrition Program on Monday, Thursday and Friday. The suggested donation for lunch is $3.50 for seniors over age 60; the cost is $8 for those under 60. Annual membership dues are $1.25.

Transportation is available locally for the senior lunch program, and for monthly

trips to Omak/Okanogan the second Tuesday of the month and to Wenatchee the third Tuesday of the month. Call the Senior Center at 997-7722 for additional details.

Lunch menuTHURSDAY, OCT 1: Beef ta-cos, refried beans, Spanish rice, coleslaw, apple crisp.FRIDAY, OCT. 2: Chili cheese stuffed baked potato, green salad, beets, pears, cornbread, frosted cake.MONDAY, OCT. 5: Meatloaf, mashed potatoes and gravy, corn, green salad, whole wheat roll, apple crisp.THURSDAY, OCT. 8: Beef Stroganoff, mashed potatoes, green beans, garden salad, mixed fruit, garlic bread, cook-ies.FRIDAY, OCT. 9: Biscuits and gravy, pea salad, chopped kale salad, peaches, brownies.

Loren Ramon RosvallLoren was born in Mount

Vernon, Washington, on Sept. 22, 1930, to LeRoy and Anna Rosvall of Stanwood. He died on Sept. 25, 2015. Loren was raised in the family home in Cedarhome and graduated from Stanwood High School in 1948. Following high school, Loren served in the U.S. Army during the Korean conflict. After serv-ing overseas, he returned to his hometown of Stanwood and mar-ried June Wilson. Though their marriage was brief, it blessed them with one daughter, Julie. Upon his return he started work-ing for Skagit Valley Telephone and stayed in the telephone industry for 34 years and retired from Continental Telephone Company.

He married Golda Campbell of Stanwood on Dec. 3, 1966. They resided at their family farm in the Cedarhome area, raising their five kids and farm-ing until 1991. Loren was an avid bird hunter and enjoyed hunting, fishing,and camping trips with family and friends. In 1991 Loren and Golda moved to Winthrop, where Loren enjoyed raising a beautiful and bounti-ful garden each summer. He also enjoyed working around their place doing numerous home improvement projects and keep-ing a meticulous and lush yard. Loren also worked for 12 years as a caretaker at the Sullivan Cemetery in Winthrop, where he took great pride in up-keeping the grounds. Loren and Golda were snowbirds and loved spend-ing their winters at their home in Florence, Arizona. They enjoyed exploring the desert, growing citrus trees, trips to the casino, and peaceful times on their back porch enjoying the beautiful scenery and watching the birds and Arizona wildlife.

He was the center of our fam-ily, the roots to our very diverse

family tree. We are forever bound by the love he gave each of us. He was strong, gentle, hard-working, loving, playful, a man of his word and our hero. We will forever miss the sparkle and love in his eyes. Words can-not express the hole in our hearts that is left by his passing. He was our everything. Our husband, dad, grandpa, great-grandpa and friend.

Loren is survived by his wife, Golda Rosvall; daughter Bernetta Killingsworth (Dick), son Bob Campbell (Anita), daughter Karla Roper (John); grandchildren Erika Lervick (Jeff), Shelby Dronen (Andrew), Leanna Bell, Briana Anderson (Michael), Erin Estill (Aaron), Ryan Titera, Holly Christianson (Darius); great-grandchildren Karina, Ella and Ole Lervick, Emma Short, Daniel Estill; and numerous relatives and devoted friends. He was preceded in death by his parents LeRoy and Anna Rosvall, sister Muriel Morrow, daughter Julie Bell, daughter Mickey Christianson, and grandson Guy Christianson.

A private family gathering will be held at a later date.

Loren Ramon Rosvall

Rhett!Clint and Erika Nohavec announce the birth of their son, Rhett Charles Nohavec, on July 31, 2015, in Issaquah. Rhett weighed 7 pounds, 10 ounces, and was 21 inches long at birth. Rhett is a sixth-generation Methow Valley Northcott, great-grandson to Shirley Northcott and the late Mel Northcott. Rhett is little brother to Brooks; grandparents are Rick and Lynn Northcott, Winthrop; Carol and Bob King, Kent; Curt and Carol Nohavec, Kent; uncle and aunt Brian and Nicki North-cott; cousin Dean; and step-uncles Andy and Robin Button, Fairbanks, Alaska.

Photo courtesy Clint and Erika Nohavec

Bull trout habitat improvement project on Goat Creek will also help other fish

A project to improve critically designated habitat for bull trout in Goat Creek is underway and is expected to be completed by the end of October.

Work will occur on the Okanogan-Wenatchee National Forest below the Goat Creek culvert referred to as “Vander-pool Crossing,” between river miles 6.7 and 7.6. The work is intended to restore stream com-plexity through the addition of large woody material.

The project will be con-ducted through a partnership of the National Forest Foundation (NFF), the U.S. Forest Service,

U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, and the Methow Salmon Recov-ery Foundation.

The project will replace wood that was removed due to past logging and management prac-tices. This will enhance spawn-ing habitat, cover, and refuge for bull trout, west slope cutthroat, and other fish species living in and using Goat Creek, accord-ing to information from the For-est Foundation.

The wood that will be used for the project was salvaged from a debris slide that occurred several years ago on federal land in the War Creek drainage.The

public should be aware of equip-ment and large truck traffic on both War Creek Trailhead Road (Forest Road 4430-100) and Goat Creek Road (Forest Road 5200). Log loading operations on War Creek Trailhead Road may delay vehicle traffic during daylight hours for periods of up to 20 minutes.

Storm-proofing on Goat Creek Road to reduce erosion and sedi-ment loading into the watershed during runoff and storm events will also be a part of the project and may be completed this fall, if the weather allows.

The project is funded through

NFF, the Forest Service, U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service, Wash-ington State Recreation and Conservation Office Salmon Recovery Funding Board, National Fish and Wildlife Foundation, Patagonia World Trout Initiative, and a personal gift from Gordon and Betty Moore.

This work is part of a suite of work that NFF is conducting with the Forest Service through the Treasured Landscapes, Unforgettable Experiences Majestic Methow campaign. For more information, contact Dayle Wallien at (206) 832-8280.

Student brief sWenatchee Valley College

has announced graduates and certifications for the 2014-15 year. Local students are:

• Associate of arts and sciences degree, Garrett Dornfeld, Twisp; Tabitha Bergevin-Krumme, Winthrop.

• Associate of applied science-transfer degree in nursing, Madeline Hajek, Winthrop.

• Associate technical sci-ence degree in accounting, Danny Yanarella, Twisp; Laurie Miller, Winthrop.

• Medical assistant certifi-

cate, Krysten Port, Twisp.• Practical nursing certificate,

Madeline Hajek, Winthrop.Chelsea Miller, daughter

of Kathleen Jardin of Win-throp, has received a grant to help her pursue a doctorate in adult and geriatric nursing at the University of Washington School of Nursing.

William Duguay of Carl-ton has been awarded a schol-arship by the Community Foundation of North Central Washington, one of 130 schol-arships distributed to students throughout the region.

Let’s be friends! Find us on Facebook: Methow Valley News

Page 16: Methow Valley News, Sept. 30, 2016

Page B8 Wednesday, September 30, 2015 Methow Valley News

Valley Life

Valley Life

Contacts

Lower Valley: Joanna Bastian, (509) 341-4617 or

[email protected]

Mazama: Bob Spiwak, 996-2777 or

[email protected]

Winthrop: Ashley Lodato, 996-3363 or

[email protected]

Twisp: Sally Gracie, 997-4364 or

[email protected]

WinthropAshley Lodato

MazamaBob Spiwak

It’s been an interesting week, under-scored by unusually cool nights. We had our lowest temperature last night, Sunday, when the thermometer dipped to 32 at wake-up time. Whether this has anything to do with the lunar eclipse is questionable, but at this point it seems

certain that the world is not going to come to an end. At least not today. The sun is hot already at 10 a.m., perhaps mocking the moon.

Being in a geophysical hole here in West Boesel, it takes a long time before we see moonrise. Thus, we missed the opening stanza of the red moon phe-nomenon and when we looked later on, the eclipse was waning.

We saw no red, although there were others who did, like Larry Miller — who saw the event from the elevated vantage point of his son’s home. We had a pretty good look at it on the Internet, and the temperature was a lot more comfortable that way.

One thing not attributable to celes-tial events was the surprise arrival at SLIME of Dick and Nancy Gode. They were long-time residents of suburban Mazama and now live in Kirkland. Their son Geof is a caregiver for Bob

and Maryann Sitts up the road. Daughter Jen and her husband, Scooter, previous owners of the Mazama Store, now reside in Hawaii. It was nice to see the parents again. It’s been a long time.

The newest event at the store was the top-sealing of the parking lot, replete with a brand new set of stripes for the parking area. For some reason, the east-ern half of the lot has now been painted in diagonal lines; closer to the store is still the traditional ones vertical from the road. This is of consequence because those in the diagonals, once backing out, have nowhere to go but east on Lost River Road in quest of a turn-around if they are leaving the area of urban Mazama.

A caution for dog-walkers along the river: Our hound, on her own at the riv-erside, apparently discovered a dead fish and rolled around in it. We have no idea how many times, but it must have

been a big fish because this dog, usually absent of odor, could be smelled at 20 feet when she returned to us. Not only is the stench of import, but I have long heard of dead salmon being poisonous to dogs. And where there are fish, there may well be bears.

Our neighbors, the Westermans, spotted a big bear emerging from our place last week as they were headed for their driveway. The bruin looked at them as they slowed their car, then crossed the highway and watched as they pulled into the drive. Jay Lucas noted several bruin visits at his Mazama digs, and recently saw one that dived into a container of apples and pears. The bear ate all the apples but did not touch the pears. On the hills of Edelweiss, Larry McWhirter has seen one cruising the neighborhood with some frequency.

Our own problem appears to be not

bears but raccoons. Something has been raiding the garbage container, managing to open the high-tech device and with-draw goodies along with other stuff that it leaves strewn around. One item was an empty plastic meat container about 30 feet from the can. On a sunny day, I spotted it and picked it up. Bad idea. It got to about knee level and was greeted by an uncountable convention of yellow-jackets. In an uncharacteristic moment of intelligent response, I dropped the container back upon them and ran like hell.

As long as this has turned into a visit to the animal corner, let’s mention the cows that are still coming out of the hills. This past Friday there was a small gathering of Angus casually strolling along Highway 20. With all respect for the ranchers, it seems it may be time to reconsider what is open range along a 60-mile-per-hour road.

Eighteen people doing anything together in Winthrop very nearly con-stitutes a mob, but few eyebrows were raised last week when a dozen-and-a-

half Methow At Home (MAH) members took to the streets during Methow At Home’s second social event of the year, which combined three of life’s greatest pleasures and was aptly titled the “Walk and Talk and Coffee.” After meeting at the Winthrop Barn on a chilly and beautiful morning, the MAH partici-pants walked through town, across the Sa Teek Wa bridge, into North Village, and wound up at Rocking Horse Bakery, where they were met by some additional members of MAH.

For some, the walk was a chance to make the acquaintance of Deirdre Cassidy, MAH’s newly hired coordina-tor. For others, it was a chance to get to know each other better, as some of the members are new to the valley while others have lived here since the 1960s.

For all, it was satisfying to answer with a straight face the earnest question asked by a visitor who was having coffee and a pastry at Rocking Horse: “Do you know the name of this town?” Did they, indeed!

If you thought the nearly two dozen MAH walkers were a large group, you would have been in for quite a surprise had you hiked the Maple Pass loop on Thursday, as you would have been in the company of almost 60 sixth-graders and their chaperones. As part of the annual sixth-grade campout, the students com-pleted the 7-mile hike near Rainy Pass, many of them for the first time. Stu-dents also experimented with archery, canoeing, plein air watercolors, poetry, and other activities during the three-day camp.

The camp involved mountains of gear, dozens of kids, and scores of food boxes, but when all was packed up on Friday afternoon not a trace remained at Falls Creek Campground, unless you count the iPhone that slipped out of a pocket and straight down the chute of an out-house early one morning.

A third large gathering of valley folks took place on Saturday at Dave and Marilyn Sabold’s house at the Methow Conservancy’s 12th annual Cider Squeeze. Preparations took place sev-eral days before the event, with about a dozen volunteers picking apples donated by Deborah DeKalb, and cider experts Beth and John Sinclair of Sixknot Cider pre-pressing countless gallons of cider so that all guests could go home with a jug after the actual Squeeze.

For the second year in a row, Paul Herget of Twisp built and donated 60 birdhouses, which went home with Squeeze guests. Paul started this prac-tice in the summer of 2014 after the fires, and felt compelled to carry on the tradition this year. One couple, who lost all of their existing birdhouses in the Tunk Valley fire last month, were par-ticularly excited to take home the first birdhouse in their new collection.

And a final surprise — the duo Squir-rel Butter, who were playing a benefit at the Twisp Valley Grange on Saturday evening, showed up halfway through the Squeeze and joined Paul Gitchos, Brad Pinkerton, Peter Neitlich and John Almquist in a bluegrass jam session.

Call it cider, call it apple juice — I call it community.

Cinder the bear ‘doing great so far’ after releaseBy Ann McCreary

Cinder the bear appears to be doing well in her new home after being released into the wild almost four months ago.

A victim of the 2014 Carlton Complex Fire, Cinder was discovered — emaciated and unable to walk on severely burned paws — in French Creek after the wildfire swept through the area.

The bear cub drew international atten-tion after she was rescued by state wildlife officials and underwent months of treat-ment at Lake Tahoe Wildlife Care in Cali-fornia, followed by rehabilitation at Idaho Black Bear Rehabilitation near Boise.

When her caretakers decided she had recovered enough to return to the wild, she was set free on June 3 — 11 months after she was rescued — in a densely for-ested area about 30 miles north of Leav-enworth.

“She’s doing great so far. I’m so glad I picked this release spot, as the drought and fires would have placed her in a no-win sit-uation” in many other areas of north cen-tral Washington, said Rich Beausoleil, bear and cougar specialist for the Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife.

Beausoleil organized the release of Cin-der and another bear cub, called Kaulana, who was found orphaned in the Leaven-worth area. The bears had developed an affinity for each other while they were kept in the same enclosure at the rehabilitation center last winter.

The bears were fitted with GPS radio collars so wildlife officials can track their movements. Cinder initially trav-eled several miles from the release site but returned and has remained there, said Beausoleil. Kaulana is also in the same general area, he said.

Wildlife officials hope to capture the bears periodically to replace the collars before they stop transmitting.

Cinder will be 3 years old and Kaulana will be 2 years old in January. Beausoleil said Cinder will be able to reproduce at about age 4, and he hopes to be able to visit her in her winter den at that time.

Because of her long and painful recov-ery and her feisty personality, Cinder has been described as a “symbol of hope” for residents of the Methow Valley in the aftermath of the Carlton Complex Fire.

Having fun putting the squeeze onIt was mostly play and just a wee

bit of work on the apple press at the

Methow Conservancy’s annual Cider

Squeeze last weekend. Top left, the

Apostles — John Almquist, Peter

Neitlich, Brad Pinkerton and Paul

Gitchos — play inspired bluegrass.

Middle right, sunny weather and soft

grass inspired a puppy pile at the

expense of Ray Sanders’ back. Below

right, hosts David and Marilyn Sabold

take in the festivities.

Photos by Laurelle Walsh and Don Nelson