32
by ALANA LINDEROTH Sequim Gazette T he onset of fall with cooler tem- peratures and rain showers may seem to indicate the statewide drought is over, but for many Sequim- Dungeness Valley farmers the impacts of a warm winter and dry summer still are lingering or yet to come. Despite the change of seasons, Sequim and the greater Olympic Peninsula is con- sidered to be in a state of “severe drought” according to the United States Drought Monitor produced through a partnership among the National Drought Mitigation Center at the University of Nebraska- Lincoln, the United States Department of Agriculture and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration. The Olympic Peninsula was one of the first areas a drought emergency was declared as early as March because both the agricultural and residential com- munities are heavily reliant on surface water-related supplies, Ginny Stern, Washington Department of Health hy- drogeologist, said. Secondly, the hydrol- ogy of the area doesn’t lend itself to large storage reservoirs and that “creates real challenges.” “This historic drought is not over and we’re already planning for next year,” Maia Bellon, Washington State Depart- ment of Ecology director, said. “There’s growing concern we may not get our winter snowpack in the mountains and if we don’t, the harm will be felt much earlier next year and be more costly.” Already DOE officials plan to allocate more money toward leasing water from farmers and large-scale irrigators as early as January to help prepare, she said. Early preparation Both proactive and early planning proved beneficial among local farmers working to buffer threats imposed by the drought. Anticipating a short irrigation season PENINSULA October 2015 volume 5, issue 4 families today Halloween fun for all Champions, x2 SHS cross country teams get sweep at league’s final meet A-3 B-5 Sequim’s Hometown Newspaper 75 CENTS Vol. 41, Number 44 THURSDAY, OCT. 29 59 50 FRIDAY, OCT. 30 58 52 SATURDAY, OCT. 31 57 47 weather outlook: Sports B-5 Schools B-8 Arts & Entertainment B-1 Opinion A-12 Obituaries A-11 Classifieds C-1 Crossword Section C by MICHAEL DASHIELL Sequim Gazette In a 4-0 vote on Oct. 21, board members of Clallam County Parks and Recreation District 1 — one that oversees the Sequim Aquatic Recreation Center — voted to tem- porarily close the facility until other funding sources are found. “Certainly one of the toughest decisions of my life,” SARC board chairman Frank Pickering said. “It’s a community asset. Unfor- tunately, it has not had the entire support of the voting community.” In a unanimous vote, Pickering, Sherry Nagel, Jan Richardson and Gil Goodman agreed to close the multi-use building that houses a gymnasium, racquetball courts, weight room, aerobic rooms, pools, sauna and more; board director Melinda Griffith was absent. Craig Miller, an attorney who represents both SARC and the Wil- liam Shore Memorial Pool, said the options SARC has to remain open are varied, from collaborations with nonprofits, for-profit businesses, the formation of a metropolitan park district, operations levy to financing and more. But given the financial situation of SARC, board commissioners SARC to close its doors Oct. 30 Scott Chichester, owner of Chi’s Farm, an organic farm nestled in the heart of the Sequim-Dungeness Valley, harvests a variety of lush greens that, like all his crops, responded well to drip irrigation. In anticipation of the the drought Chichester watered 95 percent of his farm via drip irrigation and seeks to continue to adapt and use water conservative methods moving into future, sustainable farming within the area. Sequim Gazette photo by Alana Linderoth Voted yet? In Clallam County’s Nov. 3 General Election, 8,185 ballots have been sub- mitted out of 47,481 (17.24 percent) as of Tuesday, Oct. 27. There are several ballot drops in Clallam County. Sequim’s is in the Sequim Village Shopping Center in the JCPenney’s parking lot. Port Angeles has ballot drop boxes at the Clallam County Courthouse, 223 E. Fourth St. Curbside ballot drop boxes require no postage and are open 24 hours a day until 8 p.m. on Election Day. For more information, call the elections office at 417-2217. Look for General Election results in the Nov. 4 print edition of the Sequim Gazette and online at www.sequimgazette.com. by ALANA LINDEROTH Sequim Gazette As the first areas to have a Master Site Plan designed specifically for them, the layout of Carrie Blake Park and the abutting Water Reuse Dem- onstration Site are up for discussion. While developing a Master Site Plan for the park and nearby water reuse site the key elements under evaluation include access, parking, connectivity and future uses, said Joe Irvin, City of Sequim parks manager and assistant to the city manager. “This is the first realistic attempt at preparing a Master Site Plan for flagship community parks,” Sequim Gazette staff Clallam County Fire District 3’s leadership team announced this week that Dan Orr of Santa Maria, Calif., will serve as its newest assistant chief. He replaces retired Assis- tant Fire Chief Roger Moeder and will take on a new title as the Assistant Chief of Risk Reduction and Planning be- ginning Dec. 1. by ALANA LINDEROTH Sequim Gazette Any and all plans to imple- ment Wi-Fi or cell phone towers within the Sequim city limits are on hold. The Sequim City Council ap- proved a six-month moratorium on wireless communication support towers on Oct. 26 via a 5-1 vote with councilor Dennis Smith opposed and Ken Hays absent. The moratorium went into immediate effect and includes all zones except public facility zones, according to Ordinance 2015-018. “New technology allows this, but appropriate consideration needs to be made for safety so they don’t become ‘wi-fry’ towers,” Future of reuse site, park is up for discussion Sequim’s Fire District 3 picks Orr for new assistant chief City to ban wireless Wi-Fi, cell towers In this issue: Board votes to shutter rec facility, gains funds to aid Sequim High’s swim team See SARC, A-11 Open House: Site planning of Carrie Blake Park & Water Reuse Demonstration Site When: 6:30-8:30 p.m., Monday, Nov. 2 Where: Sequim Civic Center, 152 W. Cedar St. More info: Contact Joe Irvin, parks manager and assistant to the city manager, at 582-2457. See WATER SITE, A-2 See DROUGHT, A-9 Planning proved key for farmers combating drought impacts, though state climatologist warns warming trend isn’t over Relief from Clallam’s dry spell Public hearing slated for Nov. 9 See TOWERS, A-6 ORR See FIRE CHIEF, A-6 SEQUIM GAZETTE Wednesday, Oct. 28, 2015 5A1424209 WILDER TOYOTA 43 Jetta Way, Port Angeles 1-800-927-9379 360-457-8511 You Can Count On Us! www.wildertoyota.com Avalon new 2015 Toyota *UP TO $2,000 TOYOTA CASH BACK OR 0% FOR UP TO 60 MONTHS, ON APPROVAL OF CREDIT. 0.0% APR FINANCING FOR 36 MONTHS - $27.78 PER $1,000 BORROWED OR 0.0% APR FINANCING FOR 48 MONTHS - $20.83 PER $1,000 BORROWED OR 0.0% APR FINANCING FOR 60 MONTHS - $16.67 PER $1,000 BORROWED. NO DOWN PAYMENT WITH APPROVED CREDIT THROUGH TOYOTA FINANCIAL SERVICES – TIER 1 PLUS AND 1 ONLY. NOT ALL CUSTOMERS WILL QUALIFY FOR LOWEST RATE. PLUS TAX, LICENSE AND $150 NEGOTIABLE DOCUMENTARY FEE. 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Page 1: Sequim Gazette, October 28, 2015

by ALANA LINDEROTHSequim Gazette

The onset of fall with cooler tem-peratures and rain showers may seem to indicate the statewide

drought is over, but for many Sequim-Dungeness Valley farmers the impacts of a warm winter and dry summer still are lingering or yet to come.

Despite the change of seasons, Sequim and the greater Olympic Peninsula is con-sidered to be in a state of “severe drought” according to the United States Drought Monitor produced through a partnership among the National Drought Mitigation Center at the University of Nebraska-Lincoln, the United States Department of Agriculture and the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration.

The Olympic Peninsula was one of the first areas a drought emergency was declared as early as March because both the agricultural and residential com-munities are heavily reliant on surface water-related supplies, Ginny Stern, Washington Department of Health hy-drogeologist, said. Secondly, the hydrol-ogy of the area doesn’t lend itself to large storage reservoirs and that “creates real challenges.”

“This historic drought is not over and we’re already planning for next year,” Maia Bellon, Washington State Depart-ment of Ecology director, said. “There’s growing concern we may not get our winter snowpack in the mountains and if we don’t, the harm will be felt much earlier next year and be more costly.”

Already DOE officials plan to allocate

more money toward leasing water from farmers and large-scale irrigators as early as January to help prepare, she said.

Early preparationBoth proactive and early planning

proved beneficial among local farmers working to buffer threats imposed by the drought.

Anticipating a short irrigation season

PENINSULA

October 2015volume 5, issue 4

families todayA publication for families living on the North Olympic Peninsula, and a supplement produced by the Peninsula Daily News

todayPeninsula Daily News

today today and

today todaySequim Gazette

today today advertising department. today

AUTUMN ON THE

OLYMPIC PENINSULA

Halloween parties and

fall excursions — Page 10

Program helps teach math,

science skills — Page 6

Halloween fun for all Champions, x2SHS cross country teams get sweep at league’s final meetA-3

B-5

Sequim’s Hometown Newspaper 75 CENTSVol. 41, Number 44

THURSDAY, OCT. 29▲59 ▼50

FRIDAY, OCT. 30▲58 ▼52

SATURDAY, OCT. 31▲57 ▼47

weather outlook:

Sports B-5 • Schools B-8 • Arts & Entertainment B-1 • Opinion A-12 • Obituaries A-11 • Classifieds C-1 • Crossword Section C

by MICHAEL DASHIELLSequim Gazette

In a 4-0 vote on Oct. 21, board members of Clallam County Parks

and Recreation District 1 — one that oversees the Sequim Aquatic Recreation Center — voted to tem-porarily close the facility until other funding sources are found.

“Certainly one of the toughest decisions of my life,” SARC board chairman Frank Pickering said. “It’s a community asset. Unfor-tunately, it has not had the entire support of the voting community.”

In a unanimous vote, Pickering, Sherry Nagel, Jan Richardson and Gil Goodman agreed to close the

multi-use building that houses a gymnasium, racquetball courts, weight room, aerobic rooms, pools, sauna and more; board director Melinda Griffith was absent.

Craig Miller, an attorney who represents both SARC and the Wil-liam Shore Memorial Pool, said the options SARC has to remain open

are varied, from collaborations with nonprofits, for-profit businesses, the formation of a metropolitan park district, operations levy to financing and more.

But given the financial situation of SARC, board commissioners

SARC to close its doors Oct. 30

Scott Chichester, owner of Chi’s Farm, an organic farm nestled in the heart of the Sequim-Dungeness Valley, harvests a variety of lush greens that, like all his crops, responded well to drip irrigation. In anticipation of the the drought Chichester watered 95 percent of his farm via drip irrigation and seeks to continue to adapt and use water conservative methods moving into future, sustainable farming within the area. Sequim Gazette photo by Alana Linderoth

Voted yet?In Clallam County’s Nov. 3 General Election, 8,185 ballots have been sub-mitted out of 47,481 (17.24 percent) as of Tuesday, Oct. 27. There are several ballot drops in Clallam County. Sequim’s is in the Sequim Village Shopping Center in the JCPenney’s parking lot. Port Angeles has ballot drop boxes at the Clallam County Courthouse, 223 E. Fourth St. Curbside ballot drop boxes require no postage and are open 24 hours a day until 8 p.m. on Election Day. For more information, call the elections office at 417-2217. Look for General Election results in the Nov. 4 print edition of the Sequim Gazette and online at www.sequimgazette.com.

by ALANA LINDEROTHSequim Gazette

As the first areas to have a Master Site Plan designed specifically for them, the layout of Carrie Blake Park and the abutting Water Reuse Dem-onstration Site are up for discussion.

While developing a Master Site Plan for the park and nearby water reuse site the key elements under evaluation include access, parking, connectivity and future uses, said Joe Irvin, City of Sequim parks manager and assistant to the city manager.

“This is the first realistic attempt at preparing a Master Site Plan for flagship community parks,”

Sequim Gazette staff

Clallam County Fire District 3’s leadership team announced this week that Dan Orr of Santa Maria, Calif., will serve as its newest assistant chief.

He replaces retired Assis-tant Fire Chief Roger Moeder and will take on a new title as the Assistant Chief of Risk Reduction and Planning be-ginning Dec. 1.

by ALANA LINDEROTHSequim Gazette

Any and all plans to imple-ment Wi-Fi or cell phone towers within the Sequim city limits are on hold.

The Sequim City Council ap-proved a six-month moratorium on wireless communication support towers on Oct. 26 via a 5-1 vote with councilor Dennis Smith opposed and Ken Hays absent.

The moratorium went into immediate effect and includes all zones except public facility zones, according to Ordinance 2015-018.

“New technology allows this, but appropriate consideration needs to be made for safety so they don’t become ‘wi-fry’ towers,”

Future of reuse site, park is up for discussion

Sequim’s Fire District 3 picks Orr for new assistant chief

City to ban wireless Wi-Fi, cell towers

In this issue:

Board votes to shutter rec facility, gains funds to aid Sequim High’s swim team

See SARC, A-11

Open House: Site planning of Carrie Blake Park & Water Reuse Demonstration SiteWhen: 6:30-8:30 p.m., Monday, Nov. 2Where: Sequim Civic Center, 152 W. Cedar St. More info: Contact Joe Irvin, parks manager and assistant to the city manager, at 582-2457.

See WATER SITE, A-2

See DROUGHT, A-9

Planning proved key for farmers combating drought impacts, though state climatologist warns warming trend isn’t over

Relief from Clallam’s dry spell

Public hearing slated for Nov. 9

See TOWERS, A-6 ORR See FIRE CHIEF, A-6

SEQUIM GAZETTEWednesday, Oct. 28, 2015

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Page 2: Sequim Gazette, October 28, 2015

Oct. 29 6:10 a.m. 8.1 11:19 a.m. 4.4 4:44 p.m. 7.6 11:33 p.m. -1.6Oct. 30 7:05 a.m. 8.1 12:19 a.m. 4.8 5:25 p.m. 7.2 NAOct. 31 NA 12:19 a.m. -1.3 8:01 a.m. 8.1 1:28 p.m. 5.0Nov. 1 NA 1:08 a.m. -0.7 7:59 a.m. 7.9 1:54 p.m. 5.0Nov. 2 NA 1:01 a.m. -0.0 8:58 a.m. 7.8 3:27 p.m. 4.7Nov. 3 NA 1:59 a.m. 0.7 9:55 a.m. 7.7 4:43 p.m. 4.2Nov. 4 NA 3:02 a.m. 1.5 10:46 a.m. 7.6 5:38 p.m. 3.6

Date High Low Oct. 21 55 42Oct. 22 57 46Oct. 23 55 41Oct. 24 51 46Oct. 25 57 41Oct. 26 57 46Oct. 27 56 48

Date Sunrise SunsetOct. 29 7:52 a.m. 6:01 p.m.Oct. 30 7:53 a.m. 5:59 p.m.Oct. 31 7:55 a.m. 5:57 p.m.Nov. 1 * 6:56 a.m. 4:56 p.m.Nov. 2 6:58 a.m. 4:54 p.m.Nov. 3 6:59 a.m. 4:52 p.m.Nov. 4 7:01 a.m. 4:51 p.m.* Daylight Saving Time ends

TIDE CHARTS

SUNRISE/SUNSETWEATHER

Oct. 27 Full MoonNov. 3 Third QuarterNov. 11 New MoonNov. 18 First Quarter

MOONRAINFALL

These tides are corrected for Dungeness Bay.

Rainfall for Week of Oct. 21-27, 20150.21 inch of precipitation recorded.Rainfall recorded at Mariners Outlook and reported at www.wunderground.com.

CORRECTIONClallam County commissioner Jim McEntire was incorrectly identified in a photo in last

week’s Sequim Gazette (“Clallam County commissioner candidates get boost with key en-dorsements, funding,” page A-6).

Sequim Gazette staff

There’s no shortage of candy to go around this Halloween and Harvest season.

Sequim and Port Angeles continue to offer many activi-ties through Oct. 31. The Boys & Girls Club hosts its annual pre-Halloween event with candy and games while adults can enjoy festivities on Oct. 30 at the Oasis Bar & Grill. On Halloween, Sequim High School offers its annual Haunted Hallways and the Downtown Merchants serve up some treats. Churches, a car dealership and the casino also get in on the fun on Halloween.

THROUGH HALLOWEEN • Pumpkin Patch When: Open daily noon-6 p.m.Where: Corner of U.S. Highway 101 and Kitchen-Dick

Road. Details: Pumpkin patch, field trips. Pumpkins: 50 cents per

pound, straw maze: $5; Pumpkin shoot (two shots) $5. Contact: 461-0940.• Troll Haven Farms’ Haunted Castle When: 6 p.m. through Oct. 31Where: Troll Haven, 950 Gardiner Beach Road, Sequim Details: Family friendly scare in the barn. Cost: 5 and

under free, 6-12 $5• Troll Haven Pumpkin PatchWhen: noon-5 p.m. through Oct. 31Details: $5 admission for ages 6-12, youths 5 and younger

are free. Includes haunted area upstairs, petting zoo, crafts, games, popcorn, cider, coffee and hot cocoa. Pumpkins: small two for $5, medium $7 and large $10.

Contact: 559-577-3067 or visit trollhaven.org.

FRIDAY, OCT. 30• Boys & Girls Club’s

pre-Halloween eventWhen: 6:30-9 p.m.,

Friday, Oct. 30. Where: Sequim Boys

& Girls Club, 400 W. Fir St.

Det a i l s : Ca ndy, games and more with a haunted house: $2.

Contact: Boys & Girls Clubs of the Olympic Peninsula, 683-8095.

• The Oasis Bar & Grill’s Halloween party, costume contest

When: 10 p.m. live music with costume contest later, Friday, Oct. 30

Where: The Oasis Bar & Grill, 301 E. Washington St., Contact: 582-3143. Call before 11 a.m.

SATURDAY, OCT. 31• Layton Hill Horse Camp When: 9 a.m.-dusk, Saturday, Oct. 31.Where: 2514 Chicken Coop Road, BlynDetails: 9 a.m.-2:30, Poker Run; 3:30 p.m. costume competi-

tion and pumpkin carving (BYOP); 5 p.m. Dutch oven cook-off; at dusk, Haunted Forest, $5. Not recommended for children.

Contact: Anna 425-737-7404.

Tricks, treats abound this Halloween in Sequim

Bristol Bury, at only 20 months old, dressed as a strawberry and quickly took to trick-or-treating last fall.

parks,” he said. “It gives me pride knowing that we’ve gotten to the point where we can decide how the park will operate for the years to come with a definitive plan.”

Open houseIn hopes of sparking com-

munity interaction, city officials are hosting an open house Monday, Nov. 2.

Accompanied by station leaders aimed at gathering suggestions, general input and answering questions about the Master Site plan-ning process, three alterna-tives with corresponding visuals will be on hand throughout the open house.

“What’s so cool about this type of planning is you jointly put together a vision and then turn that into reality,” Irvin said. “This open house is an opportunity for public engagement.”

To best incorporate citi-zens’ thoughts in response to the draft alternatives, city of-ficials are working with staff from Hough Beck & Baird (HBB) Inc., a Seattle-based landscape architecture firm. HBB officials are locally ac-tive and were involved in both the Port Angeles waterfront project, as well as creating a master plan for the city’s Lincoln Park.

Together city and HBB offi-cials will use the public input gained at the open house to

Water SiteFrom page A-1

shape the Master Site Plan alternatives, Irvin said. The revised alternatives will then be presented to the Sequim City Council and the city’s Park and Recreation Board during a joint work session at 5 p.m., Monday, Dec. 14.

A second open house on Tuesday, Dec. 15, will follow to showcase the final pro-posed Master Site Plan to the community.

The final plan will include all costs associated with it and thus allow for grant submittals to begin and allocation of budget funds in subsequence years. Also, Irvin anticipates pursuing community partnerships, such as the city’s collabo-ration with a local group of pickleball players, the Sequim Picklers.

Already the Sequim Pick-lers have raised $2,295 of its $10,000 goal via a GoFundMe account (www.gofundme.com/sequimpicklers) and have supplied Master Site Plan project manager Dean Koontz of HBB with the pick-leball court designs proposed for Carrie Blake Park.

Under the proposed City of Sequim 2016 budget, the anticipated pickleball courts are listed with a price tag of $51,000. However, the funds

aren’t secured and depend on alternative funding sources, like grants, explained David Garlington, City of Sequim public works director.

“The pickleball people are well on their way to finding those funding sources,” he said.

Albert Haller PlayfieldsLike the ongoing public

and now collaborative effort toward establishing pickle-ball courts, “the task to solve the parking and access needs in collaboration with the Sequim Family Advocates is tracking side-by-side with the Master Site Plan,” Irvin said.

The Master Site planning process under way is a prod-uct of the City of Sequim Parks and Recreation Master Plan adopted late February and is separate from the proposed parking plan for the Albert Haller Playfields, but given the proximity and interaction between the projects, “they’ll be designed in tandem,” Irvin said.

On Oct. 26, Irvin provided city councilors with an up-date on the parking options created to address the ad-ditional parking, access and increased safety precautions needed to accommodate

the activity at the Albert Haller Playfields on Tuesdays, Thursdays and Saturdays.

Four locations with corre-sponding parking lot designs were discussed, as well as the construction of an access road from the Water Reuse Interpretative Center to one of the proposed parking lots located between the James Center and Albert Haller Playfields.

City officials have ear-marked $75,000 in the pro-posed 2016 budget for park-ing and access improvements within the area of concern, but the total costs to pursue the full buildout of possible parking options is between $765,000 and $932,000. Given the costs involved, both city and Sequim Family Advocate officials are hope-ful they’ll be able to re-se-cure grants and community contributions given to the Sequim Family Advocates for the parking project, but given back when it seemingly lost momentum.

Moving forward, Irvin expects to present a park-ing recommendation to the Sequim Park and Recreation Board on Monday, Nov. 2, and return to the city councilors with a recommendation on Monday, Nov. 9.

Sequim city officials working to develop a final Master Site Plan for Carrie Blake Park and adjoining Water Reuse Demonstration Site seek community input on three alternative future layout designs. Graphic courtesy City of Sequim

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Page 3: Sequim Gazette, October 28, 2015

CORRECTIONClallam County commissioner Jim McEntire was incorrectly identified in a photo in last

week’s Sequim Gazette (“Clallam County commissioner candidates get boost with key en-dorsements, funding,” page A-6).

Sequim Gazette staff

There’s no shortage of candy to go around this Halloween and Harvest season.

Sequim and Port Angeles continue to offer many activi-ties through Oct. 31.

The Boys & Girls Club hosts its annual pre-Halloween event with candy and games while adults can enjoy festivi-ties on Oct. 30 at the Oasis Bar & Grill.

On Halloween, Sequim High School offers its annual Haunted Hallways and the Downtown Merchants serve up some treats.

Churches, a car dealership and the casino also get in on the fun on Halloween.

THROUGH HALLOWEEN • Pumpkin Patch When: Open daily noon-6 p.m.Where: Corner of U.S. Highway 101 and Kitchen-Dick

Road. Details: Pumpkin patch, field trips. Pumpkins: 50 cents per

pound, straw maze: $5; Pumpkin shoot (two shots) $5. Contact: 461-0940.• Troll Haven Farms’ Haunted Castle When: 6 p.m. through Oct. 31Where: Troll Haven, 950 Gardiner Beach Road, Sequim Details: Family friendly scare in the barn. Cost: 5 and

under free, 6-12 $5• Troll Haven Pumpkin PatchWhen: noon-5 p.m. through Oct. 31Details: $5 admission for

ages 6-12, youths 5 and young-er are free. Includes haunted area upstairs, petting zoo, crafts, games, popcorn, cider, coffee and hot cocoa. Pump-kins: small two for $5, medium $7 and large $10.

Contact: 559-577-3067 or visit trollhaven.org.

FRIDAY, OCT. 30• Boys & Girls Club’s pre-

Halloween eventWhen: 6:30-9 p.m.Where: Sequim Boys & Girls

Club, 400 W. Fir St. Details: Candy, games and

more with a haunted house: $2. Contact: Boys & Girls Clubs

of the Olympic Peninsula, 683-8095.

• The Oasis Bar & Grill’s Hal-loween party, costume contest

When: 10 p.m. live music with costume contest later

Where: The Oasis Bar & Grill, 301 E. Washington St.,

Contact: 582-3143. Call be-fore 11 a.m.

• Sequim Community Church’s Fall Family FestivalWhen: 5-8 p.m.Where: Sequim Community Church, 950 N. Fifth Ave.Details: Carnival games, bounce house, giant ob-

stacle course, hot dogs, chili cook-off, candy; costumes welcome

Contact: 683-4194 or [email protected].

SATURDAY, OCT. 31• Layton Hill Horse Camp When: 9 a.m.-duskWhere: 2514 Chicken Coop Road, BlynDetails: 9 a.m.-2:30, Poker Run; 3:30 p.m. costume competi-

tion and pumpkin carving (BYOP); 5 p.m. Dutch oven cook-off; at dusk, Haunted Forest, $5. Not recom-mended for children.

Contact: Anna 425-737-7404. • Sequim High School Haunted

HallwaysWhen: 1-4 p.m.Where: At school campus in H Build-

ing, 601 N. Sequim Ave. Details: Parents and grandparents

can bring children dressed in costumes for Halloween activities and fun. No admission is required, but canned food donations will be added to the high school’s annual October food drive to benefit the Sequim Food Bank.

Contact: 582-3600.• Trick-or-treat with the merchants

in downtown SequimWhen: 3-5 p.m.Where: Look for pictures of pumpkins

in window of participating stores. Contact: Contact Sequim-Dungeness

Valley Chamber of Commerce at 683-6197.

• Faith Lutheran Church’s Hallow’d Eve Harvest Festival

When: 5-7 p.m.Where: Faith Lutheran Church, 382

W. Cedar St. Details: Free games, prizes, candy

and a cake walk.Contact: 683-4803. • Price Ford’s “Trunk or Treat”When: 5-7 p.m. Saturday, Oct. 31Where: 3311 E. U.S. Highway 101, Port Angeles.Details: 30 local businesses providing a safe place for

youngsters inside rain or shine. Contact: 457-3333.

Tricks, treats abound this Halloween in Sequim

• Olympic View Church of God’s Trunk-or-Treat When: 5-7 p.m. Where: 503 N. Brown Road Details: Family friendly environment with free hayrides,

food/drinks and treats for children. Contact: 683-7897 or Christine Paulsen at 461-1866. • King’s Way Foursquare Church’s The Bash When: 5-8 p.m. Where: King’s Way Foursquare Church, 1023 Kitchen-

Dick Road. Details: Bringing a non-perishable food item/s gets you into

the fun and games, including pony rides, a Ferris wheel, a rock climbing wall, bounce houses, games and candy. Bring a buck or two and grab some hot dogs or an espresso. Family friendly cos-tumes and fun for the whole family. Adults accompany children.

Contact: www.thekingsway.net or call 683-8020.• Eastern Hills Community Church’s Trunk-or-TreatWhen: 6-8 p.m. Saturday, Oct. 31Where: Eastern Hill’s Community Church, 91 Savannah

Lane, Carlsborg Details: Free bounce houses, train rides, hot dogs, music, candy. Contact: 681-4367 or easternhillscommunitychurch.org. • Seven Cedars CasinoWhen: 9 p.m.-1 a.m.Where: Club Seven at 7 Cedars Casino, 270756 U.S. Hwy 101. Cost: No coverOther: Gold Digger plus a $500 costume contest. Contest

for cash prizes: 11 p.m. Must be here by 10 p.m. to pre-judged. 21 & Over with ID.

Also: Rainforest Stage, music by DJ O.B.1 from 9 p.m.- 1 a.m.; 18-20s contest for cash prizes at 10 p.m. Must be here by 9 p.m. to be pre-judged. 18+ with ID.

Downtown Sequim was bustling with people of all ages in a variety of costumes to trick-or-treat in 2014. Sequim Gazette file photos by Alana Linderoth

Bristol Bury, at only 20 months old, dressed as a strawberry and quickly took to trick-or-treating last fall.

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Page 4: Sequim Gazette, October 28, 2015

Rep. Derek Kilmer honored as a ‘Champion’ of nature

The Nature Conservancy in Washington honored Rep. Derek Kilmer (D-Wash.) with its “Champion of Nature” award.

Mike Stevens, state director for The Nature Conservancy in Washington, presented the award in person on Oct. 8, as he and members of the Washington Board of Trustees and staff traveled to Capitol Hill to discuss several conservation issues currently facing Congress.

“It’s an honor to receive this award from The Nature Conservancy,” said Kilmer. “Generations have enjoyed the ability to swim, fish and dig for clams in the iconic waters of the Puget Sound. I’m proud to partner with The Nature Conservancy to protect this legacy. If future generations — including my little girls — are going to have these opportunities on the sound we’ve got to take action today.”

Anti-fluoride rally setClean Water for Clallam County

invites all to attend the End Fluori-dation Rally at 1 p.m. Saturday, Oct. 29, at the Gateway Transit Center Pavilion for a rally, food drive and free information. A march to Port Angeles City Hall follows at 5 p.m.

PFOA sets benefitPeninsula Friends of Animals

invites the community to a Din-ing Benefit Event at Smuggler’s Landing, 115 Railroad Ave., Port Angeles from 5-7 p.m. Thursday, Oct. 29. Join members in celebrat-ing National Cat Day. Half of din-ner proceeds will be donated to PFOA supporting its rescues and spay/neuter clinics for low-income pet owners. Call 452-0414 or visit www.safehavenpfoa.org for ticket information.

Studying salmonInterested in getting fishy? Attend

a training to survey coho with the North Olympic Salmon Coalition. The group provides the gear and the know-how as participants and collect important data on spawning salmon at Chimacum Creek, start-ing at 9:30 a.m. on Friday, Oct. 30. Call 379-8051 or e-mail [email protected] for more information.

Harvest dinner slatedThe Esther Chapter #19 Order

of the Eastern Star is having their sixth-annual Harvest Dinner from 11:30 a.m.-3:30 p.m. on Sunday, Nov. 1, at the Port Angeles Masonic Lodge, 622 S. Lincoln St.

The event includes a homemade turkey dinner with all the trim-mings. Tickets are $12 for adults, $6 for children ages 6-10, and free for children ages 5 and younger. Tickets are available at the door or by calling Vickie Larson at 457-9444 or Mary Miller at 417-9236.

‘Hope for the Holidays’Paul Fiorini, a bereavement

counselor with Assured Hospice in Sequim, presents a seminar for people who have lost loved ones and need some assistance in getting through the holidays. “Hope for the Holidays” is free and will be from 1-3 p.m. Wednesday, Nov. 4, at the Sequim Library, 630 N. Sequim Ave. Call 582-3796 to register.

Mac users group to meetThe Strait Mac User’s Group

meets at 7 p.m. on Wednesday, Nov. 4, at the Port Angeles Library, 2210 S. Peabody St. Presenter Jim Karr demonstrates the Apple program

COMMUNITY NEWS BRIEFSMILESTONES

Submitted photo

Submitted photo

Do you have an item for Milestones? We want to hear about births, awards, anniversaries, graduations, church events and any other milestone. Please send your items, including photos, to [email protected]. Or, drop them off at the Gazette office, 147 W. Washington St. Oh, babies!

Oct. 16, 1:05 p.m. — a daugh-ter, Khloe Mykel H a m p t o n , 7 pounds 10 ounc-es, to Jeff and Heidi Hampton, Port Angeles.

Oct. 20, 11:55 p.m. — a son, Finn Robert Mc-Ginley, 7 pounds 11 ounces, to Bryce and Jessica McGinley, Sequim.

Finn Robert McGinley

OMC gala nets $92,000Olympic Medical Center Foundation, in

conjunction with Seattle Cancer Care Alli-ance, presented the annual Harvest of Hope Wine & Dinner Gala on Oct. 24 at the Sun-Land Golf & Country Club in Sequim and saw the event net about $92,000. The 13th annual gala once again raised funds for lo-cal cancer patients being treated at Olympic Medical Cancer Center through the provision of services, programs and equipment.

For more information about the OMC Foundation, call 417-7144.

Soroptimists honor Rigg, ShrefferSoroptimist International of Sequim

honored two Girls of the Month at its Oct. 13 meeting.

Waverly Shreffler (pictured above, at right) is the Soroptimist Girl of the Month for September. She is a senior at Sequim High School and ASB executive secretary this year. Throughout her four years at SHS, she has been very involved in ASB, varsity cross country and track, and clubs — including Be The Change and Honor Society. Shreffler said she enjoys volunteering in the community and adventuring in the Olympics. She hopes to attend Colorado College next year and pursue a career in education.

Kyla Rigg, Soroptimist Girl of the Month for October, is a senior at Sequim High School and plans to go to a university and study to become a pediatrician. She said she loves to help people, be involved in her school and spend time with children. Rigg expresses these interests in her activities: coaching youth sports, serving in leadership and par-ticipating in sports.

KILMER

For our warriorsThe Peninsula Dream Machines group

(above) selected the Wounded Warriors local events as their charity for the 2015 Car show held in September. The show raised $2,700 for the Wounded Warriors.

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Page 5: Sequim Gazette, October 28, 2015

Rep. Derek Kilmer honored as a ‘Champion’ of nature

The Nature Conservancy in Washington honored Rep. Derek Kilmer (D-Wash.) with its “Champion of Nature” award.

Mike Stevens, state director for The Nature Conservancy in Washington, presented the award in person on Oct. 8, as he and members of the Washington Board of Trustees and staff traveled to Capitol Hill to discuss several conservation issues currently facing Congress.

“It’s an honor to receive this award from The Nature Conservancy,” said Kilmer. “Generations have enjoyed the ability to swim, fish and dig for clams in the iconic waters of the Puget Sound. I’m proud to partner with The Nature Conservancy to protect this legacy. If future generations – including my little girls – are going to have these opportunities on the sound we’ve got to take action today.”

Anti-fluoride rally setClean Water for Clallam County

invites all to attend the End Fluori-dation Rally at 1 p.m. Saturday, Oct. 29, at the Gateway Transit Center Pavilion for a rally, food drive and free information. A march to Port Angeles City Hall follows at 5 p.m.

PFOA sets benefitPeninsula Friends of Animals

invites the community to a Dining Benefit Event at Smuggler’s Land-ing, 115 Railroad Ave., Port Angeles from 5-7 p.m. Thursday, Oct. 29. Join members in celebrating National Cat Day. Half of dinner proceeds will be donated to PFOA supporting its rescues and spay/neuter clinics for low-income pet owners. Call 452-0414 or visit www.safehavenpfoa.org for ticket information.

Studying salmonInterested in getting fishy? Attend

a training to survey coho with the North Olympic Salmon Coalition. The group provides the gear and the know-how as participants and collect important data on spawning salmon at Chimacum Creek, starting at 9:30 a.m. on Friday, Oct. 30. Call 379-8051 or e-mail [email protected] for more information.

Harvest dinner slatedThe Esther Chapter #19 Order of

the Eastern Star is having its sixth-annual Harvest Dinner from 11:30 a.m.-3:30 p.m. Sunday, Nov. 1, at the Port Angeles Masonic Lodge, 622 S. Lincoln St.

The event includes a homemade turkey dinner with all the trim-mings. Tickets are $12 for adults, $6 for children ages 6-10, and free for children ages 5 and younger. Tickets are available at the door or by calling Vickie Larson at 457-9444 or Mary Miller at 417-9236.

‘Hope for the Holidays’Paul Fiorini, a bereavement

counselor with Assured Hospice in Sequim, presents a seminar for people who have lost loved ones and need some assistance in getting through the holidays. “Hope for the Holidays” is free and will be from 1-3 p.m. Wednesday, Nov. 4, at the Sequim Library, 630 N. Sequim Ave. Call 582-3796 to register.

Mac users group to meetThe Strait Mac Users Group meets

at 7 p.m. Wednesday, Nov. 4, at the Port Angeles Library, 2210 S. Pea-body St. Presenter Jim Karr demon-strates the Apple program Keynote, showing how he uses Keynote to

deliver professional lectures around the world.

Using Keynote, he will share personal insights from his work and travels through the Amazon River. Refreshments will be served. Call Jerry Freilich at 457-4660 for more information.

Paws to readDogs make great listeners for read-

ers of all ages. Starting at 3:30 p.m. Thursday, Nov. 5, the Port Angeles Library (2210 S. Peabody St.) invites the community to share a story with a furry, four-legged friend from Olympic Gentle Paws Therapy Dog Club. For more information about this and other upcoming programs at the library, visit www.nols.org and select “Events,” call the library at 417-8500, or send an e-mail to [email protected].

Transit back on scheduleClallam Transit will resume

regular fixed-route, dial-a-ride and paratransit bus service on Veterans Day, Wednesday, Nov. 11, throughout Clallam County.

The fixed-route and dial-a-ride ser-vice provided will be on the regular weekday schedule. The administra-tion office will be closed and will reopen for business on Thursday, Nov. 12.

Learn about EcoVIlliageLearn about EcoVillage Dunge-

ness-Cohousing, a new EcoVillage being created in the Sequim-Dunge-ness Valley. Meetings (with potluck, community video and visioning) are at 6 p.m. Mondays at The Natural Healing Clinic, 162 S. Barr Road, Port Angeles. Learn about our preferred location, which will save an old farm in Sequim.

Call to confirm attendance at 457-1515 or 808-2662.

Speaker shares message for youth at fundraiser

The My Choices Celebration of Life Fall fundraiser, Education Impacts Choices, presents speaker Pam Sten-zel sharing her powerful message of hope for youth. Education Impacts Choices begins at 7 p.m., Nov. 5, at Sequim Community Church, 950 N. Fifth Ave., Sequim. Doors open at 6:30 p.m. for socializing and a des-sert buffet. Call Lisa at 452-3300 for reservations.

For writersAll locations of the North Olym-

pic Library System host weekly Write-Ins in November as part of its ongoing celebration of Na-

tional Novel Writing Month (NaNo WriMo), a creative-writing-focused program in which participants try to write a 50,000-word novel during the month of November.

In Sequim, Write-Ins are Mondays from 3-5 p.m.; in Port Angeles, they are Saturdays, 2-4 p.m.

Tables, chairs, power outlets, Wi-Fi and free coffee will be provided. No previous writing experience is necessary to attend.

Fifth Avenue residents step upDuring the first 15 days of Novem-

ber, The Fifth Avenue in Sequim is conducting a Food and Funds Drive with the goal of raising 500 pounds of food for the Sequim Food Bank. In addition, it’s also raising funds to give five families with seniors raising grandchildren, who attend the Sequim Boys & Girls Club, fully

prepared Thanksgiving meals. They will be collecting food and funds from Nov. 1-15. Donations can be taken to The Fifth Avenue or the satellite collection boxes at Safeway and The Grocery Outlet. The Fifth Avenue residents will be on hand at Safeway and Grocery The Outlet from noon-4 p.m. Sunday, Nov. 8, and Saturday, Nov. 14 for food and monetary donations.

Vet clinic comingThe Olympic Peninsula Equine

Network will have a veterinary clinic at 10 a.m. Saturday, Nov. 14, at 554 Roupe Road, Sequim. If your horse needs a ride, the cost is $25 for Sequim and the surrounding area. Space and rides are limited and generally fill up quickly, so call 360-207-1688 to sign up and for price information. Services include teeth

floating, castration, worming, etc.Volunteers also are needed.

Senior Nutrition menu setSequim Senior Nutrition Site

menus are served at 4:30 p.m. at the Shipley Center, 921 E. Hammond St. on Tuesdays, Wednesdays and Fridays. Suggested donation is $5 (60 and over), $8 guest and a 24-hour advance reservation is needed. RSVP to 683-8491. Menus are subject to change.

Friday, Oct. 30: Harvest soup, Scary Salad w/curdled milk and spider eggs, Mummy Wrap, Ghostly Jell-O

Tuesday, Nov. 3: French onion soup, beef Burgundy, whipped pota-toes, green beans, spiced apples.

Wednesday, Nov. 4: Coleslaw, sweet/sour chicken, fried rice, zuc-chini, pears.

COMMUNITY NEWS BRIEFSMILESTONES

Sequim Bay has been downgraded to reflect a closure of all species due to Diar-retic Shellfish Poisoning (DSP), the Clallam County Department of Health and Human Services’ Environmental Health Division announced last week.

All species means clams (including geo-duck), oyster, mussels and other inverte-brates such as the moon snail. All areas are closed for the sport harvest of scallops. These closures do not apply to shrimp. Crabmeat is

not known to contain the PSP toxin, but the guts can contain unsafe levels. To be safe, clean crab thoroughly and discard the guts (butter), health officials advise.

There are no closures along the Strait of Juan de Fuca from Cape Flattery east to the Jefferson County line.

For more information about the closure, call the Marine Biotoxin Hotline at 800-562-5632 or see www.doh.wa.gov/shellfishsafety.htm.

OMC gala nets $92,000Olympic Medical Center Foundation, in

conjunction with Seattle Cancer Care Alli-ance, presented the annual Harvest of Hope Wine & Dinner Gala on Oct. 24 at the Sun-Land Golf & Country Club in Sequim and saw the event net about $92,000. The 13th annual gala once again raised funds for lo-cal cancer patients being treated at Olympic Medical Cancer Center through the provision of services, programs and equipment.

For more information about the OMC Foundation, call 417-7144.

For our warriorsThe Peninsula Dream Machines group

(above) selected the Wounded Warriors local events as their charity for the 2015 Car show held in September. The show raised $2,700 for the Wounded Warriors.

Toxins close Sequim Bay to shellfish harvesting

Monday Musicale presents its 2015 Fall Scholarship Benefit Concert, at 2 p.m. Sunday, Nov. 1, at Holy Trinity Lutheran Church, 301 E. Lopez Ave. in Port Angeles. Featured artists include Carlos Xavier, flautist, and Marlene Moore on cello (right), Pen-insula Men’s Gospel Singers (above), Dr. Deborah Rambo Sinn (far right), pianist, and Eric Stolinder, marimba. Concert proceeds go to provide scholarships to local high school students who wish to continue their music studies.

Top Tunes for Tuition

Submitted photos

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Page 6: Sequim Gazette, October 28, 2015

by MATTHEW NASHSequim Gazette

Earlier this summer, Jim and Julie Schumacher chose the Blimpie Way.

The owners of Carlsborg Station opened the Blimpie Sub Shop inside the convenience store and gas station on July 31 and are hoping business will blow up.

“Things are always changing in this industry and we wanted something with a draw,” Julie said.

The couple said they wanted a brand, something distinct rather than Jim and Julie’s Sandwich Shop.

“We did a lot of investigating and we went to some Blimpie’s and we liked their prod-uct,” Jim said.

The sub shop offers deli subs, hot subs, panini subs, wraps and more.

Customers can order a sandwich and have it their way or the Blimpie Way, which includes to-mato, lettuce, onion, oil and vinegar and oregano.

So far, customers are about 50/50 on what they choose, Jim said.

Their most popular sandwiches are the “Blimpie Best” with ham, salami, capicola, prosciuttini and provolone cheese, and the “Ultimate Club” with ham, turkey, bacon and Swiss cheese.

“Each sandwich is made when or-dered and meats are sliced when you order,” Julie said. “That’s as fresh as you can get it.”

Organic vegetables come from Sunny

Business

Jim and Julie Schumacher stand inside the Carlsborg Station where they opened the new Blimpie on July 31. They plan for a grand opening on Nov. 14. Sequim Gazette photos by Matthew Nash

Blimpie opens for business in CarlsborgCouple plans for grand opening on Nov. 14

Enjoy artisan wine, cider and food pairings along with the stunning colors of fall during the Olympic Peninsula Wineries’ Harvest Wine Tour from 11 a.m.-5 p.m. Nov. 7-8.

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Lisa Bridge is the Sequim Farmers Market manager. The market caps its 2015 season on Oct. 31, but a special holiday show is set for Nov. 21 at the Guy Cole Center at Carrie Blake Park. Submitted photo

by LISA BRIDGEFor the Sequim Gazette

Thank you all for another won-derful market season!

We have had another successful season in our downtown location. As it stands now, we will be in the same configuration for the 2016 season.

T he v i s ib i l -ity that we enjoy downtown has had a tremendous positive effect on the revenue of our vendors and the vibrant spirit of downtown Se-quim on Satur-days.

W h e n w e moved from Ce-dar Street two years ago it felt like a big over-haul and most of us were ready and excited for that to take place. On Cedar Street the market, un-fortunately, had begun to slump. The overall total sales of vendors in 2007 and 2008 were over a quarter of a million dollars and it wasn’t until the move in 2014 that we saw that worm turn. The numbers had just continued to slowly decrease each year.

Adding up the total sales in 2014 was thrilling, the jump in total vendors sales from 2013 to 2014 were up an amazing 25 percent. This year we are looking just a bit better than last year. We don’t have the final numbers yet but it is look-ing very close.

And you know what they say, “Location, location” … and that is right.

Well, it doesn’t hurt that we have fantastic vendors, too. We have had a wonderful rush of new and interesting vendors join the market in recent years and are fortunate to have a few great farms and some wonderful food.

The market is run by a volun-

teer board of directors who hired me, Lisa Bridge, and they are my employers. I began this posi-tion in November 2009 and the finances were unstable, as you may recall by the articles in the newspaper.

In 2010, we began the work to stabilize the market.

Val Jackson, owner of Whimsi-cal Woods (gnome homes and bird-houses) became board president. Now, five years later, he is step-ping down from the presidency and the market is in good financial shape. We, the market, express our gratitude for your fantast ic contributions to

the Sequim Farmers Market. Thank you Val! We welcome our new board

president, Dee Green of Studio by the Creek pottery, who has been in the vice president’s seat for many years now. With a handful of other new board members, the enthusi-asm is peppy and refreshing.

This year was a big year for me. As many of you know, I gave birth to my two healthy twin sons, Charles and Ivan Bridge, back on Feb. 17. Now 8 months old, the twins are thriving and bumbling all over the place, along with my first-grader Olive. Cheers to our market that is a supportive employer for a work-ing mom!

All in all, the market greatly has enjoyed its front and center place in our beautiful downtown. It is a joy to put up the flags and banners and contribute to making Saturdays in Sequim a festive destination. Thank you all for shopping local and supporting the Sequim Farm-ers Market.

See you at the market this week and at the Holiday Show on Nov. 21!

Thanks for a great season at the market!

Sequim Farmers MarketOpen Saturdays 9 a.m.-3 p.m. through October• Oct. 31 (closing day for 2015); holiday show is 9 a.m.-3 p.m., Saturday, Nov. 21, at Carrie Blake Park’s Guy Cole CenterDowntown Sequim at Centen-nial Plaza, Sequim AvenueContacts: www.sequimmarket.com; [email protected]; 460-2668

FROM THE POLICE BLOTTEROct. 209:38 a.m. — Vehicle prowl, 300

block of Mill Road12:09 p.m. — Warrant arrest,

300 block of North Fifth Avenue2:43 p.m. — Theft, 100 block of

House Road3:19 p.m. — Vehicle accident,

1400 block of Ward Road4:09 p.m. — Theft, 100 block of

Ruth’s Place6:05 p.m. — Warrant arrest, 100

block of North Solmar DriveOct. 2110:16 a.m. — Vehicle accident,

1100 block of West Washington Street

11:43 a.m. — Theft, 100 block of Spencer Road

3:27 p.m. — Vehicle accident, West Washington Street/North Seventh Avenue

4:39 p.m. — Vehicle accident, 1300 block of West Washington Street

5:55 p.m. — Theft, 600 West Washington Street

6:42 p.m. — Burglary, 100 block of Ridgetop Place

7:00 p.m. — Warrant arrest, 100 block of Spencer Road

8:26 p.m. — Vehicle accident, 100 block of Gupster Road

11:16 p.m. — Theft, 200 block of East Prairie Street

Oct. 2212:50 a.m. — Prowler, 100 block

Many Feathers Way9:14 a.m. — Vehicle prowl, 800

block of East Washington Street11:35 a.m. — Theft, 1200 block

of West Washington Street12:11 p.m. — Vehicle accident,

600 block of North Sequim Avenue1:04 p.m. — Vehicle accident,

2500 block of Hooker Road3:51 p.m. — Assault, 100 block of

East Fir Street4:46 p.m. — Theft, 700 block of

South Maizie Court5:20 p.m. — Vehicle accident,

600 block of West Washington Street

7:28 p.m. — Assault, 1200 block of West Washington Street

Oct. 236:17 a.m. — Warrant arrest, 3500

block of Chicken Coop Road9:29 a.m. — Theft, 800 block of

East Oak Tree Ridge10:54 a.m. — Warrant arrest,

300 block of West Cedar Street3:09 p.m. — Vehicle accident,

1300 block of Holland Road6:40 p.m. — Assault, 900 block

of Raven’s Ridge Road8:07 p.m. — Warrant arrest, 300

block of West Cedar Street8:41 p.m. — Prowler, 100 block

of Valley View Drive

Oct. 247:21 a.m. — Warrant arrest,

Woods Road/US Highway 1019:20 a.m. — Theft, 500 block of

Toad Road10:27 a.m. — Theft, 300 block of

Dungeness Meadows12:36 p.m. — Theft, 268000

block of U.S. Highway 1013:34 p.m. — Theft, 1200 block of

West Washington Street6:04 p.m. — Warrant arrest, 100

block of East Fir Street7:25 p.m. — Theft, 1200 block of

West Washington Street8:43 p.m. — Assault, near 100

block of Valley View DriveOct. 258:01 p.m. — Vehicle accident,

Kitchen-Dick Road/US Highway 101

Oct. 263:14 a.m. — Prowler, 100 block

of West Alder Street6:54 a.m. — Vehicle accident,

600 block of North Sequim Avenue

2:53 p.m. — Theft, 100 block of West Prairie Street

3:40 p.m. — Warrant arrest, 100 block of North Sequim Avenue

3:41 p.m. — Vehicle prowl, 2600 block of Atterberry Road

4:07 p.m. — Theft, 700 block of West Washington Street

City Attorney Craig Ritchie, said. “That is something we don’t have regulations for.”

Although the city has yet to receive any applications for the construction and installation of ei-ther Wi-Fi or cell towers, the mora-torium allows city officials the time

to create appropriate safety and aesthetic regulations to sup-port the technology.

“We didn’t have to worry about this before because the technology wasn’t good enough to have

good transmission from shorter towers, but now we have to worry about it,” Ritchie said. “The City of Sequim does not have sufficient

control over the potential use of our rights of way by cell phone and wireless companies for mini-tower structures.”

Already, cities like Spokane have dealt with the onset of wireless companies in pursuit of real estate to install mini-communication towers, which are then leased to companies like AT&T, Verizon or Sprint. There’s also a Wi-Fi net-work relying on similar technology in Port Angeles, but the towers used are primarily placed on city-owned telephone poles, Ritchie said, whereas the City of Sequim doesn’t own its telephone poles.

“What we’re really looking at is almost nothing but safety,” Ritchie said. “As a hypothetical example, X-rays are a safe technology, but testing X-rays is important because they’re adjustable and you can fry things with X-rays if set incor-rectly that otherwise are wonder-

ful things, therapeutic, diagnostic agents.”

Once developed, Ritchie expects the local regulations to be similar to those created in Spokane where the data showing how testing will be done, how often and the param-eters, are required.

“As I understand it from our consultant, it (the safety) has to do with how stuff is aimed,” he said. “So if it’s aimed right, it should be fine.”

Once the needed regulations and associated requirements are in place, Ritchie anticipates working with companies seeking to install mini-communication towers, he said, as the city isn’t against bet-ter cell phone coverage and Wi-Fi access.

Consistent with the adoption of a moratorium without first holding a public hearing, a hearing has been scheduled on Monday, Nov. 9.

TowersFrom page A-1

RITCHIE

Orr comes to Sequim after 15 years with the Santa Maria Fire Department including serving as its fire chief since December 2011. Prior to that he started with the Pismo Beach Fire Department in 1985.

Ben Andrews, Clallam County Fire District 3 fire chief, said Orr’s new position is key to the fire depart-ment’s success. “His supervision of the risk reduction activities will continue the district’s already strong history of fire prevention and fire safety education, as well as expand into a broader approach of community risk reduction,” Andrews said.

Community risk reduction, he added, is the iden-tification and prioritization of risks followed by the coordinated application of resources to minimize the probability or occurrence and/or the impact of unfortunate events.

Some of Orr’s responsibilities include coordinating the development and maintenance of the district’s

plans such as the strategic plan, capital replacement plan, staffing plans and contingency plans.

“His planning responsibilities will aid the district in making prudent, deliberate and fact-based decisions on how to meet the growing demands for emergency services in our community,” Andrews said.

In addition to the risk reduction and planning du-ties, Orr also will help oversee day-to-day operations of the fire district and will serve on the Duty Chief rotation responding to major incidents.

During the interview process, Andrews said Orr was described by Santa Monica city leaders and fel-low firefighters as a “servant leader who puts others before himself.”

Orr is married and they have two children in high school.

He told Santa Monica news outlets that Sequim’s rural nature is something he and his wife were looking for.

For more information about the hiring and/or Clal-lam County Fire District 3, call 683-4242 or visit www.clallamfire3.org.

Fire ChiefFrom page A-1

SEQUIM GAZETTEA-6 • Oct. 28, 2015 SEQUIM GAZETTE

USDA CHOICETOP SIRLOIN STEAK $649HEMPLER'SKIELBASA & LINGUISA $499FRESHROCK FISH $599

79¢LB

$129LB

$169BUN

35%OFFMSRP Country Life™ Supplements

SUPPLEMENTSJarrow®

• Fresh pressed here• Washington apples• NO added sugar or � avors

• Cleans, polishes, safely whitens & detoxes.

REG.$12.99

• 100% Recycled• Whitened without chlorine• 12 double rolls • 2-ply

Seventh Generation $81912 ROLLSBATH TISSUE

BULK • REG. $5.49ORGANIC • UNSWEETENED

BULK • REG. $5.89ORGANIC • UNSWEETENED

BULK • REG. $7.19CALIFORNIA

BULK • REG. $7.69DARK CHOCOLATE

SHREDDED COCONUT

ALMOND BARK WALNUT HALVES

COCONUT CHIPS$469

LB

$649LB

$599LB

OUR OWN • REG. $5.99SWEET PICKLE PASTA SALADFLAVORFUL • REG. $5.99CAESAR SALAD DRESSINGMADE IN STORE • REG. $6.99CASHEW BROCCOLI SALAD

DRAPER VALLEY FARMS, WA

CHICKEN THIGHS $199LB

LB

ALL NATURAL

PORK SHOULDER STEAK $199

LB

LB

LB

LB

DOMESTIC • REG $7.29

SWISS CHEESE $629

FRESH SLICED • REG. $6.99

DELI HAM LB$579

$499

$599LB

$529LB

LB$499

Drew's

REG.$3.79

ORIGINAL OR JALAPEÑO NON GMO CORN

NON GMO • ALL NATURALASSORTED ZESTY FLAVORS

Mary's Gone Crackers

REG.$5.59

Barbara's

REG.$3.39

REG.$12.99

SAVE$1.50

SAVE$2.00

SAVE$1.20

ORGANIC • NON GMOVEGAN • 4 FLAVORS

SAVE$2.00

CRACKERS SALAD DRESSING$189

7 OZ

$1099LB

$259$3596.5 OZ

CHEESE PUFFS

REG.$4.89

• Hypoallergenic formula• 2 scents plus free and clear• Cuts grease

49¢LB

49¢LB

99¢LB

98¢LB

89¢LB

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BRAEBURN

Jumbo Yellow

Hass $299

APPLE CIDER

APPLESAVOCADOS

Radishes Green OnionsYAMS SWEETS

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LB

2 $1F O R

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SLICING

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PEPPERS TOMATOES CILANTROCUCUMBERS

LACINATO KALE GREEN CABBAGE

SQUASH

RUSSET BAKER

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POTATOES

Equal Exchange WHOLE BEAN COFFEE

Sunrise Co� ee from Port Townsend also on sale.

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My Magic Mud

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OR

Page 7: Sequim Gazette, October 28, 2015

by MATTHEW NASHSequim Gazette

Earlier this summer, Jim and Julie Schumacher chose the Blimpie Way.

The owners of the Carlsborg Station opened the Blimpie Sub Shop inside the convenience store and gas station on July 31 and are hoping business will blow up.

“Things are always changing in this industry and we wanted something with a draw,” Julie said.

The couple said they wanted a brand, something distinct rather than Jim and Julie’s Sandwich Shop.

“We did a lot of investigating and we went to some Blimpie’s and we liked their prod-uct,” Jim said.

The sub shop offers deli subs, hot subs, panini subs, wraps and more.

Customers can order a sandwich and have it their way or the Blimpie Way, which includes to-mato, lettuce, onion, oil and vinegar and oregano.

So far, customers are about 50/50 on what they choose, Jim said.

Their most popular sandwiches are the “Blimpie Best” with ham, salami, capicola, prosciuttini and provolone cheese, and the “Ultimate Club” with ham, turkey, bacon and Swiss cheese.

“Each sandwich is made when or-dered and meats are sliced when you order,” Julie said. “That’s as fresh as you can get it.”

Organic vegetables come from Sunny

Farms and breads are made daily by long-time station employee Jim McDonald.

Julie said he starts at 3 a.m. daily making the breads and station’s other

hot foods. Prior to opening the

sub shop, Julie and Mc-Donald trained in an Idaho Blimpie for two weeks learning many of the ins and outs.

More on the subsThe Schumachers

opened the Carlsborg Station in April 29, 1999, operating the Shell sta-tion and convenience store.

They’ve lived on the Olympic Penin-sula their whole lives.

The first Blimpie opened on April 4, 1964, in Hoboken, N.J., and franchises across the U.S. are operated under the Kahala Brands parent company, that also operates Cold Stone Creamery and Taco Time.

Jim said the closest Blimpie is in North Bend and the franchise is

known to some customers.“Some people recognize it and say

they love it,” he said. “Other people have no idea what it is.”

Three people they’ve swayed are their sons who were big fans of another sand-wich shop.

“Our children all love it (Blimpie),” Julie said.

Another distinction about the Carls-borg sandwich shop is a drive-thru.

Jim said they knew they would have limited parking so they built the drive-thru so that 6-7 cars could fit.

They also are looking to cater events offering a 3-foot or 6-foot BlimpieBlast sandwich, similar to a Blimpie Best sandwich, and trays of sandwiches.

The Schumachers also anticipate the franchise offering gluten-free breads in the future.

Overall, the couple is excited for the shop’s potential.

“I think this area is ideal with the (Clallam) PUD coming in and the in-dustrial area down the road,” Jim said.

For more on the Blimpie in Carlsborg, call 681-2290 or visit the Carlsborg Sta-tion, 20 Carlsborg Road.

Donate winter gear for vetsFrom Nov. 2-11, Drennan & Ford Funeral Home and

Crematory is collecting new or gently used sweaters, warm clothing, blankets, rain gear, gloves, hats, socks and similar items to be donated to the Clallam County Voices for Vet-erans, to be distributed to individual veterans in Clallam County. Drennan & Ford Funeral Home is at 260 Monroe Road, Port Angeles; donation times are from 9 a.m.-4 p.m.

For more information, call funeral director/owner Steve Ford at 457-1210 or e-mail to [email protected]. See www.drennanford.com.

Auto repair shop movesRobert’s Repair automotive repair business recently has

moved from a shop in Carlsborg, just outside the Sequim city limits, to 91 River Road.

The move helps the business expanded the size of its facility and the company has added two local technicians.

Call 683-5888 for more information.

Flights from Fairchild againSeaPort Airlines, Inc. announced last week it will expand

in the Pacific Northwest on March 1, 2016, with service con-necting Moses Lake and Port Angeles to Seattle-Tacoma International Airport.

Port Angeles will be provided with five roundtrips to Sea-Tac each weekday. Reduced flight frequencies will be offered on weekends. All SeaPort Airlines flights are operated with nine-passenger Cessna Caravan turboprop aircraft.

Tickets may be purchased beginning Nov. 15 at www.SeaPortAirlines.com or by calling 888-573-2767.

Town & Country welcomes agentRealtor Susan Telliard has joined the real estate broker-

age of Town & Country, Sequim. Find real estate and local area information at www.

susan.sequimrealestate.com or call Telliard at 565-6348.  Town & Country, a real estate brokerage specializing in

video production and promotion, is at 305 S. Sequim Ave. Call 683-6000 or see www.sequimrealestate.com.

Yarn shop marks ninth yearA Dropped Stitch Yarn Shop, 136 S. Second Ave., Sequim,

will celebrate its ninth anniversary in business on Saturday, Oct. 31. This year will feature a “Trunk Show” to showcase the latest hand knits made by Universal Yarns. Owners Jean Montoya and Nora Polizzi will have treats for customers and trick-or-treaters.

New stretch class startingStarting in November, Fit4life Studio has added a stretch

class on Tuesday and Thursdays from 10:30-11:30 a.m. with instructor Niela Rockey.

Rockey has over 30 years experience teaching low impact aerobics, chair exercise, stretching and group exercise.

For more information, call 464-5231, go to www.fit4life-sequim.com, or stop in at 1245 W. Washington St.

New hours, new employeeSequim Gym has new hours which are 8-6 p.m. Monday-

Friday and 9 a.m.-noon Saturdays. See more information at www.sequimgym.com.

The business also has added a new staffer, Demetropolis. She is a certified orthopedic exercise specialist and recently earned a certification in spiritual care for end of life pa-tients. Her daily focus is on providing orthopedic exercise, bodywork, spiritual care and non-medical care to people so they can transition from this world with peace, grace and dignity.

Bakery now has fudgeEffective Nov. 3, WeDo Fudge and Crumb Grabber

Bakery have joined forces by sharing the drive-thru space and increasing customer hours. From Tuesdays-Fridays from 10 a.m.-4 p.m. customers can purchase both fudge and baked goods.

The public is invited to celebrate by enjoying samples of each at a ribbon cutting at noon Wednesday, Nov. 4, at the drive-thru, 11 Valley Center Place in Carlsborg.

See www.wedofudge.com.

BusinessSEQUIM GAZETTE A-7

BUSINESS NEWS

Jim and Julie Schumacher stand inside the Carlsborg Station where they opened the new Blimpie on July 31. They plan for a grand opening on Nov. 14. Sequim Gazette photos by Matthew Nash

Blimpie opens for business in CarlsborgCouple plans for grand opening on Nov. 14

Pam Poage prepares a turkey sand-wich at the new Blimpie inside the Carlsborg Station.

Blimpie Sub ShopWhere: 20 Carlsborg Road, inside Carlsborg Shell Station Open: 10 a.m.-8 p.m. Monday-Saturday and 10 a.m.-7 p.m. SundayGrand opening: 10 a.m.-3 p.m. Saturday, Nov. 14; includes discounts on sand-wiches (look for a flier in mail) More info: 681-2290

Enjoy artisan wine, cider and food pairings along with the stunning colors of fall during the Olympic Peninsula Wineries’ Harvest Wine Tour from 11 a.m.-5 p.m. Nov. 7-8.

Ten artisan wineries lo-

cated in the Olympic Penin-sula towns of Sequim, Port Angeles, Port Townsend, Chimacum and Nordland pair new and current wine releases with foods that celebrate the season, from soups and

pumpkin chili to vegetables with a new twist to seasonal sweets. Online tour tickets are $25 (plus a service fee) or $30 at the door of each winery.

Wineries include Sequim’s Wind Rose Cellars; Camarade-

rie Cellars, Harbinger Winery and Olympic Cellars in Port Angeles; FairWinds Winery, Lullaby Winery, Eaglemount Wine & Cider and Alpenfire Cider in Port Townsend; Finnriver Farm & Cidery in Chimacum; and Marrowstone Vineyards in Nordland (Mar-rowstone Island).

Annual wine tour coming soon

Lisa Bridge is the Sequim Farmers Market manager. The market caps its 2015 season on Oct. 31, but a special holiday show is set for Nov. 21 at the Guy Cole Center at Carrie Blake Park. Submitted photo

teer board of directors who hired me, Lisa Bridge, and they are my employers. I began this posi-tion in November 2009 and the finances were unstable, as you may recall by the articles in the newspaper.

In 2010, we began the work to stabilize the market.

Val Jackson, owner of Whimsi-cal Woods (gnome homes and bird-houses) became board president. Now, five years later, he is step-ping down from the presidency and the market is in good financial shape. We, the market, express our gratitude for your fantast ic contributions to

the Sequim Farmers Market. Thank you Val! We welcome our new board

president, Dee Green of Studio by the Creek pottery, who has been in the vice president seat for many years now. With a handful of other new board members, the enthusi-asm is peppy and refreshing.

This year was a big year for me. As many of you know, I gave birth to my two healthy twin sons, Charles and Ivan Bridge, back on Feb. 17. Now 8 months old, the twins are thriving and bumbling all over the place, along with my first-grader Olive. Cheers to our market that is a supportive employer for a work-ing mom!

All in all, the market has greatly enjoyed its front and center place in our beautiful downtown. It is a joy to put up the flags and banners and contribute to making Saturdays in Sequim a festive destination. Thank you all for shopping local and supporting the Sequim Farm-ers Market.

See you at the market this week and at the Holiday Show on Nov. 21!

Thanks for a great season at the market!

SEQUIM GAZETTE SEQUIM GAZETTE Oct. 28, 2015 • A-7

An effective, proven leader. Always putting you � rst!

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Paid for by Committee to Re-Elect Jim McEntire, P.O. Box 631, Sequim, WA 98382

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His office is located at 321 N. Sequim Ave., Ste. C. (360) 683-4850www.Sequimsmiles.com

Dr. Davies is accepting new patients

WHAT’S THE BIG DEAL?

Nothing in dentistry is more misrepresented and misunderstood than Root Canals, or what we call Root Canal Therapy. They are often invoked in comparisons to suggest the ultimate in pain, drudgery and annoyance. Nothing could be further from truth. The vast majority of root canal treatments are comfortable and no more annoying than a properly done filling. Although the time to complete one may be longer. In concept we are merely cleaning out the hollow space in a tooth and sealing it which allows it to stay useful in the mouth for years to come.

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Page 8: Sequim Gazette, October 28, 2015

SEQUIM GAZETTEA-8 • Oct. 28, 2015 SEQUIM GAZETTE

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Page 9: Sequim Gazette, October 28, 2015

with little to no snowpack available to maintain the Dungeness River’s typical flow, Ben Smith, president of the Dungeness River Agri-cultural Water Users Associa-tion and co-owner of Maple View Farm, participated in this year’s dry-year leasing program offered by the Wash-ington Water Trust.

Using funds from the Washington Department of Ecology, the nonprofit tasked with managing water, paid willing farmers the costs associated with not irrigating during the late season.

The usual irrigation sea-son spans from April 15-Sept. 15.

Smith plans to use the money from the program to source hay to help account for the feed he wasn’t able to grow locally to support his dairy operation.

Taking precautionary measures, Smith also saved hay from the previous year and opted to grow a different variety of corn known for maturing quicker, but with the trade-off of a lower yield.

Although Smith believes the early and proactive steps he took early in the year helped to lessen the impacts of the drought, the drought’s effect still will reflect on the farm’s bot-tom line.

Smith estimates his corn yield is down about 5-10 percent and having gotten one less cutting of hay, he guesses his hay production volume at about 75-80 per-cent of normal. The lack of hay leaves Smith with less hay to sell to the commu-nity, let alone support his own dairy.

“We’ll be doing some number crunching this winter to help plan for next year and assess what worked,” he said. “The drought could have had huge impacts, but a whole bunch of little aspects came together to lessen what could have been terrible.”

Things like a rainy spring and the early onset of most crops helped to offset some of the impacts of no snowpack, followed by little precipitation, Smith said. And, although the drought caused lower yields among some crops, other did well.

“Our grain yields were great,” Smith said.

Fruit trees also tended to thrive.

“Apples do well in dry, warm areas,” Jim House, Olympic Orchard Society president, said. “And things like scab (a fungus that in-fects apples) doesn’t do well during dry years, like it does when it’s damp and cool.”

Like Smith, those at Nash’s Organic Produce, another longtime Sequim-Dungeness farming opera-tion, made an early effort to combat the possible prob-lems related to drought.

“We were anticipating not having irrigation by late July, early August so we made decisions early on in the year based on our assumptions” Patty McManus-Huber, co-owner of Nash’s Organic Produce, said. “I wouldn’t say we weren’t impacted, but we were lucky and we planned early.”

Because farming always is vulnerable to factors, like weather, a percentage of the annual crop loss is expected, McManus-Huber said, “but that’s why we have a diverse farm.”

Beyond distancing them-selves from mono-crops, farmers at Nash’s choose to plant water-reliant veg-etables in fields with well access and made precau-tionary agreements with neighboring landowners to use their wells if need be, McManus-Huber said.

Farm owner Nash Huber also invested a lot in drip lines.

“We were impressed with

the results and found the drip lines to be very use-ful on certain crops like potatoes and squash,” Mc Manus-Huber said. “They’re a good quality and reusable so now we’ll be able to con-tinue to use them.”

The dry and early growing season did provide a first for Nash’s Organic Produce, in that they were able to harvest all their grain crops prior to September’s mois-ture, McManus-Huber said.

“ O v er a l l , o u r p l a n seemed to work this year so we’ll be carrying our experience with us mov-ing into next year,” she said. “We were pleasantly surprised that the water kept flowing this season, but here’s hoping.”

Echoing Smith and Mc-Manus-Huber, owners of Clark Farms, Tom and Holly Clark, also made adjust-ments in response to the drought.

“This year caused us to switch gears,” Holly Clark said. “Adapting and chang-ing farming practices for changing weather are all things farmers are savvy to, but this year just made the decision for us.”

Nudged by the drought, the Clarks decided to rely more heavily on their con-struction business in order to buy equipment, like a round baler, to better equip themselves for future farm-ing in what seems to a shift-ing climate, she said.

Like Smith, the drought hindered the Clarks’ ability

to bale and put up a normal amount of hay, leaving only hay for their livestock. Addi-tionally, to help with pasture management in the midst of a dry year, the Clarks opted to sell some calves.

“We’ll see the impacts of that two years from now,” Holly Clark said.

Maintaining the river In working with the

Washington Water Trust, the Clarks don’t irrigate during the later part of ir-rigation season and instead rely on their deep, third aquifer well. This year, however, they decided to draw water from their well even earlier than normal despite the costs of running the powerful pump (about $1,500/month) because of low river flows.

“We started using the well early July,” Holly Clark said.

Use of the well causes community-wide benefits because the less water di-verted from the Dungeness River and its tributaries, the more water available to sus-tain river flows for spawning salmon and other farmers dependent on irrigation, she explained.

Also helping to keep sus-tain the river flows, Smith and the water users associa-tion asked the community to conserve water during the irrigation season.

“It was very successful,” Smith said.

Community water con-servation efforts likely al-lowed irrigators another

couple of weeks worth of water use without many restrictions, he said.

However, by the last four to six weeks of the irrigation season, irrigators relied on a spreadsheet to the manage the daily amount of water being diverged.

Using the spreadsheet in conjunction with the daily flow of the Dungeness River, irrigators were able to individually calculate how much water they could withdraw that day and could therefore plan, Smith said.

“The system seemed to work pretty good,” he said, noting how heavily depen-dent “commercial agri-culture is on the river and ability to irrigate.”

Collaborative effortPublic water conserva-

tion measures and wa-ter management practices implemented by farmers weren’t the only efforts be-ing done to maintain river flows. Smith also turns his gratitude toward the James-town S’Klallam tribe and their work within the river to ensure fish passage.

“I really appreciate the amount of time they spent working in the river this year,” he said.

Officials with the tribe were successful in pro-curing a drought grant through the Department of Ecology. The grant helped buy supplies, equipment and manpower needed to maintain adequate fish passage within the Dunge-ness River and surrounding waterways.

“We felt we had some pretty good results in pro-viding fish passage,” Scott Chit wood, Ja mestown S’Klallam tribe natural resources department di-rector, said. “For example, we had evidence that the pink salmon made it all the way up to the basin to where they normally would.”

The forecasted number of pink salmon estimated to return to the Dungeness River (originally expected to be 1-1.3 million) was con-cerning given the low river flows, but only a “fraction” of the pink salmon thought to return throughout the Salish Sea, including the Dungeness River, actually did, Chitwood said.

Still, given the relatively large number of salmon that did return to the Dungeness River, if few flood conditions occur, Chitwood anticipates an “enormous fry produc-

tions this January, February and March.”

No numbers have been confirmed, but Chitwood estimates about 400 chi-nook salmon also returned to river. Of those, more than 100 adults were collected using a weir in the lower stretch of the river and pro-vided 281,000 eggs for the 2015 hatchery brood-stock program, he said.

They also use the weir capture program to move some adult salmon to trans-port beyond the extremely low flowing areas.

“The hatcher y crew tagged all those fish and it’s not clear at this point whether that was successful or not, but we’ll sort that out with some post-season analysis and see if the tagged fish actually stayed higher up in the system, which was what the intent was,” Chitwood said.

While local farmers and managers of the area’s natural resources spend the next couple of months con-firming numbers, yields and evaluating their response to the drought, state clima-tologist Nick Bond with the Office of the Washington State Climatologist, sug-gests “the odds are strongly tilted toward another toasty winter.”

“It bears noting that is unlikely to be as extreme as last winter but it’s pos-sible,” he said. “We probably have about a 10-15 percent chance of having a winter as warm as the last one with El Niño rearing its ugly head in the tropic Pacific and it’s of the magnitude and type that is strongly associated with warmer than normal temperates in this area.”

“The bottom line is we need to be prepared for re-duced snowpack at the end of next winter,” he said.

Reach Alana Linderoth at [email protected].

DroughtFrom page A-1

Katie Adolphsen of Adolphsen Farms LLC, feeds a herd of hungry, awaiting cows. Katie’s father Gene has farmed for more than 30 years within the Sequim-Dungeness Valley, mostly focusing on beef cattle, hay, straw, oats and barley wheat, as well as cauliflower and spinach for seeds. Sequim Gazette photo by Alana Linderoth

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Page 10: Sequim Gazette, October 28, 2015

had little choice Wednesday night, Miller said.

“The numbers would sug-gest a court would step in pretty quickly (if it wasn’t closed), not just from an operations view but a legal view,” Miller said.

SARC Executive Director Scott Deschenes said that, including costs of closing the facility — which include monthly payroll and payroll taxes, severance costs for con-tracted employees, sales tax, utilities, legal fees and other various costs — would leave SARC about $20,000 in debt.

He said SARC’s revenues for October are estimated at about $36,000 or nearly $47,000 down from October 2014.

“We’re basically falling off the table,” Deschenes said. “We just aren’t getting the revenue.”

Not long after, Pickering and board members reluctantly voted to close SARC’s doors.

“I’m not sure my hands are not tied,” Pickering said.

“I don’t see any alter-native,” commissioner Gil Goodman added.

Pass refunds on holdAfter Oct. 30, SARC passes

will be placed in suspension, not cancelled, “until all av-enues of reopening have been exhausted,” the bardof com-missioners said in an online post on Oct. 23.

“In mid-November we should know more about whether a venture with the YMCA could be feasible,” board members wrote. “In addition, the Board of Direc-tors continues to work closely with community leaders on possible funding and part-nering solutions.”

Help for swim teamThe vote did come with

a request for community support to help SARC’s pool remain open for the Sequim High School girls swim team to continue training until their season ends on Nov. 12.

All funds donated, Picker-ing noted, are tax deductible.

Earlier this week, anony-mous donations from area residents will alow the team to complete their season.

The SARC Foundation, a nonprofit entity estab-lished to accept tax-deducible funds on behalf of SARC, announced Monday it had raised $7,500 dollars over the past week to allow the girls team to continue practicing, the Peninsula Daily News reports.

Deschenes said it would cost about couple of thou-sand dollars to keep the pool open for the swim team.

Steve Burke, executive director of the William Shore Memorial Pool in Port Ange-les, said On Oct. 21 his facility could accommodate Sequim High School’s girls swim team for the remainder of the 2015 season.

“It’s going to be a very difficult problem if SARC shuts down because we don’t have the room,” Burke said, “(but) we will accommodate the swim team at our facility

SARCFrom page A-1

Above, Sequim Aquatic Recreation Center board of commission-ers agreed to shut down the facility on Oct. 30 last week. Photo by xxxxxxxxxxxxxxAt right, Frank Pickering, SARC board of commissioners chairman, and Judy Rhodes, petition team captain for the SARC Metropolitan Park District, search the unofficial results of the 2015 Primary Election on Aug. 4, only to realize the measure to create a SARC Metropolitan Park District had failed. Sequim Gazette file photo by Alana Linderoth

Sequim Gazette staff

Olympic Medical Cancer Center, 844 N. Fifth Ave., Sequim, has the following cancer support groups in November:

Monday, Nov. 2, cancer patients wig fitting. Call Patient Navigator Assis-tant Elizabeth Thomas at 582-5627 for an ap-pointment.

Tuesday, Nov. 10, 1-3 p.m., Women’s Cancer Sup-port Group, OMCC library, drop-in group, Facilitator: Maggie Jamison, Ph.D

Monday, Nov. 16, 1-2:30 p.m., Look Good, Feel Better, OMCC Conference Room, skin and hair care during cancer treatment. Register by calling Thomas at 582-5627. Wig fitting also available.

Wednesday, Nov. 18, 10 a.m.-1 p.m., free Cancer Wellness Series, “Holidays are for Joy,” second floor, Medical Services Building, call 582-5627 to register. Drop-ins welcome.

Tuesday, Nov. 24, 1-3 p.m., Women’s Cancer Sup-port Group, OMCC library, drop-in group, Facilitator: Maggie Jamison, Ph.D.

Support groups to meet

Sequim’s Adrienne Haggerty and Ella Christiansen go up for a block in a three-set win against Bremerton on Oct. 26. The Wolves (6-5 in Olympic League play, 7-6 overall) look to have their district tournament playoff position set after Tuesday night’s match against Olympic. North Kitsap (10-1 in league) locked up the league title earlier this month but it’s more muddled after that, with (as of Monday night) Kingston (7-4), Bremerton (7-5), Olympic (6-5) and Sequim vie for the league’s second, third, fourth and fifth seeds to the West Central DIstrict tournament. Districts is set for Nov. 6-7 at Franklin Pierce High School in Tacoma. Sequim Gazette photo by Matthew Nash

Pass, set, Playoffs GIRLS SWIMMING

Sequim Gazette staff

The Lady Wolves finished with a capital W at the final home meet of the season at SARC. They won 97-73 over the Kingston Buccaneers on Oct. 22.

Last year, the Bucs defeated Sequim to finish the regular season.

This year, the Wolves finished 3-4 on the season and their season officially ended on Tuesday, Oct. 27, at the Last Chance Meet in Port Angeles. A few girls were on the cusp of qualifying in more events and/or improving their qualifying times for districts and state.

The 2A Western Central District III dive meet is held on Nov. 6, at Auburn Pool, for which Sequim does not have any competitors. The swimming championships are held on Nov. 7, at Hazen High School.

Sequim as of Oct. 26 had three relays qualified for dis-tricts plus eight individuals on those teams and/or qualify-ing individually.

Wolves win in final home meetDistricts slated for Nov. 6-7

Kayley Lofstrom swims the 500 free on Oct. 22. Sequim Gazette photo by Matthew Nash

SEQUIM GAZETTEA-10 • Oct. 28, 2015 SEQUIM GAZETTE

Dave BlakeMichele AdkissonNathan AdkissonRita AdragnaAlber’s Family Claire AlkireGeorge AlkireRenee AllenWilliam R. AllenTerilee Allsop-HowatAndrea AlstrupShirley AndersonTom AndersonBen AndrewsLeah AndrewsDarwin AnsoteguiJackie AnsoteguiLiam AntrimAsta Ardickas BonheyoDotty ArmbrightCraig ArmstrongKia ArmstrongLora ArmstrongStacey Armstrong BurgetteChristina ArriolaHazel AultRobyn BacchusCharles Bakeman

Kathryn BakemanChristy Balkwill DitlefsenSusan BaritelleAaron BarnesPaula Barnes Glenn BartonNick BatchellerBill BatsonShelley BatsonBill BaughmanBruce BedingerSarah BedingerJim BellCeleste BennettDavid BentzMelanie BentzBrian BergTrina BergAllan BernardsClaire BernardsDede BesseyMary Beth BeukeJasmine BirklandTennille BixbyLori Black AndersonVicky BlakesleySusan Blakney CraigMary Jane BlantonMichael BlantonTracy Bliemeister SwansonWendy BonhamSteve BootsJoe BordenTawana BordenAnne BornholdtPaul BoucherSue BoucherLee BowenTerry BoyerDave BrasherMonique BrasherVann BrasherNicole BrewerChas Bridge

John BridgeKris BridgeRose BridgeSonja BrownSteve BrownMolly Bruce McAleerDoug BrundageJodi Buckley OlsonKevin BurkeKathy BushRick BushKaylene ByrneMaureen ByrneQuincy ByrneJubal ByrneBob CaldwellElaine CaldwellCarl CamagnaMary CamagnaJohn CambalikJeanne CameronPete CameronBergen CareyBrenda CarpenterMike CarpenterChrysalis CarterRebecca CaseShawnra CashKevin Cassal

Robin CassalTeresa CassidyPhil CastellSarah CastellSharon CastellJames CastellIrene Cayannan-BarrCaroline ChamblinDebbie ChamblinDerek ChamblinKeith ChamblinLinda ChanclerChris ChartersKaren ChartersDr. Jeffrey ChenKelli ChenRebecca ChenMari ChesserThomas ChesserJo ChinnSteve ChinnLouise ChitwoodEid ChommuangHolly ClarkStephanie ClarkTom ClarkNell ClausenScott ClausenMary Ann ClaytonBeth Clifford Peter Clifford Angela CliftSean CliftGeorge CluffMarcella CluffDebbie ClymerMichael CobbTrisha CobbTheresa ColemanLorna CollinsTim CollinsSteve ConroyBertha CooperDonna CornellDave Coughlin

Melissa CoughlinJodie CoulsonJohn CoulsonJen Coyle BondPeter CraigSusan CraigTim CullinanValerie CullinanRob DalmSandra DalmEric DanielsonPatsene DashiellDanielle Dean DeMetzJodi-Lee DemottCharisse DeschenesScott DeschenesAndrea DietzmanGary DillsSherie DillsChristy DitlefsenDave DitlefsenMonica DixonKimberly DombushJi DouglasBob DuncanCeilidh DuncanMary Jane DuncanJan Eadie

Pam EdensElizabeth EdwardsCheryl EekhoffDylan EekhoffJob EekhoffJohn EekhoffDiane FatzingerNoelle FazioBonnie FergusonRoger FightPatricia FinleyBryce FishRobin FlingRene FloresJared ForshawLyell FoxDouglas FrancisAl FriessAlwynn FriessVirginia FriessJulie FrybergerVanessa Fuller

George GalassoKris GalassoJule GarlingKen GarlingMary GetchellBrandino GibsonDawn GibsonSue GillelandAndrea Gilles

Ron GillesGreg GlasserJack GlaubertShirley GlaubertMatthew GluckNicole GoettlingJackie GoldHolly GoldenJoleen GoodrichLi-Hui GordonScott GordonJeanette GorrStephanie GouldBill GreenCathy GreenJenny GreenTracey Green-KoskiBea GrowJim GrowLucille Gullikson CaughronRay HaganSteve HaggertyPeter HaglinAlan HalfhillJeff HallRobin HallHeidi HansenStephanie Hardwick PriceLiz HarperTom HarrisDavid HartmanDave Hasenp�ugSusan Hasenp�ugAllison HastingsDoug HastingsMichael Hastings, PSClare HatlerCandi HaydenCarolyn HeinsMatt HeinsVicki HelwickBethany Henke-RichJessica HenningRobin HenriksonMatilda HenryVirginia HietpasLarry HillRandy HillJo HoffmannPhil HoffmannJoe HoltropKaren HoltropChristie Honore’Joe HookerNikki HookerBeverly HoranGuy HortonLynn HortonNikki Hover JulmistMike HoweDonna Hudson Jake Hudson Dick HughesKris Hughes

Kyra HumphreySteven HumphreyBill IsenberyCandyce JackJon JackHeidi JamesJimmy JamesKevin JamesHeather Jeffers

Larry JeffersSharon JensenBill JevneCathy JilgMarylou JohannStan JohannSteve JohnsonTara JohnsonWalter JohnsonJared JohnstadTraci JohnstadPowell JonesDr. Jason JuddColin KahlerMarty KahlerCarrie KalinaBurt KarapostolesCaity KarapostolesChris KarapostolesMegan KateBret KeehnRobin KeehnGail KiteCynthia KlinkeGrace KnappRobert KnappValorie KnieperMaggie KnutsonSteve KoehlerAl KruebbeJanet KruebbeBrian KuhSarah KuhJane LaBeaumePete LaBeaumeJim LamLynn LamShirley LamWaylon LamNaomi LandigPam LandoniShawn LangstonShelley LangstonKimberly Langston GlasserJulie LawrenceMarc LawrenceElizabeth LawsonMary LeeLouise LemleyDave LeRouxAlwynn LewisBrian LewisEric LewisMark LewisPat LewisSkyler LewisCarol LichtenKate LilyLisa-Anne LindleyJoyce LittlebearBill LittlejohnRuss LodgeKen LofstromMary LofstromJohn Lorentzen

Laura LorentzenMargaret LotzgesellKathleen LynchKevin LynchChristine MacDougall DanielsonLaura MacMurchieBob MadduxJill Maddux

Roger MageeFred ManzerJane ManzerStu MarcyIone MarcyMarybel MarksJacki MarquartCharlene MartinJeanne MartinRebecca MartineauDavid MattingleyPatricia MattingleyPamela MauridesCol. Robert J. McAleerColleen McAleerKate McAleerLynn McAleerMichael McAleerMike McAleerMolly McAleerDennis McCarthyAlice McCrackenSteven McElroyJim McEntireCarolyn McGintyTorrie McIntyreKaren McKeownTim McNultyRobert MetzEckart MildensteinRoland MillerSarah MillerLori Miller ConroyAlan MilletLora MilletJenn MillsJodi MinkerBecky MitchellDaylin MitchellSusan MolinApril Montanye-SewellTom MontgomeryCindy MooreJason MorganMary MorganTara MorganCarla MortonGeraldine MuellerLynn MuenchJoElle MungerCathy Murillo BourmBilly NaglerStephanie NashGary NealKimberly Ann NeedobaAnnette NesseSarah Jeanne NewellPamela NewmanRichard NewmanKaty NicholsDeborah NormanTrayce NormanGerad NucciMichelle NucciHeather Nuerenberg Short

Arlene Ohmert-LeafWhe Whe OlitzaCheryl O’MeraKelly O’MeraStephanie O’MeraCon O’NeilVirginia O’NeilKaren OpdykeSharle Osborne

Chastine Owens Danlelle Owens-KimMark OziasJulie ParfkeJudith ParkerKevin ParkerKatrina ParksLiz ParksMaggie ParksMatt ParksRichard ParksDanielle PattersonJake PattersonChristine PaulsenSteve PaulsenCarl PeecherJ P PersallDustin PersonsDan PetersonJan PetersonMaureen PfaffKelly PhillipsCherie PickettJim PickettMeg PinzaPaul PinzaNora PolizziLouise PotterMary PowellChuck PrebleRosalie PrebleDavid PriceBarb Primus ShawKaren PritchardTom PritchardDavid ProebstelMike RadfordNick RamppJuanita Ramsey-JevneSusie RapaljeLinsay RapeljeBob ReandeauChantelle ReandeauSheri Reandeau KruckebergKate ReaveySuzanne RegoNancy ReisThomas ReisDr. Samantha ReiterMichelle RhodesDena RiccobeneVince RiccobeneDylan RiceFrances RiceFrances Louise RiceMichelle RidgewayDan RiggShawna RiggAnn RiggsScott RipleyBethanie RobbinsShelli Robb-KahlerJim RobertsJoAnn RobertsColleen Robinson

Jared RombergJulie RombergChristy RookardKim RosalesSteven RosalesLeslie RosaschiTanya RoseTheresa RubensRita Rudder

Martha RudersdorfAnn SalmonDavid SalmonKaren SandeRon SandeMelanie SandsSusie SanfordNichole SatherVictoria Savacool-Baird

Dawnn SavageJacque SchaafsmaTom SchaafsmaNancy SchadeLisa SchermerJon SchmalzAlana SchmickerBob SchmickerLori SchmidtDuane SchoesslerTeri SchoesslerJoseph SchroederWendy SchroederSharon SchubertSherry SchubertWalt SchubertDawn Schucker Springgate

Gabriel SchuenemannJessica SchuenemannJim SchuenemannSuzi SchuenemannLeland SchwabPaula SchwabWest Coast Sea GlassBill SeaboltMaria Seabolt

William SeaboltAnn SeilerRichard SeilerJudy SensintaffarKylie SensintaffarDavid SharmanMary SharmanMichelle ShayLeslee Shchultz-Francis

Dawn ShidelerBridget ShingletonJames ShingletonDave Shref�erDorothy Shref�erCliff SillimanPaula Simpson BarnesBecky SmithBen Smith

Betsy SmithBeverly SmithGary SmithJan SmithJanice SmithNancy SmithNoah SmithTroy SmithStephanie Snover-SweetAnn SouleBecky StantonGailen SteichenBonnie Lee StephensHans StevenfeldtJudy StevenfeldtCraig StevensonLarry Stevenson

Rebecca StevensonDiana StofferJim StofferSarah StofferFowler StrattonJosslyn StreettRobert StreettKathy StrozykHall Stuart-LovellPete Stuart-LovellCaroline StuckeyNikki SturmAnna SwanbergAmbur TaftSteve TharingerJanet ThomasDiane Kim Thomp-son-YoungJessica Thoms HaugenTeresa ThorsonDave TomanJessica TothJana Tozzer GrasserJerry TraczykJoAnn TrindleTom TrindleCheryl Vadset O’MeraGina ValaskeGreg ValaskeJennifer Van De WegeKevin Van De WegeEthan Van SelusKristal Van Selus

Seth Van SelusMarla VarnerMarci ViadaGregory VoylesKlayton WaldronMagan WaldronPaulette WaldronTami Wall Karyn Wallers

McCrackenJack WalshMarilyn WalshMaggie WalthalWylie WalthalDawn Marie WarrinerJoe WatkinsLoretta WatkinsDenny WatsonNancy WatsonJim WeatherlyJan WebbHeather WellsMalina Whitehead-GrallDiana WickmanKen WiersemaNancy Wiersema

Kimberly WilliamsLeslie WilliamsTom WilliamsonJames WillisVance WillisJason WilwertRoger WisemanBob WithrowDana WoodruffHeather Wreggit CowanKathy WrightPaula WrightYvonne YokotaAmy Young Joe YoungerShenna YoungerRena Zimmerman Betsy ZumkellerCity of Sequim City Council Olympic Medical Center Board of Directors Sequim Education Association Sequim Association of Realtors Sequim School Board of Directors Anette HansonCharlie BushKen HaysLaura DuboisCandace Pratt

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“Sequim has a critical shortage of physicians and the number one question Olympic Medical Center receives from physicians is what is the quality of the local schools. By improving our school facilities, we will send a positive message to physicians and other health care professionals that Sequim is a great place to raise your family. Vote yes for our schools and students.” Eric Lewis, CEO Olympic Medical Center

WHEREAS, Olympic Medical Center recognizes the importance of quality public schools for the recruitment and retention of physicians, advanced practice clinicians, RNs, and other healthcare professionals, and the importance of health and physical education in preparing students to adopt healthy lifestyles, while looking to the public school system to properly educate students for a variety of health care career opportunities, as well as graduate studies in the health sciences and the training of future health professionals;ADOPTED and APPROVED by the Board of Commissioners of Olympic Medical Center at the open public meeting thereof this 21st day of October, 2015.

“WHEREAS, in order for the City of Sequim to maintain its competitiveness, keep existing employers, attract desired professionals such as physicians, nurses, therapists, engineers, law enforcement officers and others, and attract new economically viable businesses and family wagejobs, the Sequim School District needs to maintain and improve the District’s high academic standards and provide high quality education; Adopted by the Sequim City Council at a regular meeting held this day of September 28, 2015.

“It’s not about attracting buyers and increasing property values, it’s about bettering the quality of life for all our residents. We believe that part of the foundation of a community is its strong educational system. Our children are our future. Supporting the school bond is a worthy investment that benefits us all.” Owners of Brokers Group Real Estate, Kaylene Byrne, Deborah Norman and Hazel Ault

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Page 11: Sequim Gazette, October 28, 2015

OBITUARIESJeanne B. Jubb

Sequim resident Jeanne B. Jubb died in her Sequim home on Oct. 20, 2015, at the age of 76.

No services are planned.She was born Sept. 3, 1939.

Rolland E. RoedellPort Angeles resident Rolland E. Roedell died at Crest-

wood Convalescent Center on Oct. 20, 2015, at the age of 88.A service is planned for 11 a.m. Saturday, Oct. 31, at

Calvary Chapel, 91 S. Boyce Road, Sequim.He was born Feb. 7, 1927.

William L. Hopper Sr.Port Angeles resident William Lee Hopper Sr. died Oct.

25, 2015, in Port Angeles at the age of 85. A funeral will be at 10:30 a.m. at Drennan & Ford Funeral

Home, Saturday, Oct. 31, with private burial at Mount Angeles Memorial Park.

After the funeral, a celebration of life reception will follow with the location announced then.

He was born Aug. 29, 1930.

FAITH NEWSAglow meeting set

Aglow International hosts the Sequim Aglow Monthly Prayer Meeting, set for 10 a.m.-12:30 p.m. Monday, Nov. 2, at the Shipley Center, 921 E. Hammond St., Sequim. On the agenda: worship and prayer.

Finding ‘the good’Olympic Unitarian Universalist Fellowship of Agnew, at

73 Howe Road, hosts guest speaker the Rev. Amanda Aik-man at 10:30 a.m. Sunday, Nov. 1.

Aikman presents on “Find the Good — or Else.” She served Olympic Unitarian Fellowship from 2002-2005 as a consulting minister. She lives in Everett and now serves South Fraser Unitarian Congregation in Surrey, B.C. She also is is a playwright and is developing a series of short “chancel” plays for use in UU worship.

The Olympic Unitarian Universalist Fellowship welcomes anyone looking for a church community with a growing children’s program.

See www.olympicuuf.org or call 417-2665.

“My Disability Is Only ONE Part of Who I Am!” is the theme for October’s National Disability Employment Awareness Month. On Oct. 29, Mary Cliffton from Clallam Country Health and Human Services will discuss how

this theme aligns with the mission of her department. This event is free and open to the public.

Cliffton is the lead for Business Leaders Advisory Council and is a Clallam County Health & Human Services Developmental Disabilities case manager. She previously served as the Vocational Services Manager and Disability Case Manager at Goodwill’s

Work Opportunity Center in Longview.During her Studium Generale presentation, set for

from 12:35-1:25 p.m. in Peninsula College’s Little Theater, Cliffton explores employment issues for local citizens with developmental disabilities.

She also address the needs of high school transition students with disabilities as they prepare to transition to higher education, vocational training, employment and a complete inclusive life in the community.

For more information, e-mail Kate Reavey at [email protected].

Talk takes on perceptions of those with disabilities

CLIFFTON

had little choice Wednesday night, Miller said.

“The numbers would sug-gest a court would step in pretty quickly (if it wasn’t closed), not just from an operations view but a legal view,” Miller said.

SARC Executive Director Scott Deschenes said that, including costs of closing the facility — which include monthly payroll and payroll taxes, severance costs for con-tracted employees, sales tax, utilities, legal fees and other various costs — would leave SARC about $20,000 in debt.

He said SARC’s revenues for October are estimated at about $36,000 or nearly $47,000 down from October 2014.

“We’re basically falling off the table,” Deschenes said. “We just aren’t getting the revenue.”

Not long after, Pickering and board members reluctantly voted to close SARC’s doors.

“I’m not sure my hands are not tied,” Pickering said.

“I don’t see any alter-native,” commissioner Gil Goodman added.

Pass refunds on holdAfter Oct. 30, SARC passes

will be placed in suspension, not cancelled, “until all avenues of reopening have been exhausted,” the board of commissioners said in an online post on Oct. 23.

“In mid-November we should know more about whether a venture with the YMCA could be feasible,” board members wrote. “In addition, the Board of Direc-tors continues to work closely with community leaders on possible funding and part-nering solutions.”

Help for swim teamThe vote did come with

a request for community support to help SARC’s pool remain open for the Sequim High School girls swim team to continue training until its season ends on Nov. 12.

That request was answered earlier this week, when anonymous donations from area residents will allow the team to complete its season.

The SARC Foundation, a nonprofit entity estab-lished to accept tax-deducible funds on behalf of SARC, announced Monday it had raised $7,500 over the past week to allow the girls team to continue practicing, Pickering said. The donated funds will help pay for heat-ing the pool and showers, and for running the air han-dling system, he said.

SHS’s swim practices will continue Monday through Thursday this week and next, Pickering said.

Steve Burke, executive director of the William Shore Memorial Pool in Port Ange-les, said on Oct. 21 his facility could accommodate Sequim High School’s girls swim team for the remainder of the 2015 season.

“It’s going to be a very difficult problem if SARC shuts down because we don’t have the room,” Burke said,

SARCFrom page A-1

“(but) we will accommodate the swim team at our facility no matter what happens at SARC, for the short term.”

But SHS swim girls coach Anita Benitez said that sce-nario wouldn’t work.

“With our budget con-straints, we won’t be able to afford (going to Port Ange-les),” Benitez said.

YMCA partnership still a possibility

The SARC board, with financial support from Olym-pic Medical Center, City of Sequim and Clallam County, paid for a survey in part to consider a partnership with the Olympic Peninsula YMCA, which operates facili-ties in Port Angeles and Port Townsend.

Results of the $36,000 survey still are about two weeks away, said Kyle Cronk, Olympic Peninsula YMCA chief executive officer.

He said that his organiza-tion will bring a business plan to SARC commissioners by mid- to late November.

Goodman said he expects the district to need more funding even if a partnership is struck. “Everyone forgets we’ve gone out twice to the community and the public said, ‘No.’ Even if the Y takes over, a levy’s going to have to be pushed to pick up the slack,” Goodman said.

SARC leaders had hoped to keep the facility open through September 2016. But after announcing the closure date and cutting back hours earlier this month, the cash flow dropped off signifi-cantly, Deschenes said.

Burke said his organiza-tion had a similar experience in 2008 and 2009, when that

facility was shut down due to financial hardships.

“As soon as the notice went out, the revenues went through the floor,” Burke said.

Some SARC users had suggested at previous board meetings to raise the fees to keep the facility open, but Burke said that likely wouldn’t help SARC’s situation.

“In my experience, the price becomes so astronomi-cally high, you lose the people who need the pool the most: the youth and senior citi-zens,” Burke said.

Burke noted that SARC is the only pool he can find in Washington that operates without any subsidies and that SARC user fees manage to pay 80 percent of operating costs.

“I’m at about 58 percent and SARC’s at 80 percent — that blows me out of the water,” Burke said. “Scott’s done a yeoman’s job navigating these waters (but) you’re not going to run a library on overdue fees. I hope the Y can make those numbers work,” Burke said.

While the Olympic Pen-insula YMCA is part of a national organization, it is a franchise that pays for operations through user fees. Cronk said his organi-zation does have fundraising projects to help support the annual budget.

“Our board’s No. 1 priority is to see how we can help,” Cronk said.

Closure optionsMiller, SARC’s attorney,

noted that in the event the facility is seen as no longer viable to operate, that the board could vote to trans-fer the facility to another municipal district (i.e. the Sequim School District, City

of Sequim, Olympic Medical Center, Fire District 3, etc.) with the same legal rules and restrictions as SARC has now, to sell the facility or to dissolve the district.

If the facility were sold — and the fair market value of SARC is in question, Miller noted, considering there has not been a full appraisal of both the facility and land — that money would be used to pay off any remaining debts. Taxpayers in the district boundaries would be on the hook to pay off any other debt, Miller noted.

SARC could file a bank-ruptcy petition, Miller said, but a court would order the facility be sold and that — as in the case of a sale or dissolu-tion of the district — the dis-trict likely would not get fair market value for its assets.

SARC user Ken Phillips suggested the board close only the pool and leave the remaining parts of the facility open. Then, the board could ask voters to approve a pool operations-only levy.

“If the people see what they’re missing, maybe they’ll bring it back,” he said. “If not, the people have spoken.”

Call for new leadershipPaul McHugh, a former

SARC board commissioner and facility user, encouraged the current board members at Wednesday’s meeting to step down.

“You’re part of the prob-lem, for better or worse,” McHugh said. “It’s time for new leadership.”

Bill Black, also a former board commissioner and longtime user of SARC, en-couraged the same move to establish a new set of leaders.

“What we’re facing tonight is not new; it’s been around since the inception of SARC,” Black said.

Black noted that the intent of SARC was that it would be self-sustaining two to four years after it began operations.

“Obviously that didn’t hap-pen,” he said. “You can look at the finances (in years past) and the numbers keep going down,” Black said. “This has been predictable for years (but the) board has chosen to do nothing.”

SARC board commission-ers, however, declined to resign Wednesday.

Pickering said that if cur-rent SARC commissioners had resigned, county commission-ers would appoint three new members, who would them-selves appoint two more to run the junior taxing district.

Above, Sequim Aquatic Recreation Center board of commissioners agreed to shut down the facility on Oct. 30 last week. Photo by Elizabeth Kelly.At right, Frank Pickering, SARC board of commissioners chairman, and Judy Rhodes, petition team captain for the SARC Metropolitan Park District, search the unofficial results of the 2015 Primary Election on Aug. 4, only to realize the measure to create a SARC Metropolitan Park District had failed. Sequim Gazette file photo by Alana Linderoth

William Shore Pool adds two-tier pricingUsers of the Sequim Aquatic Recreation Center got plenty of bad

news last week withe the facility’s closure. And thanks to a William Shore Memorial Pool District decision earlier this year, they won’t be getting a break on admission to the Port Angeles pool, either.

In July, district staffers recommended to the board of commis-sioners that the William Shore Pool go to a two-tier rate structure, for district residents and non-district residents. The district was going to implement this pricing structure at the beginning of the year which would give Sequim residents plenty of notice about the price change, Steven Burke, executive director for the William Shore Memorial Pool District, wrote this week. But because of SARC’s Oct. 30 closing date, the Port Angeles pool is activating its new pricing structure effective immediately.

The district is subsidized more than 50 percent by district prop-erty owners in the amount of 17 cents per $1,000 of assessed valu-ation or $480,000 each year, Burke noted. “The district taxpayers should not subsidize use rates for non-district residents,” he wrote.

Because of a lack of space, Burke wrote, the district will give preference to patrons who live in the district first, then out-of-district residents. For specific prices or more information, call Burke at 417-9767 ext. 102 or e-mail to [email protected].

SEQUIM GAZETTE SEQUIM GAZETTE Oct. 28, 2015 • A-11

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Page 12: Sequim Gazette, October 28, 2015

A vote for JeffersA school board is a public policy

body charged with the governance of local public school districts. Its role is to ensure that public mon-ies are spent appropriately and that educational mandates are met in our community. By definition, then, pub-lic policy and governance require a breadth of viewpoint and experience.

Heather Jeffers, candidate for District 1, exemplifies these quali-fications. In addition to a strong education (including B.A. and M.S.W. degrees in social work from the University of Washington), she has 15 years of experience in health care executive management. She understands budgets, regulatory constraints, facilities, special needs, and people. She is also a parent with a fifth-grade daughter at Greywolf Elementary School.

The school board appointed Heather to an open position in August 2014. Since then, she has proven herself to be an outstanding steward of our schools. She is active in all board affairs, performs the role of vice president and has twice attended the Legislative Assembly on behalf of the district. Heather verifies her data and considers multiple options before making decisions. Most important, she asks questions – questions that often challenge the status quo. This is a requisite for good public policy.

Please join me in supporting Heather Jeffers for Sequim School Board, District 1. A vote for Heather is a vote for proven good governance.

Steven HumphreySequim

Questions Ryan’s viewsFirst, my credentials to support

my views. In 1953, I helped form and served on the board of directors and as a volunteer on an “all volunteer” fire department in Pennsylvania. In 1972, I helped form and served on the board of directors and as a volunteer on a fire department with a paid chief and a secretary, in Alaska. And from 1986-1998, I served as a volunteer for

Clallam Fire District 3 — a total of 40 years of volunteer service.

After reading of the views of Sean Ryan in the Peninsula Daily News on promoting the hiring of more paid fire-men for Fire District 3, I immediately started to wonder exactly how much my current “fire tax” of $418.07 would “rise” if his desires were put in place.

I realize in this busy world, that time is of importance, but the satisfaction I received from “volunteering” with three different departments were some of the “highlights” of my life. I would be “happy” to volunteer again if needed in some form of recruiting of volunteers for Fire District 3.

I also would like to add that I was greatly disappointed that Assistant Chief Tony Hudson, a longtime close associate of mine, and a very competent assistant chief, was not elevated to the position of chief of Fire District 3.

Harvey MartinSequim

Candidates promote fiscal responsibility

Clallam County residents are clear-ly starting to benefit from the cut in county taxes advanced by Clallam County Commissioner Jim McEntire and enacted by unanimous vote of all three county commissioners.

That’s great news for residents in the unincorporated areas of the county, but what about people that live, work and shop in Sequim? Good news! Sequim residents finally have a special opportunity this election sea-son to elect, not just one, but three, candidates to the Sequim City Coun-cil who are committed to financial integrity, propriety and responsibility to the taxpayer. I call this the Sequim Fiscal Responsibility Team.

Brandon Janisse, John Miller, James Russell are the three names you need to consider as you fill out your ballot in the City of Sequim. All are commit-ted the principle that city government must be efficient and limited to those activities that serve public safety and the essential safety net.

For too long, the Sequim taxpayer has been viewed as a private ATM machine by local elected officials pushing their pet projects. That status quo needs to be disrupted. This is the team to do it. So please, for your own best interest, I strongly recommend you cast your vote for the Sequim Fiscal Responsibility Team of Janisse, Miller and Russell.

And also, to bring fiscal discipline and financial integrity to Fire Dis-trict Three, you will want to keep in mind Sean Ryan, another candidate I strongly recommend.

Donnie HallSequim(Hall is Precinct Committee Of-

ficer, Jamestown 240, for the Clallam County Republican Party.)

Democrats vs. AmericaThe question of whom to vote for as

county commissioner has an easy an-swer. Jim McEntire is a proven leader with a lifetime of public service who is looking out for our best interests. He deserves our vote.

His opponent aligns himself with the socialist Democratic Party which works against our interests. At their 2012 national convention, Demo-crats voted to remove any mention of God from their platform. In the October 2015 Democratic Presi-dential debate, when asked “which enemy are you most proud of,” four of the five candidates associated the word “enemy” with other Americans instead of external adversaries.

The future Democrat Presi-dential nominee, Hillary Clinton, named as her enemies the National Rifle Association, health insurance companies, drug companies and Republicans. That’s tens of millions of Americans. She went on to equate them with Iranians who chant “Death to America.” That’s hateful.

The Democratic Party hate-fest on America has intensified lately. They are dividers, not unifiers. Most Americans are now aware of the fact, which is why 30 state legislatures have Republican majorities and only

11 are majority Democrat — 31 states have Republican governors.

Mark Ozias’ supporters say he will collaborate to make things better. It’s more likely he will collaborate with socialist Democrats against business and fellow Americans. Ozias aligns himself with the party that consid-ers God and other Americans as en-emies. That shows poor judgement. Don’t join the hate-fest by voting for a Democrat. Vote for Jim McEntire (R).

Peter HeiselSequim

Support GawleyServing for 38 years in the fire ser-

vice has allowed me to observe some great fire ground commanders and even greater fire commissioners who set direction for our emergency ser-vices. Every once in a while you come across a person who is committed to serving as a fire commissioner for all the right reasons; a sense of commu-nity; a sense of service to those in need and leading from the front.

Michael Gawley was appointed to the Clallam County Fire District 3 Board of Commissioners after a suc-cessful career as a volunteer firefight-er and air traffic controller for the FAA. With this experience Michael knows how to handle stressful situa-tions methodically and professionally with the taxpayer in mind.

As a retiree, Michael knows how to live within his means and what limitations senior citizens have when it comes to fixed incomes. He knows that leadership is seldom easy and that making the difficult decisions on behalf of those he serves will provide the best results in the long run.

The fire service in Clallam County is fortunate to have the leadership of incumbent Michael Gawley as a com-missioner in Fire District 3 (Sequim). Please join me in supporting his re-election for all the right reasons.

Sam PhillipsPort Angeles(Phillips is District 2 Fire Chief.)

OpiniOn

LETTERS TO THE EDITOR

To submit a letter147 W. Washington St., Sequim, WA 98382Phone: 360-683-3311 • Fax: 360-683-6670E-mail: [email protected] noon the Friday before publication

Wednesday, Oct. 28, 2015

SEQUIM GAZETTE A-12

Your opinions on issues of community interest and your reaction to stories and editori-als contained in your Sequim Gazette are important to us and to your fellow readers. Thus our rules relating to let-ters submitted for publication are relatively simple.

• Letters are welcome. Letters exceeding 250 words may be shortened. We strive to publish all letters.

• Letters are subject to editing for spelling and gram-mar; we contact the writer when substantial changes are required, sending the letter back to the writer for revi-sions. Personal attacks and unsubstantiated allegations are not printed.

• All letters must have a valid signature, with a printed name, address and phone number for verification. Only the name and town/commu-nity are printed.

• Deadline for letters to appear in the next publica-tion is noon Friday. Because of the volume of letters, not all letters are published the week they are submitted. Time-sensitive letters have a priority.

• Letters are published subject to legal limitations relating to defamation and factual representation.

• To submit letters, deliver or mail to 147 W. Washington St., Sequim, WA 98382; fax to 360-683-6670 or e-mail [email protected].

(Warning: May contain words of violence or nudity.)

It was the very darkest Halloween Eve in humankind history. Switch-back circular winds blew in defiance of any definition of its direction.

“The wind is blowing around,” reported Channel NOGOV located in what used to be the West Wing of the White House.

“The rains are riding the wind,” the weather saint droned on, “might as well leave your umbrellas home again tomorrow.” Weather saint signed off his shift and walked home through the swirling rain and grove of naked trees. “It’s the same report everyday unless it’s not raining; then it’s periodic reports of sun sightings through the smoky clouds generated by the fire that won’t stop burning,” he lamented, trying to quiet his mind that wouldn’t stop thinking.

Across the nameless town referred to as the capitol of the United States – America was dropped from the name decades ago – a militia of firefighters

made up of men sent from each of the states was fighting the fire that won’t stop burning.

The fire has been burning so long that no one can remember what the town was like before the fire started or for that matter what caused the fire. Legend has it that piles upon piles of files, no longer needed when govern-ment bureaucracies were dismantled were tossed into the deserted football stadium.

Digital and paper records filled the former FedEx field. FedEx had long

since changed its name to Amazon Drone Delivery (ADD), adding a disclaimer that it never meant to be called federal. The stadium was used because it was no longer needed; the football team left the deserted town and joined the States’ Foot-ball League (SFL) along with other teams. The League was whittled down to two divisions.

Instead of regional divisions, SFL created the “Reality” and “Fantasy” Football divisions.

Halloween HistoryThe revolution started in the 21st

century when a small but passionate group of politicians elected to Con-gress promised to dismantle govern-ment and get it out of people’s lives.

It was a hard-fought battle but they won in the end by a majority vote of the people who voted, say around 50 percent of registered voters. Regis-tered voters represented about 35 percent of the population. The IRS, seen to be intrusive and demanding

in expecting compliance with tax laws, went first. Next went the Envi-ronment Protection Agency, seen to be intrusive and professing the crazy notion that there was global warming despite record snowfall in Northeast states.

The Department of Education, seen to be intrusive in parents’ rights to set education standards for their children, came next. So went the agencies and their resources, except their money received from taxes and fees, which were returned to the states proportionate to the senior-ity and, yes, power of their elected representatives.

Many states like Mississippi had a windfall which was ultimately spent and like other states they came to rely on their own tax revenues to support the government activities of the state. The richer states like New York, Cali-fornia and Washington fared the best, although were somewhat beholden to

In a democracy, all citizens should be able to vote. Laws shouldn’t make it harder to vote. Laws should ease

the way to voting. That is, unless we don’t want all citizens to vote. But if that is the case, we have a pretty poor democracy.

More than a quarter of voting age adults in our state are not registered to vote. If you subtract the 7 percent who are not citizens, that leaves over a million adults who are of voting age, are citizens and can’t vote because they are not registered to vote.

When you turn 18, or get your driv-er’s license or pay your property taxes, you don’t get an automatic right to the vote. You have to affirmatively act to register to vote. If you fail to do

that, or miss a deadline, or don’t have access to the Internet or it just doesn’t cross your mind, you can’t vote. On the other hand, you pay your taxes automatically, with the sales tax. Your FICA taxes for Social Security and Medicare are subtracted from your pay check, no questions asked.

One way or another, voter turnout onus is on us

An ‘R-rated’ Halloween story

LETTERS POLICY

SEQUIMGAZETTEPublished every Wednesday

147 W. Washington St.Sequim, WA 98382

Phone: 360-683-3311Fax: 360-683-6670

www.sequimgazette.comSound Publishing Inc.

Vol. 42, Number 43USPS 685-630 • ISSN: 1538-585X

PUBLISHERTerry Ward

[email protected]

EDITORMichael Dashiell

[email protected], x5050

SPECIAL SECTIONS EDITORPatricia Morrison Coate

[email protected], x5054

NEWS & PRESS [email protected]

REPORTERSMatthew Nash

2015 WNPA Feature Writer of the [email protected]

360-683-3311, x5056

Alana Linderoth2015 WNPA News Writer of the Year

[email protected], 5060

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360-683-3311, x3050Jonel Lyons

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POSTMASTER: Send changes of address to:

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Bertha Cooper

Think AbouT iT ...

John Burbank

GuesT opinion

See BURBANK, A-13

See COOPER, A-13

super PACs who determined the dis-tribution of government services.

The states did have to work out funding for common interests like the defense of the country and protecting their borders, although it took a few scuffles to define just what borders were considered borders.

Finally a defense saint agreed upon by the states was named and took over managing the vast network of information systems, home state security and supplying the military. His exact location is unknown to avoid the inevitable rivalry between brother states. It

CooperFrom page A-12

So for some of us, we experience taxation without representation, because we are not registered to vote.

We could criticize those who have not registered to vote. We could say that they don’t exercise their civic responsibility, that they couldn’t register to vote in between looking at their iPhones and immersing themselves in social media. On the other hand, it might not be at the top of some-one’s to-do list when they are working two shifts at a lousy wage and caring for their kids. Either way, none of these arguments trump the dismal anti-democratic fact that over one million

BurbankFrom page A-12

See LETTERS, A-13

Schools need leader with project management experience

If the school bond is approved by the vot-ers, there is no one on the school board or school administration who is experienced or qualified to plan, manage, oversee or execute the required construction details and contracts.

At $50 million, this is not a project which can be subcontracted or delegated to another person or company. I doubt that the board or administration has anyone who has had experience in managing a $5 million or $10 million construction project, let alone a $50 million complex project.

The responsible person must take owner-ship to be involved in the details of the design, cost and assure the most economical and successful project outcome – this cannot be delegated!

We have an “interim” superintendent with no previous experience as a superintendent and a board without executive private indus-try experience!

Sequim has a history of short-term su-perintendents of three to five years going back to 1993! This provides no stability or long-term planning for our school system and the results are evident. The board and administration have shown no leadership, vision or long-range planning for the school district facilities along with poor judgment for offering the $154 million bond issue several years ago. To be on the board, it is necessary to have more experience than simply being a parent, a teacher, having a

LettersFrom page A-12

SEQUIM GAZETTEA-12 • Oct. 28, 2015 SEQUIM GAZETTE

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Page 13: Sequim Gazette, October 28, 2015

OpiniOnWednesday, Oct. 28, 2015

A-12

Your opinions on issues of community interest and your reaction to stories and editori-als contained in your Sequim Gazette are important to us and to your fellow readers. Thus our rules relating to let-ters submitted for publication are relatively simple.

• Letters are welcome. Letters exceeding 250 words may be shortened. We strive to publish all letters.

• Letters are subject to editing for spelling and gram-mar; we contact the writer when substantial changes are required, sending the letter back to the writer for revi-sions. Personal attacks and unsubstantiated allegations are not printed.

• All letters must have a valid signature, with a printed name, address and phone number for verification. Only the name and town/commu-nity are printed.

• Deadline for letters to appear in the next publica-tion is noon Friday. Because of the volume of letters, not all letters are published the week they are submitted. Time-sensitive letters have a priority.

• Letters are published subject to legal limitations relating to defamation and factual representation.

• To submit letters, deliver or mail to 147 W. Washington St., Sequim, WA 98382; fax to 360-683-6670 or e-mail [email protected].

LETTERS POLICY

SEQUIMGAZETTEPublished every Wednesday

147 W. Washington St.Sequim, WA 98382

Phone: 360-683-3311Fax: 360-683-6670

www.sequimgazette.comSound Publishing Inc.

Vol. 42, Number 43USPS 685-630 • ISSN: 1538-585X

PUBLISHERTerry Ward

[email protected]

EDITORMichael Dashiell

[email protected], x5050

SPECIAL SECTIONS EDITORPatricia Morrison Coate

[email protected], x5054

NEWS & PRESS [email protected]

REPORTERSMatthew Nash

2015 WNPA Feature Writer of the [email protected]

360-683-3311, x5056

Alana Linderoth2015 WNPA News Writer of the Year

[email protected], 5060

DISPLAY ADVERTISINGAdvertising Representatives

Harmony [email protected]

360-683-3311, x3050Jonel Lyons

[email protected], x3060

[email protected]

Ad Designer, productionMary Field

360-683-3311, x4050

CLASSIFIED ADVERTISINGDenise Webb

[email protected] Clenard

[email protected], 1550

CIRCULATION [email protected]

6 months, $261 year, $36

2 years, [email protected]

POSTMASTER: Send changes of address to:

Sequim Gazette147 W. Washington St.,

Sequim, WA 98382

to super PACs who determined the distribution of government services.

The states did have to work out funding for common interests like the defense of the country and pro-tecting their borders, although it took a few scuffles to define just what borders were considered borders.

Finally a defense saint agreed upon by the states was named and took over managing the vast network of information systems, home state security and supplying the military. His exact location is unknown to avoid the inevitable rivalry between brother states. It doesn’t really matter because most

of the defense saint’s work is done over the Internet. For example, he just completed an order for the new improved nuclear bomb shield from Amazon.com. And being a Prime member, the U.S. can expect next day delivery.

Halloween Human ServicesThe simple systems seem to be

working smoothly with little fuss. Instead of bickering over rights, states focus on responsibilities. Some states are having a bit of a problem with population growth though, in that they have none. In fact for some, population, therefore tax revenue, is seriously declining.

Women are choosing to leave states that no longer provide repro-ductive services like birth control or

health services for parts of women’s bodies that men don’t have. It isn’t too surprising that able men are packing up and leaving too, espe-cially since the women that stay aren’t participating in mating until they want children.

Although feeling victorious about the return to important values; the morality saints don’t fully understand the unintended consequences.

Dismantling Social Security and the Department of Health and Human Services, seen as the most intrusive in financing retirement income and medical care in old age through payroll deductions, was the most difficult to dismantle.

In recognition of people living longer, the first move was to change

the definition of retirement age from 67 to 85 years of age. Strangely enough, hardly anyone is living past 67 now. But gradually generations have moved on and the so called entitlements became a legend of the golden age for the aged.

The states will have to deal with the issue of declining population growth which seems to be resulting in declining revenue for important programs like protecting the border; but it’s less a concern now since it doesn’t seem that anyone wants to come to the United States anymore.

But first the states must deal with the pressing issue of naming rights for the country. Amazon.com is best positioned since it now negotiates with and practically owns all cor-porations and gets the best prices

for just about everything. Rumor has it that they are think-

ing of offering health care at reason-able prices to all Prime members.

Just imagine, the United States of Amazon.com, good old USA.

“Indeed, it is the darkest Hal-loween Eve in humankind history,” muttered the grumpy weather saint trying to quiet his mind. He quick-ened his pace to avoid being held hostage by the strong circling winds.

Bertha D. Cooper is retired from a 40-plus year career as a health care administrator focusing on the delivery system as a whole. She still does occasional consulting. She is a featured columnist at the Sequim Gazette. Reach her at [email protected].

CooperFrom page A-12

So for some of us, we experience taxation without representation, because we are not registered to vote.

We could criticize those who have not registered to vote. We could say that they don’t exercise their civic responsibility, that they couldn’t register to vote in between looking at their iPhones and immersing themselves in social media. On the other hand, it might not be at the top of some-one’s to-do list when they are working two shifts at a lousy wage and caring for their kids. Either way, none of these arguments trump the dismal anti-democratic fact that over one million

citizens aren’t registered to vote in our state.

Registering to vote is the first step and actually voting is the next step. But we are not doing very well on that account either. For example, in the Snohomish County primary elections, of the 421,450 ballots that were mailed out, 97,433 were re-turned and counted as votes. Another 150,000 citizens in Snohomish County did not get the option, because they were not registered voters. So the dismal math is that while close to 100,000 citi-zens voted in August, close to 500,000 did not.

Fixing the processWe could make it easier to

register to vote, by allowing voter registration on elec-tion day, as is done in Idaho,

Wyoming, Minnesota, New Hampshire and Wisconsin. Or we could be like North Dakota and not even have a system for voter registration.

As a citizen, you just vote. In Australia, if you don’t vote, you get fined, but that prac-tice may be more suitable to the Aussie Outback rather than the American West.

So how about we look closer to home? Just this summer the Oregon Leg-islature passed a law for automatic voter registration. Here’s how it works: If you are a citizen and you sign up for your driver’s license, you automatically are enrolled as a registered voter. If you don’t want to be a registered voter, you have 30 days to opt out. It is that simple.

Who is not registered to vote now? Disproportion-

ately these citizens are low-income workers, Hispanic-Americans, young people, those who only have high school diplomas and high school dropouts. They have drawn the short end of the stick for many things in life and not registering to vote just compounds that.

Consider a high school senior with college-educated parents insisting that she register to vote as soon as she turns 18, and a high school senior working at McDonald’s, helping with her family’s income and studying and hoping to go to commu-nity college. One has plenty of time and parental pushing to register to vote, the other has little time to do so. With automatic voter registration, both of them would get reg-istered to vote.

We complain a lot about our elections and the vari-ous candidates for office. Then we complain about lack of voter turnout in elections.

Then we complain about people not registering to vote. We may not be able to immediately fix the first and second complaints, but we could get everyone reg-

istered to vote. That might help voter turnout and get-ting good candidates to run for public office.

At least it is the thing to do in a democracy!

John Burbank is executive director of the Economic Op-portunity Institute in Seattle. He can be reached at [email protected].

BurbankFrom page A-12

Schools need leader with project management experience

If the school bond is approved by the vot-ers, there is no one on the school board or school administration who is experienced or qualified to plan, manage, oversee or execute the required construction details and contracts.

At $50 million, this is not a project which can be subcontracted or delegated to another person or company. I doubt that the board or administration has anyone who has had experience in managing a $5 million or $10 million construction project, let alone a $50 million complex project.

The responsible person must take owner-ship to be involved in the details of the design, cost and assure the most economical and successful project outcome — this cannot be delegated!

We have an “interim” superintendent with no previous experience as a superintendent and a board without executive private indus-try experience!

Sequim has a history of short-term su-perintendents of three to five years going back to 1993! This provides no stability or long-term planning for our school system and the results are evident. The board and administration have shown no leadership, vision or long-range planning for the school district facilities along with poor judgment for offering the $154 million bond issue several years ago. To be on the board, it is necessary to have more experience than simply being a parent, a teacher, having a

college degree or being an educator. There needs to be private industry execu-

tive management experience with the un-derstanding of long-term planning, depre-ciation, replacement reserves, etc., along with determining the community capacity for project financing through taxes and the qualified personnel to execute completion of projects.

The Port Angeles board has wisely chosen to wait until 2016 when they will have their new board members in place prior to decid-ing on future action for their bond issue – a wise choice.

After the misfiring of the $154 million original bond issue, last year I met several times in extensive discussion meetings with Kelly Shea, our past superintendent, to un-derstand the details of the project and his experience and qualifications to personally take responsibility and ownership of the project for a cost-effective successful out-come in addition to his other responsibili-ties. I was comfortable with his responses and his taking personal ownership of the project. As a result, I was supportive of the bond issue at that time.

Now, that is not the case — we do not have a permanent or experienced “interim” superintendent nor anyone else experi-enced who can take ownership of the $50 million complex project.

I urge a no vote at this time until we can get an experienced superintendent and board along with an ownership plan of project execution. There is much more to a construction project than simply getting approval to spend $50 million.

John SartoriSequim

Supports McEntireCounty government impacts all of us

in a multitude of ways and can directly influence our daily lives — in short, it is important.

Commensurately, it behooves us to elect county leaders who are knowledgeable, wise and have a proven track record of accomplish-ment.

County Commissioner Jim McEntire is such a leader — his opponent, Mark Ozias, isn’t.

Ozias touts his role in directing a food shelter which, in reality, is but a marginal accomplishment — anyone can do it. It’s akin to the other “feeding-at-the-taxpay-er’s-public-trough” jobs he’s held — all of which equate to being a “community organizer,” and we know how that leader-ship test fails!

Ozias tried to run a private business in the real world — but it’s now closed! And, given that his “transparent” past is hardly an open book, any successes in the real world are unknown and, if claimed, would be suspect.

Moreover, it’s especially important to note that Ozias’ campaign is under-written and funded by union greed — a sure sign that he’d honor the wishes of special interests over those of we ordi-nary voters.

We, the people, would suffer with Ozias as a commissioner. Unions would thrive.

We need to re-elect independent and thoroughly proven Jim McEntire, and not unproven and tainted Mark Ozias.

Gerald J. StilesSequim

Favors Stoffer for school boardWith current Sequim School District

board member John Bridge not running for re-election for Position 3, the best candidate to replace him is clearly Jim Stoffer.

Mr. Bridge has endorsed him. I’ve known Jim for about a year and am im-pressed with his sincere desire to serve our community, much like he did for our country during his career in the U.S. Coast Guard.

Jim has followed the doings of the school district for several years and ac-tively participated in various ways to help with their needs.

He is engaged in the issues facing edu-cating this community’s K-12 students and has a strong desire to improve all aspects of the learning process.

He will be a tireless worker to that cause and make all efforts to connect with in-terested parties.

Jim’s leadership is needed on this im-portant board with pending facility im-provements and better education delivery the current most important issues facing the board. These and other matters the board takes on require careful thought, necessary analysis and definitive conclu-sions.

He will faithfully perform this process and own his actions.

We need Jim Stoffer on the Sequim School District Board. He’s got my vote. If you compare the two candidates for Position 3, he should get yours, too.

John WhiteSequim

LettersFrom page A-12

See MORE LETTERS, A-14

SEQUIM GAZETTE SEQUIM GAZETTE Oct. 28, 2015 • A-13

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Page 14: Sequim Gazette, October 28, 2015

Support bond for greater safetyAs residents of the Sequim School District,

we strongly urge all eligible voters to partici-pate in the critically important Nov. 3 election and join us by voting for increased safety for all residents in the Sequim School District by supporting the Nov. 3 Sequim School District Facilities Bond.

The recent excellent presentations by Sequim School District Superintendent Gary Neal and Director of Business Opera-tions Brian Lewis have clearly and movingly demonstrated that the Nov. 3 School District Facilities Bond will significantly increase the safety and efficiency for the Sequim School District. In turn, these essential improve-ments will increase the learning experience for current and future Sequim School Dis-trict students.

By greatly enhancing the learning experi-ence for current and future Sequim School District students, the ability of these students to live their lives to the their fullest potential also will be significantly enhanced. This essential outcome for our students will, in turn, increase Sequim’s ability to be both a beautiful and sustainable community while simultaneously providing the necessary flow of goods and services that are required for an excellent quality of life for all Sequim School District residents.

Supporting the Nov. 3 Sequim School District Facilities Bond is not only an oppor-tunity to do the right thing — it is also the “smart money move” for all Sequim School District voters.

George and Marcella CluffSequim

For JeffersThe Sequim School Board does not need

more educators!It needs people with administrative and

management backgrounds to steer the dis-trict with responsible fiscal guidance.

Heather Jeffers has these qualities honed by many years of managing facilities charged with caring for people unable to fend for themselves.

Her experience shows her ability to work

within budgetary guidelines and yet continue to provide essential services to those whom she cares about.

If you (as I do) care about the education of our students, please cast your vote for Heather Jeffers for Sequim School Board.

Al MillerAgnew

School community ‘awesome”What a great photo and caption on the

front page of the Oct. 21 Sequim Gazette of the Sequim High School Homecoming King Nick Barrett and Queen Katie Rogers.

Seeing the photo in the newspaper was wonderful but nothing like experiencing the special moment in person. The exuberant applause from the crowd, mostly the student section, was heartwarming to say the least.

Of their own inclination, Sequim High School students demonstrated initiative, remarkable character, inclusivity and com-munity support. We have the Sequim par-ents, teachers and administrators to thank for helping develop these youths who are our future.

Despite having some of the most inad-equate school facilities around, Sequim has the most awesome school community. The entire community should be very proud.

Joe HoltropSequim

SARC board is cause of many of SARC’s problems

The sudden closure of SARC has certainly taken all of us by surprise. It is hard to under-stand how a predicted closure date of Septem-ber 2016, unless an emergency should occur, could change to Oct. 30, 2015, in only 20 days.

It is never productive to point fingers, however, the SARC board president did not hesitate to pass blame to the voters when saying it was not the fault of the board that SARC had to close.

Perhaps the board should look in the mir-ror before blaming the voters. This is a board that has conducted business as usual as revenues declined and expenses escalated. It is a board that has been unable to develop a consensus on a plan to sustain the operation of the facility they are charged with govern-ing. It is a board that decided to piggyback a levy request on a large school bond election

More LettersFrom page A-13

rather than participate in an earlier election without competing money issues.

When the voters rejected a restricted levy appeal they countered with a demand for a metropolitan district that would give them the unrestricted right to tax.

They voted to combine their financial ac-counts which allowed them to drain their emergency funds for day to day expenses. They asked people to continue to buying passes with the assurance that, if SARC had to close, they would refund the unused portion.

Now the board president says that there is no money available to satisfy that com-mitment.

And finally, this board said just prior to Oct. 1, that changes in hours of operation were needed to ensure that SARC could stay open until September 2016.

It came back 20 days later and announce closure of the facility on Oct. 30, 2015.

Strong, competent and credible leadership is required in time of crisis. This is not to say that the board members are not good dedicated people.

However, as a group, this board has not demonstrated the ability to work together, to make sustainable decisions and has destroyed all its credibility.

If the voters are to blame, it is a direct re-sult of the failure of the board to provide the necessary, cohesive leadership.

Charles LambSequim

Public has empty pocketsI’ve just been reading the city council’s

2016 proposed budget. Of course, there is the usual raising of rates to gain funds. I don’t un-derstand why governments think that people are a money tree and can adjust their budgets so they can get what they want.

We the people have to make sacrifices and cut back to pay for overspending by the government, but I never see the govern-ment cutting anything (except occasionally something that will hurt the populace so they will relent).

It’s time that the governing people take pay cuts, cut back on superfluous employees, etc.

If it hurts that’s too bad, it hurts us too, especially when we are on fixed incomes.

Sandra AronsenSequim

Preparedness involves personal responsibility

Concerning “Better Plan and Warning Needed” (Letters to the editor, Sequim Ga-zette, Oct. 21, page A-11): First, there are two tsunami sirens in the Sequim vicinity, one at Diamond Point, the other at Dungeness, both areas more liable to tsunami inundation. Sec-ond, local Emergency Management (sheriff’s office) officials do believe we are liable to earth-quake/tsunami and have distributed materials stating that, I have helped hand them out!

If you want to be better prepared, contact county Emergency Management and spon-sor a “Map Your Neighborhood” session for you and your neighbors. If you want your neighborhood to be better prepared, start a “CERT” (Community Emergency Response Team); the training is free and costs only your time. If you want your kids to be prepared, lobby schools to have “Teen CERT.”

Bottom line, preparedness is a personal re-sponsibility, begin by having food, water and medications stored for the three days the city and county emergency plans expect you to be able to take care of yourself. Have a NOAA weather radio or sign up for telephonic alerts. Have a “comfort kit” if you need to evacuate.

All this information and training is avail-able for the asking, but you need to ask.

Bob MillsSequim

Return to principlesI am a most fortunate man; when I was 10

years old my mother said, “When you were born you received two gifts, the first is the gift of life, the second is you were born in the United States.” Also, I’m a 20th-century man. Practi-cally my entire life occurred while this coun-try was governed by traditional Americans instead of modern progressive liberals. Party affiliation did not matter because item No. 1 on any political agenda was “America first.”

My basic education happened before public education was ruled by Washington, D.C., and the teachers’ unions, my high school curricu-lum was far above the baccalaureate require-ments of most of today’s publicly funded uni-versities. For this I will always be thankful, I was taught to read, write and calculate, and most importantly I was taught that the principles of the United States made all of that possible.

I cannot remember any mass murders on school premises, I cannot remember home-less people (in my day they were referred to as vagrants and were taken care of) clogging the thoroughfares of major metropolises or in small towns for that matter. Why? Because the rights of the law-abiding majority were not abrogated by the special rights bestowed upon miniscule, collective minorities.

The United States Declaration of Indepen-dence states, “We hold these truths to be self evident, that all men are created equal.” That’s fine, but that equality ends a few milliseconds after birth. What each individual does with that gift of life is strictly up to the individual and must not be influenced by artificial level playing fields imposed by government fiat.

The United States must return to those Judeo-Christian principles upon which it was founded; our “Ship of State” has been meandering without God’s hand at the helm for the entire 21st century and the citizens of the United States have permitted — no, required — this to happen because they have been hypnotized by hedonism and sloth.

God Bless these United States.Ethan HarrisSequim

FROM THE WEB• SARC to close its doors Oct. 30 (Oct. 21)Not for kids and families? Anyone who says that hasn’t been there in

years. Last night I was there as 70-plus kids had a great time in their swim lessons, 20-plus high school girls practiced for their next meet, hoping to qualify for District and State competitions, siblings of swim students were with parents in the hallway, working on homework, teens were weight lifting, some seniors were swimming and doing their daily rehab walks in the hallway. That’s the reality. Those are the people who will have nowhere to go until someone steps up to get it open again. — Gail Sumpter

Stop saying it’s an activity for kids and families. If the SARC had con-sidered families all along, they might have gotten a little more support over the years. It was their own poor management that got them into this. Don’t blame the voters. — Becky Flynn Mitchell

“I only want to pay taxes for things which directly benefit me.” A very sad mantra. — Matthew Counts

This is a travesty. It was one of the only attractions in town for kids and families. — Cheryl Smith

I thought that the reduced hours were supposed to extend the closure significantly longer. Did we get misled on that? — Steve Conroy

So are they going to charge me my monthly fee while not open? — Cliff Silliman

SEQUIM GAZETTEA-14 • Oct. 28, 2015 SEQUIM GAZETTE

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SEQUIM GAZETTE SEQUIM GAZETTE Oct. 28, 2015 • A-15

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Page 16: Sequim Gazette, October 28, 2015

SEQUIM GAZETTEA-16 • Oct. 28, 2015

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Wendy is a sweet lady, but she does need some training and an owner with experience, patience, and time. When bored, Wendy has dabbled in some destructive chewing to occupy her mind. So, she will need some great toys to chew on, and some extra activities to keep her satisfi ed. Wendy would be a GREAT walking buddy for someone -- she’s a medium sized dog, doesn’t pull too hard, and walks well on a leash. She is also protective of her home, so she would be a good watch dog and keep you safe!

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Page 17: Sequim Gazette, October 28, 2015

ego

The Master Gardener column takes a winter break beginning in November and will return in March.

Gardening on the Olympic Pen-insula is a year-round activity, how-ever, so “clip and save” this article for use during the coming months. Thank you to the following talented and loyal Clallam County Master Gardener writers: Judy English, Jea-nette Stehr-Green, Michele Mangi-antini, Bill Wrobel and guest writer from Clark County, Karen Palmer. Thanks again this year to Michele Mangiantini, Beanie Gersbach and Judy English, the “behind the scenes” Master Gardeners who edit all of the articles written for the “Get It Growing” column.

Look for us here in March of next year!

Brown Bag seminars are at noon on the second and fourth Thursdays, at the Clallam County Courthouse commissioners meeting room, 223 E. Fourth St., Port Angeles:

• Nov. 12, Horticultural Oils, Bob Cain

• Dec. 10, Marking your Garden-ing Calendar for 2016, Muriel Nesbitt

Winter-roundThese activities can be done

November-February:Transplant! Transplant! Trans-

plant! Fall and winter rain, cooler temperatures and less intense sun-light allow plants to establish their roots before summer arrives. Do not transplant when temperatures are below freezing.

Remove debris and garden waste; dispose or compost, as appropriate.

Rake and destroy fallen apple and pear leaves to protect against scab. Do not compost infected leaves.

Lightly water and fertilize indoor plants

Clean and sharpen garden tools; store in a dry place.

Pull weeds while the soil is moist and soft and before weeds produce seeds.

Mow grass as needed and as weather permits.

Replenish bark and gravel on pathways.

NovemberPerform a soil test. The Clallam

Conservation District provides this service. Go to www.clallamcd.org for instructions.

Use soil test results to determine if amendments are needed. Because changes in pH take time, apply lime if soil is too acidic for intended use or sulfur if soil is too alkaline for intended use as suggested by the soil test. Amendments should be worked into the top 6-8 inches of soil.

Move container plants into a more sheltered location. Consider wrap-ping pots in a blanket, thick layer of newspaper or bubble wrap for added protection against freezing.

SEQUIM GAZETTE Sports • Arts & Entertainment • Schools • CalendarSECTION

Wednesday, Oct. 28, 2015

B Community

DeadlinesDeadline for items ap-

pearing in B-section is 5

p.m. Wednesday one week

before publication at edi-

[email protected]

or delivered to the Sequim

Gazette office at 147 W.

Washington St.

Fruitful endeavor

B-10

Get It GrowInG

Clallam County Master Gardeners

Set your winter

gardening calendar

See GROWING, B-2

Sheridan Whiteside and Beverly Carlton (Ron Graham and Pat Owens) enjoy the silly antics of Banjo (Joe Schulz) as he woos Whiteside’s nurse (Jayna Orchard). Sequim Gazette photos by Matthew Nash

by MATTHEW NASHSequim Gazette

You’re invited to spend the holidays with one of the worst house guests of all time.

Ron Graham stars as critic and radio personality Sheridan “Sherry” Whiteside in George S. Kaufman and Moss Hart’s “The Man Who Came to Dinner.”

Olympic Theatre Arts’ offers the show for three weeks from Oct. 30-Nov. 15.

As is custom, a $10 preview night begins at 7:30 p.m. Wednesday, Oct. 28, and a Pay What You Will show on Wednesday, Nov. 4.

The setup is well-known with “The Man Who Came to Dinner” opening a few weeks before Dec. 25, 1939, and Whiteside is invited to dinner at the home of industrialist Ernest

Stanley (Mark Valentine). Whiteside slips on the steps and becomes an long-term and unwelcome holiday house guest for the Stanley family as his demands become more egregious.

For Sequim’s rendition, Graham said Whiteside was a role he sought out.

“It’s one of the roles you look forward to,” he said. “It’s a challenging role. It has a huge line load and most of my script is highlighted, but it’s iconic. There’s a fun challenge in doing a role like that.”

An

for under the tree‘Man Who Came to Dinner’ opens at Olympic Theatre Arts

“The Man Who Came to Dinner”When: 7:30 p.m. Fridays-Saturdays, Oct. 30-31, Nov. 6-7, 13-14 — 2 p.m. Sundays, Nov. 1, 8 and 15Where: Olympic Theatre Arts, 414 N. Sequim Ave. Tickets: $10 preview, 7:30 p.m. Wednesday, Oct. 28Pay What You Will, 7:30 p.m. Wednesday, Nov. 4. Tickets available at the box office from 1-5 p.m. Monday-Friday, online at www.olympictheatrearts.org and by calling 683-7326.More info: facebook.com/olympictheatrearts

See OTA, B-2

Sequim Gazette staff

Sequim City Band moves indoors this weekend for its annual autumn concert.

The show will begin at 3 p.m. Sunday, Nov. 1, in the Sequim High School Auditorium, 533 N. Sequim Ave. The Navy Band Northwest joins them under the leadership of its director, Lt. Bruce J. Mansfield. They’ll open the show followed by the Sequim City Band performing some of its mem-bers’ favorite composers.

Navy group joins city band for autumn concert

The Sequim City Band opens its Winter Concert series on Sun-day, Nov. 1, in

the Sequim High School Audito-rium. The Navy

Band Northwest opens the free show at 3 p.m. Photo courtesy

of Richard Greenway

See CITY BAND, B-2

Show ushers in indoor winter concert season

Group sets fall fruit show

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Page 18: Sequim Gazette, October 28, 2015

With Owen ‘DJ OB1’ BlakeFor more than 10 years, Owen Blake, aka DJ OB1, has been

moving and riling up crowds across Western Washington with his unique music mixes. His latest event is scratching

and mixing music videos from two turntables at 7 Cedars Casino’s Rainforest Stage from 9 p.m.-1 a.m. Halloween night for ages 18-and-up.

The Sequim native said he got his start deejay-ing by mixing his parents’ classic rock records with danceable beats and “just having fun with it.”

Blake uses real turntables and lends his services to clubs, weddings, corporate events, for bands and special and nonprofit events. He also plays drums, guitars and bass and writes his own music, too. Blake says he doesn’t limit limit his musical taste though.

“I love all kinds of music,” he said. “Life is too short to only listen to one genre. There’s too much music out there.”

For more information about DJ OB1, visit facebook.com/djO.B.1 or call 461-9252.

Question 19: What is your favorite part of your job? Blake: The energy that’s created through making people

happy through music.

Question 39: Mustaches? Cool or not?

Blake: Yes, I like mustaches because Ron Burgundy ap-proves this message.

Question 21: As a child, what did you want to be or do when you were growing up?

Blake: A rock star.

Bonus Question 1: Do you feel you are a rock star?

Blake: In different ways but I’m always trying to go bigger and better. I’m never fully satisfied so I don’t think I’ll ever feel like one.

QA&

Random Questions

Sequim Gazette staff

Readers Theatre Plus (RT+) is pre-senting “The Christmas Bench,” by Larry Larson and Eddie Levi Horton, and directed by Janice Parks.

There will be six performances of this show at Sequim’s Guy Cole

Center in Carrie Blake Park, Nov. 6-8 and Nov. 13-15 (see below for showtimes).

All proceeds from the production go to the Sequim City Band.

Two men, one older, one younger, sit on a bench during the Christ-mas shopping season, waiting for their wives. As they get to know

each other, Christmas “happens” around them: The mall players present a five-minute version of “A Christmas Carol”; a homeless man tells a bizarre tale, then sings “O Holy Night”; a Jewish woman who is a greeter at the department store recites a portion of “A Child’s Chanukka in Pittsburgh,” and one of the men turns out to be not quite who we think he is.

Showtimes for “The Christmas Bench”:

• Friday, Nov. 6 – 7 p.m.• Saturday Nov. 7 – 7 p.m.• Sunday, Nov. 8 – 2:30 p.m.• Friday, Nov. 13 – 7 p.m.• Saturday, Nov. 14 – 7 p.m.• Sunday, Nov. 15 – 2:30 p.m.Tickets are available in advance

for $10 at the Purple Haze Lavender Store and Sequim Tea & Spice on Washington Street in downtown Sequim, and at Odyssey Books, 114 Front St., Port Angeles.

Tickets are $12 at the door.

RT+ presents different kind of Christmas storyReaders Theatre Plus schedules six performances of ‘The Christmas Bench’

Mulch roses with loose soil, wood chips or shredded leaves; be sure to cover the bud union. Do not fertilize.

Plant onion starts.After the first hard frost,

add mulch around winter veg-etable plants and root crops being stored in the ground to protect them from cold tem-peratures. Mulch strawberry plants with 3-5 inches of straw or pine needles.

Protect young trees from gnawing critters by wrap-ping trunks with plastic tree guards.

Late in November, fertilize lawns.

For blooms by Christmas, replant amaryllis allowed to go dormant for 6 to 8 weeks or purchase new bulbs.

Water once thoroughly and again only when top inch of soil is dry.

DecemberPrune evergreens to make

holiday decorations.Force paperwhites for gifts

and personal enjoyment.Plan next year’s vegetable

garden paying attention to crop rotation; order seeds.

JanuaryPrune trees and shrubs

while they are dormant. Do not prune when tempera-tures drop below freezing.

If aphids and mites have been a problem, apply hor-ticultural oils to fruit trees and blueberry bushes. Do not apply oils if plant tissue is wet, temperature is below 40 degrees or rain is likely in next 24 hours.

FebruaryEarly February can bring

deep cold so do not uncover roses until late in the month.

Prune established blueber-ry bushes (3 or more years) to increase productivity. Remove broken or diseased branches, those low to the ground, thin weak shoots, 2-3 older canes (6+ years) and all but 2-3 strong new canes that emerged the previous summer.

Thin second-year rasp-berry canes to 3-5 canes per square foot. Remove any dead or damaged canes.

Begin pulling mulch away from emerging bulbs in mid-month.

Check lawn for standing puddles. Correct drainage or replace lawn with ground cover more appropriate to location.

Start cool weather vegeta-bles indoors; by month’s end they should be ready to move to a cooler sheltered location to harden-off before planting.

GrowingFrom page A-1

Director Olivia Shea said “The Man Who Came to Dinner” is a classic and follows Kaufman and Hart’s popular setting from “You Can’t Take It With You” of a large cast in a living room.

“It’s been a huge hit because it’s funny,” Shea said. “I think people re-ally wanted to see something funny at the time. It took their mind off what was going on. It’s also timeless because everything basically stays the same.”

Graham says it’s a play that can affect everyone.

“This touches a human emotion that doesn’t change from era to era,” he said. “It doesn’t change be-cause of new technology. It doesn’t change because of differences in economy or anything else. It’s a very human story.”

Graham leads a large cast of 20-plus actors, including Sara Nicholls playing Maggie Cutler, Whiteside’s secretary who helps manage the chaos between Whiteside, his entourage and the Stanley family. Cutler is in love with reporter Bert Jefferson (Karl Hatton) but Whi-teside fears she’ll leave his side for a new life so he creates a love tri-angle by bringing in his friend and actress Lorraine Sheldon (Angela

Poynter-Lemaster). Graham said he doesn’t think

Whiteside knows of his selfishness and pomposity.

“His initial response to Mag-gie (being in love is) she couldn’t possibly want this because he wouldn’t possibly want this,” Gra-ham said. “I don’t think he under-stands that people have varying opinions that they’re entitled to and his opinions aren’t always right. I think he learns that in the course of the show.”

While Whiteside is based on an actual critic, Graham said he tries to connect in any role he does to a make the character seem human.

“If I’m playing an inherently bad

person like Jud Fry in “Oklahoma,” I try to bring something to the table to make somebody in the audience look at how bad that person is and realize there is something they need to change,” he said. “If I’m playing an inherently good person, I still look for something in it that shows their humanity.”

Shea said the play features a range of new and seasoned community actors.

Principal actors include Mindy Gelder, Jayna Orchard, Raven Gelder, Nick Fairchild, Merv and Judi Wing-ard, Maria Roragen, Monica Ostrom, Mark Valentine, Steve Schultz, Tracy Williams, Rich Hendricksen, Pat Owens, Jared Kneidl and Joe Schulz.

OTAFrom page B-1

In recognition of the Navy Band Northwest perform-ing, the program notes will be given by announcer Bill Benedict, a retired captain in the Navy and current Clallam County sheriff.

The autumn show is the first of three in the Winter Concert series at the Se-

City BandFrom page B-1

quim High School Audi-torium for the city band with “Happy Holidays in Sequim” at 3 p.m. Sunday, Dec. 13, and “A Grand Tour of Italy” at 3 p.m. Sunday, March 13. The band is led by Tyler Benedict.

All concerts are pre-sented free to the public with donations welcome.

Show organizers say some of the city band’s autumn show’s repertoire includes the Overture to “Candide” by Leonard Ber-nstein, the show’s “jewel” and the technically chal-lenging for piece “Glitter and Be Gay” coloratura soprano soloist, and Rich-ard Wagner’s Grand March from “Tannhauser.”

The Sequim City Band has two concert seasons with the summer Concerts in the Park at the James Center for the Performing Arts and the Winter Concert series at the high school.

More than 70 musicians travel from as far west as Port Angeles and east as Quilcene to participate in the band. Typically, the band hosts high school students to play and its members encourage this with a limited number of scholarships to students who have performed with the band.

For more information on the Sequim City Band, visit www.sequimcityband.org.

The Navy Band Northwest opens

the Sequim City Band’s free

autumn show at 3 p.m. on Sunday,

Nov. 1. The City Band follows

them perform-ing some of its

members’ favor-ite composers.

Submitted photo

SEQUIM GAZETTEB-2 • Oct. 28, 2015 SEQUIM GAZETTE

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An acerbic theatre critic breaks his leg while on a lecture tour in the Midwest and is forced to stay a bit longer at the home of his host family, ultimately taking over the house with his demands and visiting Broadway luminary friends. � is classic American comedy promises lots of laughs for everyone. — Directed by Olivia Shea.

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Tickets available at � eatre Box O� ceor online at www.olympictheatrearts.com

Performances on the Caldwell Main Stage.

By George S. Kaufman and Moss Hart

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OCT. 30 – NOV. 15FRIDAYS & SATURDAYS

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Page 19: Sequim Gazette, October 28, 2015

With Owen ‘DJ O.B.1’ BlakeFor more than 10 years, Owen Blake, aka DJ O.B.1, has been

moving and riling up crowds with his unique music mixes. His latest event is scratching and mixing music videos from

two turntables at 7 Cedars Casino’s Rainforest Stage from 9 p.m.-1 a.m. Halloween night for ages 18-and-up.

The Sequim native said he got his start deejaying by mixing his parents’ classic rock records with danceable beats and “just having fun with it.”

Blake uses real turntables and lends his services to clubs, weddings, corporate events, school functions and nonprofit charities. He also provides sound systems and stage lighting for bands, festivals, radio station events, and more. Blake plays drums, guitars and bass and writes his own music, too. Blake says he doesn’t limit limit his musical taste though.

“Life is too short to only listen to one genre,” he said. For more information about DJ O.B.1, visit facebook.com/

djO.B.1 or call 461-9252.

Question 19: What is your favorite part of your job? Blake: The energy that’s created through making people

happy through music.

Question 39: Mustaches? Cool or not?

Blake: Yes because Ron Bur-gundy approves this message.

Question 21: As a child, what did you want to be or do when you were growing up?

Blake: A rock star.

Bonus Question 1: Do you feel you are a rock star?

Blake: Maybe in different ways but I’m always trying to go bigger and better. I’m never fully satisfied so I don’t think I’ll ever feel like one.

Bonus Question 2: Where does your deejay name come from?

Blake: O.B.1 is I’m Owen Blake the First. I also like “Star Wars.”

Bonus Question 3: How much are you into “Star Wars?”Blake: The new one comes out on my birthday, Dec. 17. Bonus Question 4: What’s your earliest memory of “Star

Wars?”Blake: I was 3. My dad took me to see “Empire Strikes Back”

at the Lincoln Theater. I found an old can of pineapple juice under the seat in his T-bird. I begged him and begged him to drink it. He said no, it’s kind of old. Low and behold, it was one of those skinny cans of Dole pineapple juice with the peel off top. I pounded it down. Right during the part where Luke Skywalker crashes his X-Wing into the Dagobah swamp I remember telling my dad I didn’t feel good. I remember him carrying me like a football running down the spiral staircases. I threw up. It might have had to do with the Whoppers and other candy I was eating too. It was also the first real deep-seated feelings of regret I had. My dad had to go wipe it up with his flannel sleeve.

QA&

Random Questions Question 47: Do you believe in aliens? Blake: I think it’s selfish to think we’re the only intelligent life

in such a vast universe.

Question 10: What is one thing people might not know about you?

Blake: I did land surveying for 10 years all over the greater Western Washington area from Forks to Bainbridge Island. We did most of the big jobs like Solana. I really don’t miss it. I was just in it for the paycheck. Now I’m doing something I enjoy. That’s the trick. Find something you love to do and get paid for it and you’ll feel like you haven’t worked a day in your life.

Owen Blake, aka DJ O.B.1, describes deejaying as “taking two records and playing them at the same time and mak-ing something entirely new.” Photo courtesy of Owen Blake

In Random Questions, community members draw five random questions out of 50 to answer. With suggestions for interviews, e-mail Matthew Nash at [email protected].

SEQUIM GAZETTE SEQUIM GAZETTE Oct. 28, 2015 • B-3

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Page 20: Sequim Gazette, October 28, 2015

COMMUNITY CALENDARMusic/Dance/Etc.

Thursday, Oct. 29• Stardust Big Band, 6-9:30

p.m., 7 Cedars Casino, 270756 Highway 101, Blyn.

Friday Oct. 30• Halloween party/cos-

tume contest. 10 p.m. live music with Jack Havoc, Oasis Bar & Grill, 301 E. Washing-ton St. No cover.

• Jake Reichner, rock/blues, 7-9 p.m., Wind Rose Cellars, 143 W. Washington St.

• Nabil Kausal Hayes, 7-10 p.m., 7 Cedars Casino’s Rain-forest Bar, 270756 Highway 101, Blyn.

• BinGLO Halloween party with DJ Bizzle, top-40 dance, 9 p.m.-1 a.m., 7 Cedars Ca-sino, 270756 Highway 101, Blyn.

Saturday Oct. 31• Bill & Mark Volmut,

1960s-1970s, 7-9 p.m., Wind Rose Cellars, 143 W. Wash-ington St.

• DJ O.B.1, 7-10 p.m., 7 Ce-dars Casino’s Rainforest Bar, 270756 Highway 101, Blyn.

• Halloween Costume Party, 9 p.m.-1 a.m., 7 Cedars Casino, 270756 Highway 101, Blyn.

Sunday Nov. 1• Monday Musicale Schol-

arship Benefit Concert, 2 p.m., Holy Trinity Lutheran Church, 301 E. Lopez Ave., Port Angeles.

• Deux Voix, 2:30 p.m., George Washington Inn, 939 Finn Hall Road, Port Angeles.

Friday Nov. 6• Joy in Mudville, blue-

grass, 6-8 p.m., Wind Rose Cellars, 143 W. Washington St.

Saturday Nov. 7• David P. Jones Quartet,

2 p.m., Peninsula College’s Maier Hall, 1502 E. Lauridsen Blvd., Port Angeles.

• Jenny Davis Quartet, jazz, 6-8 p.m., Wind Rose Cellars, 143 W. Washington St.

• Port Angeles Symphony’s 2015-2016 season opener, 7:30 p.m., Port Angeles High School Auditorium, 304 E. Park Ave, Port Angeles.

Friday Nov. 13• Mary Tulin, Celtic folk,

6-8 p.m., Wind Rose Cellars, 143 W. Washington St.

Saturday Nov. 14• Linda Dowdell Trio, jazz,

6-8 p.m., Wind Rose Cellars, 143 W. Washington St.

Friday Nov. 20• Jeremy & Anna, 6-8 p.m.,

Wind Rose Cellars, 143 W. Washington St.

Saturday Nov. 21• Tony Petrillo Jazz Trio,

jazz, 6-8 p.m., Wind Rose Cel-

Enjoy an afternoon dessert tea and the majestic sounds of organ and trumpet music on the oceanfront piazza at George Washington Inn. Deux Voix — with Justin Langham on trumpet and Stephen Distad on organ — perform a variety of solo and duet works on Sunday afternoon, Nov. 1. Founded and based in Houston, Texas, Deux Voix fea-tures Distad, a nationally recognized organist and church musician and currently the music associate and organist at Memorial Drive United Methodist Church, and Lang-ham, an active performer, composer, arranger, teacher and member of the Houston Civic Symphony. Doors open at 2 p.m. and the concert begins at 2:30 p.m. Seating is limited. Tickets are $35 plus tax, and include concert tickets as well as the tea service. Call 452-5207 or e-mail to [email protected].

Dynamic Duo of Deux Voix

SportSlars, 143 W. Washington St.

Ongoing music/danceMondays• Grand Olympic Chorus

rehearsals for women’s a cappella four-part harmony. 6:30 p.m. 990 E. Washington St., Ste. 103. 681-6836 or 681-7135.

• Shipley Center ukelele group. 1-3 p.m. $3 non-mem-bers/$2 members. Beginner’s classes available, 477-4240. 921 E. Hammond St.

Tuesdays • Sequim Community

Orchestra rehearsals. 7-9 p.m. September-June, James Center for the Performing Arts, 681-5469.

• Olympic Peninsula Men’s Chorus rehearsal. 6:30 p.m. Olympic Theatre Arts Center, 414 N. Sequim Ave., Sequim.

• Olympic Mountain Clog-gers. 6 p.m. Howard Wood Memorial Theater, 132½ W. Washington St., Sequim, 681-3987.

• Square dance workshop. 7:30-9:30 p.m. Call for loca-tion, 683-0155.

• Rhody O’s Square Dance Club. 7:30 p.m. Gardener Community Center, 683-2409.

• Strait Wheelers Square Dances. 7-9 p.m. Port Angeles Senior Center, 328 E. Seventh St., Port Angeles, 457-3912.

Wednesdays • Sequim City Band re-

hearsals. 7-9 p.m., James Center for the Performing Arts, 563 N. Rhodefer Road. [email protected] or 360-207-4722.

• Open mic with Victor Reventlow. Sign-ups at 6 p.m., Nourish, 101 Provence View Lane.

• Open mic. 9:30-10:30 p.m. 7 Cedars Casino, 270756 Highway 101, Blyn, 683-7777.

Saturdays• Hawaii Amor. 2-5 p.m.

Elliott’s Antique Emporium, 135 E. First St., Port Angeles, second Saturday monthly.

Events• The Port Angeles Sym-

phony performs its first con-cert of the 2015-2016 season at 7:30 p.m. Saturday, Nov.7, in the Port Angeles High School Auditorium, 304 E. Park Ave, Port Angeles. A final rehearsal performance ($5) is at 10 a.m. with the pre-concert chat at 6:30 p.m. New music director/conductor Jonathan Pasternack welcomes pianist Alexander Tutunov to play George Gershwin’s “Rhap-sody in Blue.” Ticket prices for reserved seating are $20-$30;

general admission $15 adults and $12 seniors and students older than 17; 16 and under free when accompanied by an adult. Buy tickets at Port Book and News, the symphony of-fice in Port Angeles; The Good Book in Sequim; and Sequim Village Glass, Carlsborg.

• Grammy Award-winning artists Eric Tingstad and Nancy Rumbel’s “The Gift of Giving” Benefit for Captain Joseph House Foundation dinner, concert and auction, 5-9:30 p.m. Saturday, Dec. 5, at C’est Si Bon, 23 Cedar Park Drive, Port Angeles. Tickets $80 each or $70 for veterans, active military or Gold Star Family members. For tickets, call Betsy Schultz at 460-7848 or Sam Coyle 460-4079 or www.CaptainJo-sephHouseFoundation.org.

Ongoing Events• Alcoholics Anonymous, if

you want to drink that’s your business, if you want to stop that’s our business. Call 877-682-4143 or 360-797-0259 or see www.district55aa.com for meeting schedule and times.

• Shipley Center classes, activities. 921 E. Hammond St., Sequim, 683-6806.

Sundays• Open mic with Victor

Reventlow, 5-8 p.m., Fair-mount Diner, 1127 West Highway 101, Port Angeles, 797-4906.

• The Sequim VFW, 169 E. Washington St., breakfast from 9:30 a.m.-noon every Sunday for $5. Open to public.

• Open mic. 5:30-8 p.m., Shipley Center, 921 E. Ham-mond St., first, third and fourth Sundays.

• Full Contact Trivia. 6 p.m., Wii Bowling 8 p.m. Oasis Bar & Grill, 301 E. Washington St., Sequim. 582-3143.

• Bingo. Noon, Sequim Elks Lodge, 143 Port Wil-liams Road. Minimum $10 buy-in. 683-2763.

Mondays• Ecumenical Taize ser-

vice. 7 p.m. St. Luke’s Episco-pal Church, 525 N. Fifth Ave., fourth Monday monthly.

• Pingpong, advanced, 681-4675; bingo, 683-9546.

Tuesdays• Drop-in grief support

group. 1:30-3 p.m. first/third Tuesdays monthly, Sequim Community Church, 950 N. Fifth Ave., Sequim. Contact Paul Fiorini, bereavement co-ordinator at Assured Hospice, at 582-3796 with questions.

• The Compa ssion-ate Friends Grief Support Group. 6-8 p.m., third Tues-day monthly, St. Luke’s Epis-

copal Church, 525 N. Fifth Ave., Sequim.

• The National MS Society support group. 2-4:30 p.m., the last Tuesday monthly, Sequim Library. 808-9626.

Wednesdays• The Olympic Penin-

sula Oneness Blessings Circle. 6:30-8 p.m. every Wednesday, 2227 E. Lindberg Road, Port Angeles, 477-5682.

• Bird walks at Railroad Bridge Park, 681-4076; blood pressure checks, 417-7486.

Thursdays• Sequim Valley Lions

Club. 6:30 p.m. second/fourth Thursdays monthly, Paradise Restaurant, 703 N. Sequim Ave.

• Olympic Peninsula Chap-ter of Club Miata Northwest. 6-8 p.m., second Thurs-day monthly. Contact [email protected] or call 457-1082 for meeting loca-tion.

• Bingo. Noon, Sequim Elks Lodge, 143 Port Wil-liams Road. Minimum $10 buy-in. 683-2763.

• Clallam County Type 1 Diabetes Educational Sup-port Group. 6 p.m. fourth Thursday monthly, Olympic Peninsula YMCA, 302 S. Francis St., Port Angeles. 417-2364.

• Pingpong, advanced, 681-4675.

• Trivia Time Live. 8-10 p.m. 7 Cedars Casino, 270756 Highway 101, Blyn. 683-7777.

• The Strait Stamp Soci-ety. 6-8 p.m. first Thursday monthly, Sequim Library, 630 N. Sequim Ave. See www.straitstamp.org.

• The Gardiner Com-munity Cemetery Commis-sioners. 7:30 p.m. second Thursday monthly, Gardiner Community Center, 1040 Old Gardiner Road, Gardiner.

• The DUCK Discussion. 10-11:30 a.m. every Thursday, Parkwood Community club-house, 261520 U.S. Highway 101, www.YourInnerDuck.com.

• Alzheimer’s Association family caregiver support group. 1-2:30 p.m. second Thursday monthly, Sequim Bible Church, 847 N. Sequim Ave, Room 401. 683-5294.

Saturdays• The Northern Olympic

Lung Pulmonary group. 11:30 a.m. fourth Saturday monthly, Mariners Cafe, 609 W. Washington St. Call Annette Mari at 681-3010 or Diane Dettmer at 565-8301.

• Visually Impaired Persons of Sequim. Noon-2 p.m. first Saturday monthly, Bell Creek Bar & Grill, 707 E. Washing-ton St., Sequim. 582-6931 or [email protected]. No host luncheon.

• Retired Coast Guard. 10 a.m. breakfast, third Saturday monthly, Joshua’s, 113 Del Guzzi Drive, Port Angeles.

Ongoing Classes• Meditation Group, 7-8:30

p.m. Tuesdays. Village Heart-beat Studio, 353 Chickadee Lane, Sequim. 681-5407.

• Cardiac care classes, 417-7486.

• Yoga, 425-225-2990 or www.sequimyoga.com; hula, 360-809-3390 or [email protected]; jewelry making, 681-5087; tai chi, 866-651-0544; Whole Person Drum-ming classes, 681-5407; meditation classes/groups, 681-5407; Energy Healers/Intuitive Development, 582-0083; American mahjong, 683-6806; free language classes, German–Mondays, French–Tuesdays/Fridays Italian/Spanish–Wednes-days, 681-0226; Feldenkrais Awareness Through Move-ment, 775-6373.

• Red Cross first aid, CPR/AED (adult/pediatric), disas-ter services, babysitting, pet first aid. 457-7933.

• Bridge lessons, nonprofit Sequim Duplicate Bridge Club, 10 a.m.-noon Mondays. $30/player, $100 per four-some. Masonic Lodge, 700 S. Fifth Ave., Sequim. 681-4308.

SEQUIM GAZETTEB-4 • Oct. 28, 2015 SEQUIM GAZETTE

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Evening ConcertPAHS Auditorium

304 E. Park Avenue Pre-concert Chat 6:40 PM

Concert: 7:30 PMTickets: $30, $20, $15, $12

Free Admission - 16 yr & underwhen accompanied by an adult

Final Morning Rehearsal 10 AM: $5 Individual, $10 Family

ymphonyAngelesortP

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Est. 1932

AlexanderTutunov

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Also on the Program

BEETHOVENLeonore Overture No. 3and RIMSKY-KORSAKOVScheherazadefeaturingconcertmasterHeather Marie Ray Nov.7

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Page 21: Sequim Gazette, October 28, 2015

by MICHAEL DASHIELLSequim Gazette

Last October, freshman phenom Gracie Long from Port Angeles ran away from the

pack at the Olympic League meet and led her Roughriders to a team title.

This fall, Sequim’s Waverly Shreffler closed the gap on Long — to just half a second — and helped bring this season’s league championship to Sequim.

Shreff ler set a personal best with an 18:54 mark and nearly caught Long at the finish line, helping the Wolves capture their first Olympic League title since 2007.

Not to be out-done, Sequim’s No. 2 state 2A ranked boys team domi-nated the league

field once again at The Cedars at Dungeness golf course in Sequim, earning their third consecutive league championship.

Led by top individual finisher Brendon De-spain, Sequim outpaced runner-up Kingston by 23 points.

“Best race of the year,” Sequim head coach Harold Huff said of his girls’ team. “The tim-

ing was right. The top seven girls really had great races.”

Following Shreffler’s big finish, Kiara Pierson took seventh with a 20:46 finish (a personal best 5K mark by nearly a minute) and Audrey Shingleton was ninth at 20:58, also a personal best.

2015 Olympic League meet results• Boys1. Sequim 222. Kingston 453. Olympic 854. North Kitsap 1345. Klahowya 157*6. Bremerton 1717. Port Angeles 1808. North Mason 1839. Port Townsend 197*

• Girls1. Sequim 492. Port Angeles 783. Klahowya 90*4. Kingston 945. Olympic 1126. Port Townsend 139*7. North Kitsap 1588. North Mason 173* — 1A school

COMMUNITY CALENDAR

SEQUIM GAZETTE B-5

SportS• The Strait Stamp Soci-ety. 6-8 p.m. first Thursday monthly, Sequim Library, 630 N. Sequim Ave. See www.straitstamp.org.

• The Gardiner Com-munity Cemetery Commis-sioners. 7:30 p.m. second Thursday monthly, Gardiner Community Center, 1040 Old Gardiner Road, Gardiner.

• The DUCK Discus-sion. 10-11:30 a.m. every Thursday, Parkwood Com-munity clubhouse, 261520 U.S. Highway 101, www.YourInnerDuck.com.

• Alzheimer’s Association family caregiver support group. 1-2:30 p.m. second Thursday monthly, Sequim Bible Church, 847 N. Sequim Ave, Room 401. 683-5294.

Saturdays• The Northern Olympic

Lung Pulmonary group. 11:30 a.m. fourth Saturday monthly, Mariners Cafe, 609 W. Washington St. Call Annette Mari at 681-3010 or Diane Dettmer at 565-8301.

• Visually Impaired Per-sons of Sequim. Noon-2 p.m. first Saturday monthly, Bell Creek Bar & Grill, 707 E. Washington St., Sequim. 582-6931 or [email protected]. No host luncheon.

• Retired Coast Guard. 10 a.m. breakfast, third Saturday monthly, Joshua’s, 113 Del Guzzi Drive, Port Angeles.

Ongoing Classes• Meditation Group, 7-8:30

p.m. Tuesdays. Village Heart-beat Studio, 353 Chickadee Lane, Sequim. 681-5407.

• Cardiac care classes, 417-7486.

• Yoga, 425-225-2990 or www.sequimyoga.com; hula, 360-809-3390 or [email protected]; jewelry making, 681-5087; tai chi, 866-651-0544; Whole Person Drum-ming classes, 681-5407; meditation classes/groups, 681-5407; Energy Healers/Intuitive Development, 582-0083; American mahjong, 683-6806; free language classes, German–Mondays, French–Tuesdays/Fridays Italian/Spanish–Wednes-days, 681-0226; Feldenkrais Awareness Through Move-ment, 775-6373.

• Red Cross first aid, CPR/AED (adult/pediatric), disas-ter services, babysitting, pet first aid. 457-7933.

• Bridge lessons, nonprofit Sequim Duplicate Bridge Club, 10 a.m.-noon Mon-days. $30/player, $100 per foursome. Masonic Lodge, 700 S. Fifth Ave., Sequim. 681-4308.

BOYS TENNIS

Matthew Richards returns a hit in the last match of the season on Oct. 14. He’ll be Sequim’s lone representative at districts this week. Sequim Gazette file photo by Matthew Nash

Sequim Gazette staff

Sequim’s No. 1 singles player Mat-thew Richards placed fourth in the boys’ singles at the Olympic League Meet over Oct. 21-22.

He came in as the No. 3 seed to the tournament and defeated Cutter Bedford of Bremerton in two sets, 6-1, 6-1, and Mitch Kunold of North Kitsap 6-3, 6-4.

He lost to second-place finisher Janson Pederson of Port Angeles 6-2, 6-4, to setup a third-place match with Cameron Dubos of Bremerton 7-5, 7-5.

Richards will advance to the Class 2A West Central District tournament on Friday and Saturday, Oct. 30-31, in the Kitsap Tennis Center in Bremerton.

Sequim’s No. 1 doubles teams Justin Porter and Stephen Prorok finished sixth in the doubles brack-et and just missed out on a spot at districts as the top five singles and doubles teams advance.

They went into the league tournament as the No. 5 seed and played Tyler Aerne and Logan Peck of Olympic High School and won 6-2, 6-0. They were defeated by third-place fin-ishers Robby Henshaw and Nate McCown of North Kitsap in a close matchup 7-6 (7-3), 2-6, 7-6 (7-5).

In the consolation, they defeated Jacob Denney and Bryce Hecker in three sets 7-6 (7-3), 2-6, 7-6 (7-1) before losing to Olympic’s Isaiah Pajimula and Prab Sangha 6-1, 6-1.

Sequim’s other doubles team Dillon Liebert and Blake Wiker went in seeded 13th and also played North Kitsap’s Henshaw and Mc-Cown and lost 6-2, 6-0. In the consolation, they lost to Olympic’s Aerne and Peck 6-4, 2-6, 6-4.

On the season, the Wolves finished 3-9 in the Olympic League and 5-10 overall.

Richards moves on to districtsTwo SHS doubles teams ousted at league tourney

Someone excited about a league title? Sequim High School’s Elizabeth Rosales and teammates are after the Wolves swept both girls and teams boys cross country Olympic League championships Oct. 22 at The Cedars at Dungeness. Sequim Gazette photos by Michael Dashiell

SHS sweeps league meetSequim squads dominate on home course, head to districts

At left, Sequim’s Jackson Oliver (382), Brendon Despain (373) and Ash Francis (376) break from the field near the start of the Olympic League boys meet on Oct. 22 at The Cedars at Dungeness golf course.

At right, Sequim’s Alexis Cromer (358) outraces Klahowya’s Savannah Smith and Lily Morlan of Port Angeles to the finish line at last week’s Olympic League cross country final. Cromer finished 18th overall, helping the Wolves take the league team title.

See CROSS COUNTRY, B-6

PORTER

PROROK

WIKER

LIEBERT

CROSS COUNTRY

COLLEGE SOCCER

Peninsula’s Myu Ban rises up for a header over Trojan Kristin Snyder as Peninsula takes on Everett last week.

Sequim Gazette staff

For one Peninsula College team, it was a week with a big win. For the other, a division crown.

PC’s women’s soccer squad can lock up a North Division crown with a win today, Oct. 28, against Whatcom.

Their male counterparts already have punched their NWAC playoff ticket, earning a division title.

Women wear down Everett’s Trojans

Advantage, Peninsula.In what is until now likely

the biggest regular season matchup in school history, the NWAC’s No. 2-ranked Peninsula women had the

final answer in a 2-1 win against top-ranked Everett last week, putting the Pirates in the proverbial driver’s seat

for the conference playoffs.It didn’t come easy.PC’s Myu Ban found fellow

freshman Kennady White-head with a crossing shot and Whitehead, a redshirt frosh from Sparks, Nev., redirected it into the Everett net 11 minutes into the second half, snapping a 1-1 tie. Peninsula’s back line, led by Tori Hagen, Karen Corral and Kameryn Jury-Hale, held off the visit-ing Trojans for the remainder of the half for a key win.

That, coupled with a win against Skagit Valley on Oct. 24, has Peninsula one win away from locking up at least a tie for the North Division title.

The Pirates (12-1-0 in NWAC play, 17-1-0 overall) opened the scoring just nine

PC powering into playoffs

Peninsula’s Demar Stewart keeps his eye on the ball as Penin-sula battles (and beats) Everett on Oct. 21. Photos by Jay Cline

See SOCCER, B-7

Peninsula men clinch division, women on verge

SEQUIM GAZETTE SEQUIM GAZETTE Oct. 28, 2015 • B-5

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Page 22: Sequim Gazette, October 28, 2015

SPORTS CALENDAR

School sports calendar

Oct. 282 p.m. — Peninsula Col-

lege soccer vs. Whatcom. At Wally Sigmar Field, 1502 E. Lauridsen Blvd., Port Angeles. Men start at 4 p.m.

Oct. 296:45 p.m. — Sequim

High School girls soccer vs. Olympic. At Sequim High School stadium, Fir Street. JV starts at 5 p.m.

7 p.m. — Sequim High School football at Bremer-ton.

Oct. 30-31TBA — Sequim High

School boys tennis at West Central District tourna-ment. At Kitsap Tennis & Athletic Center, Bremer-ton.

Oct. 31TBA — Sequim High

School cross country at West Central District meet, American Lake Golf Course, Tacoma.

Noon — Peninsula Col-lege soccer at Edmonds. Men start at 2:15 p.m.

Nov. 25 p.m. — Sequim High

School junior varsity foot-ball vs. Bremerton. At Sequim High School sta-dium, Fir Street.

Nov. 6-7TBA — Sequim High

School girls swim/dive at West Central District meet, Hazen High School, Renton.

Nov. 7TBA — Sequim High

School cross country at class 2A state meet, Sun Willows Golf Course, Pas-co.

Nov. 16Sequim High School

winter sports begin

Area sports/recOct. 289 a.m. — Over the Hill

Hikers hike: Heather Park. Meet at 8:45 a.m. at Sequim Goodwill parking lot, 680 W. Washington St. Call 417-3728.

Oct. 309 a.m. — Over the Hill

Hikers hike: Old Fort Townsend. Meet at 8:45 a.m. at Sequim Goodwill parking lot, 680 W. Wash-ington St. Call 417-3728.

Nov. 49 a.m. — Over the Hill

Hikers hike: Goa Way. Meet at 8:45 a.m. at Sequim Goodwill parking lot, 680 W. Washington St. Call 417-3728.

Nov. 69 a.m. — Over the Hill

Hikers hike: Adventure Trail. Meet at 8:30 a.m. at Sequim Goodwill parking lot, 680 W. Washington St., for carpool. Call 417-3728.

Nov. 119 a.m. — Over the Hill

Hikers hike: Sadie Creek Trail. Meet at 8:45 a.m. at Sequim Goodwill parking lot, 680 W. Washington St. Call 417-3728.

Nov. 139 a.m. — Over the

Hill Hikers hike: Port Townsend. Meet at 8:45 a.m. at Sequim Goodwill parking lot, 680 W. Wash-ington St. Call 417-3728.

Nov. 149 a.m.-noon — Olym-

pic Peninsula Explorers: Olympic Discovery Trail to Elwha Bridge. Meet at William Shore Memo-rial Pool, Port Angeles. Call 697-2172.

SPORTS BRIEFSCOMMUNITY SCOREBOARDGolf

The Cedars at Dungeness• Men’s Club, Memorial

Scramble, Oct. 151. Randy Gange, Leonard

Hirschfeld, Milt Mickey and Mike Sutton, 63; 2. (tie) Gayle Dole, Grant Ritter, Barry Tuteur and Gary Wil-liams; Warren Cortez, Dick McCammon, Wayne Pinger and Everett Thometz; Dave Inglesby, David Johnson, John Magee and J.C. Schum-acher, 64

KPs: McCammon, Pat Covey, Fred Harrison, Paul Ryan, George Switzer.

SkyRidge Golf Course• Player of the Year 2015

Tournament, Oct. 12Gross: 1. Ken Chace III,

77; 2. Jeff Pedersen, 83. Net: 1. Mike Penna, 70; 2. Paul Boucher, 72; 3. (tie) Andy Cordeiro and Robb Reese, 73; 5. (tie) Bob Madsen and Shane Price, 74

• Member’s Event, Purple Tees day, Oct. 18

Gross: 1. Robb Reese, 74. Net: 1. (tie) Paul Boucher, Don Heinkel, Bob Madsen and Andy Watkins, 62; 5. (tie) Leon Lightening and Toby Weidenheimer, 63; 7. Gene

Annual Sequim Turkey Trot on tap

Sequim Gym’s 2015 Tur-key Trot, which includes 5k and 10k races, is set for a 9 a.m. start on Thursday, Nov. 26.

For the 5k, cost is $15 if registered by Nov. 24; costs increase to $20 afterward up to race day, and $25 on race day.

For the 10k, cost is $20 if registered by Nov. 24; costs increase to $25 afterward up to race day, and $30 on race day.

Families (three to six people) may register through Nov. 25 for $35.

Day-of-race registration and bib pickup starts at 8 a.m.

The event includes priz-

Potter, 64; 8. Bud Bowling, 65; 9. John Naples, 66.

VolleyballPort Angeles Recreation

coed league• Oct. 19Lazer Cats 3, Elwha River

Casino 0 (25-16, 25-21, 25-16)7 Cedars Casino 2, Black-

bird Coffeehouse 1 (25-22, 20-25, 31-29)

Gone Squatchin’ 3, Rook-ies 0 (25-19, 25-21, 25-19).

• Standings (as of Oct. 25)Gone Squatchin’ 2-0Lazer Cats 2-0Elwha River Casino/ Serena’s Spikers 1-17 Cedars Casino 1-1Blackbird Coffeehouse 0-2Rookies 0-2.

es, games and activities for children.

Call 477-8553 or e-mail Kevin at [email protected] to register or for more information.

Teel gets first aceHoward Teel of Port Angels

sank his first hole-in-one, at The Cedars at Dungeness on Oct. 20. Teel used a 7 wood to drive the 99-yard hole No. 4 at The Cedars. Randy Blackburn-Larkin of Port Angeles witnessed the feat.

Hoops tourney setPort Angeles Recreation

Department is hosting the youth Tipoff Tourney bas-ketball tournament, Nov. 7-8, with divisions for boys and girls basketball teams in grades 5-12.

Cost is $250 per team. There is a four-game guar-antee. For more information or to register, call Dan at 417-4557 or e-mail to [email protected].

Sequim’s Elizabeth Ro-sales took 13th at 21:59, Alexis Cromer was 18th with a personal best 22:38 finish, Emily Webb took 24th at 23:00 and Noelle Bittner was 25th at 23:02.

“I’m really proud of my team,” Shreffler said. “Last year we only had one senior and some juniors new to cross country. This year we have strong leadership and strong new runners. Every-one pushed themselves this season.”

Port Angeles saw Long take first, Madelyn Dough-erty third and Lael Butler 10th, but Sequim’s depth proved to be too much. The Wolves tallied 49 team points, 29 better than the runner-up Roughriders.

“Last year we wanted it,” Shreffler said. “This year, we wanted it more.”

Shreff ler’s finish was about 75 seconds bet-

t e r t h a n her previ-ous best on t he sa me course at last year’s league f i-nal, when s h e f i n -

ished second to Long.“I’m still kind of in

shock,” Shreffler said. “I just wanted to stay right behind her; that’s what I did. She (Long) has got an amazing finish.”

Despain and Sequim’s boys proved to be far too deep for the Olympic League field. Fellow senior Jackson Oliver (16:06) was second and freshman Ash Francis (16:15) was fourth in his first league race.

Sequim’s C.J. Daniels took seventh at 16:50 and Chris Jeffko was eighth with a 16:51 mark. Wendall L o r e n z e n placed 11th at 17:03 and C h r i s t i a n Ash rounded out Sequim’s varsity with a 28th-place f i n i s h a t 17:54.

Despain’s 15:52.97 mark was a personal best for 5,000 meters and about 30 seconds faster than last year’s league effort.

“Tough,” Despain called the course. “I tried to push

it from the start. (But) it was a good day.”

It was the first time Sequim has swept a league meet since they took du a l N i s q u a l l y League titles in 2005. (The Wolves did sweep the 2006 West

Central District 2A meet after placing first (first) and fifth (boys) at the league meet, getting back one of their top boys runners after the league final.)

Huff said he was excited

for Sequim’s junior varsity boys as well. Led by fifth-place finisher Bryce Dryke, the JV squad placed third at the league meet behind Kingston and Olympic.

Looking aheadSequim looks to advance

both teams to the class 2A state meet. To do so, the boys will have to finish in the top six teams and the girls in the top five at the West Central District 2A meet (aka Westside Classic) set for Satur-day, Oct. 31, at American Lake Veterans Golf Course

in Tacoma.At last year’s district

meet, Sequim’s girls missed out on a state berth by one place.

“I’m a little nervous,” Shreffler said of her team’s chances of qualifying for state. “If we race like we did

today and everyone stays strong … we just have to

believe we can do it.”On the boys’ side, Sequim

looks to have a good chance to advance to the state meet after returning all but two of its varsity runners from last year’s district title-winning team.

Lurking at the district meet, however, is No. 3-ranked Lindbergh, No. 4-ranked Liber-ty-Issaquah and No. 10-ranked Renton.

“We all need to race faster,” Despain said.

The class 2A state meet is Saturday, Nov.

7, at Sun Willows Golf Course in Pasco.

Cross CountryFrom page B-5

Sequim High’s boys are Olympic League champions for the third season in a row. This year’s crew includes, from left, Brendon Despain, Jackson Oliver, Ash Francis, C.J. Daniels, Chris Jeffko, Wendall Lorenzen and Christian Ash. Sequim Gazette photos by Michael Dashiell

Above, SHS senior C.J. Daniels (372) races to a seventh-place finish at the Olympic League meet.At left, Sequim’s Waverly Shreffler (365) keeps within striking distance of Port Angeles’ Gracie Long for the top spot at the Olympic League meet. Long won the individual title with an 18:53.93 mark, a half-second ahead of Shreffler.

PHOTOGALLERY @

www.sequimgazette.com

“Best race of the year. The timing

was right.”Harold Huff,

SHS cross country coach“I’m really proud of my team. Everyone pushed themselves this season.”

Waverly Shreffler, SHS senior

SEQUIM GAZETTEB-6 • Oct. 28, 2015 SEQUIM GAZETTE

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Page 23: Sequim Gazette, October 28, 2015

SPORTS CALENDAR

School sports calendar

Oct. 282 p.m. — Peninsula Col-

lege soccer vs. Whatcom. At Wally Sigmar Field, 1502 E. Lauridsen Blvd., Port Angeles. Men start at 4 p.m.

Oct. 296:45 p.m. — Sequim

High School girls soccer vs. Olympic. At Sequim High School stadium, Fir Street. JV starts at 5 p.m.

7 p.m. — Sequim High School football at Bremer-ton.

Oct. 30-31TBA — Sequim High

School boys tennis at West Central District tourna-ment. At Kitsap Tennis & Athletic Center, Bremer-ton.

Oct. 31TBA — Sequim High

School cross country at West Central District meet, American Lake Golf Course, Tacoma.

Noon — Peninsula Col-lege soccer at Edmonds. Men start at 2:15 p.m.

Nov. 25 p.m. — Sequim High

School junior varsity foot-ball vs. Bremerton. At Sequim High School sta-dium, Fir Street.

Nov. 6-7TBA — Sequim High

School girls swim/dive at West Central District meet, Hazen High School, Renton.

Nov. 7TBA — Sequim High

School cross country at class 2A state meet, Sun Willows Golf Course, Pas-co.

Nov. 16Sequim High School

winter sports begin

Area sports/recOct. 289 a.m. — Over the Hill

Hikers hike: Heather Park. Meet at 8:45 a.m. at Sequim Goodwill parking lot, 680 W. Washington St. Call 417-3728.

Oct. 309 a.m. — Over the Hill

Hikers hike: Old Fort Townsend. Meet at 8:45 a.m. at Sequim Goodwill parking lot, 680 W. Wash-ington St. Call 417-3728.

Nov. 49 a.m. — Over the Hill

Hikers hike: Goa Way. Meet at 8:45 a.m. at Sequim Goodwill parking lot, 680 W. Washington St. Call 417-3728.

Nov. 69 a.m. — Over the Hill

Hikers hike: Adventure Trail. Meet at 8:30 a.m. at Sequim Goodwill parking lot, 680 W. Washington St., for carpool. Call 417-3728.

Nov. 119 a.m. — Over the Hill

Hikers hike: Sadie Creek Trail. Meet at 8:45 a.m. at Sequim Goodwill parking lot, 680 W. Washington St. Call 417-3728.

Nov. 139 a.m. — Over the

Hill Hikers hike: Port Townsend. Meet at 8:45 a.m. at Sequim Goodwill parking lot, 680 W. Wash-ington St. Call 417-3728.

Nov. 149 a.m.-noon — Olym-

pic Peninsula Explorers: Olympic Discovery Trail to Elwha Bridge. Meet at William Shore Memo-rial Pool, Port Angeles. Call 697-2172.

minutes in when Hoku Afong crossed the ball into the middle Whitehead — who is all of 5 feet, 4 inches — soared above a crowd of Everett de-fenders to head the ball into the net.

Everett (11-2-0, 13-3-1) answered in the final minutes of the first half, however, after the squad was awarded a pen-alty kick. Trojan Ava Mana’o knocked it past a diving Pirate keeper Manaia Siania-Unutoa and it was 1-1 at intermis-sion — setting the stage for Whitehead’s winning score.

It was the 100th win for Peninsula head coach Kan-yon Anderson, who notched his first win on Sept. 12, 2010 — a 2-1 victory over Lane. (Anderson’s career mark improved to 100-16, with 13 draws.)

Last week’s Peninsula win was their second win against Everett this season; the Tro-jans took the first match, 1-0, in Everett on Sept. 16, before Peninsula exacted revenge on Oct. 3 at home.

Peninsula followed up

the big win versus Everett with a 10-0 whitewashing of Skagit Valley’s Cardinals, who haven’t won a confer-ence game this season.

Tasha Inong returned from injury last week and scored a hat trick against the Cardi-nals. Teammate Afong added two goals.

“We played well on a fast grass field,” Anderson said. “We were able to get the ball down to our feet and move it quickly, and once we found a gap in the defense, we were able to get at goal with purpose.”

The victory gives PC an 11-game winning streak heading into the season’s final week.

Peninsula’s women — who hold the conference lead in every major category (wins, goals for, goals against, shutouts) — host Whatcom on Oct. 28 before playing Edmonds on Oct. 31 to close the regular season.

If Peninsula can secure the North Division crown, they will host a match on Nov. 7 against either the East Division’s No. 2 team (currently North Idaho) or the No. 3 team from the South Division (Chemeketa

or Clackamas).The NWAC final four tour-

nament is set for Nov. 14-15 at Starfire Sports Complex in Tukwila.

Last season, Everett edged Peninsula 1-0 in the cham-pionship game. Peninsula won the two conference titles before that and placed second in 2011.

Men get the titleNot to be outdone by their

classmates, Peninsula’s men earned a pair of huge wins last week.

Following the PC wom-en’s victory against Everett, their male counterparts knocked off the visiting (and winless) Everett Trojans, then edged Skagit Valley on the road three days later to clinch the NWAC North Division title.

It’s the seventh straight division title and eighth overall, but the first division championship for first-year head coach Cale Rodriguez and also the first for PC in the North, where the Pirates moved this year after 15 years in the West Division.

Against Skagit on Oct. 24,

Jonathan Martinez scored twice and withstood a late Skagit goal for a 2-1 victory.

That, combined with Ever-ett’s 1-1 tie with Whatcom on Saturday, clinched the divi-sion. The men, ranked third in the Alaska Airlines NWAC Coaches Poll, are 10-1-2 in the North and 12-2-3 overall, 12 points ahead of Whatcom (7-2-4, 8-3-4) with only two matches remaining.

Peninsula started with week with a 5-2 win against Everett, on the strength of four first-half goals.

Keo Ponce opened the scoring, rocketing a shot past Trojan keeper Robert Temple at the 20-minute mark. Five minutes later Ponce again delivered, taking a cross-the-box feed from Vitor Maia for a 2-0 lead.

Everett responded at the 32-minute mark when Aus-tin Panek looped a shot past PC keeper Nick Johnson, but Peninsula got it back on the very next play. Martinez charged through the middle and drew Trojans defenders, then fed Sam McEntire who knocked it into the lower left-hand corner for a 3-1

Peninsula lead.David Joyce aded a score

before halftime, taking a re-bound off a McEntire shot for the 4-1 PC advantage.

Salvador Vargas got Penin-sula’s fifth goal, an unassisted effort at 62 minutes.

Josh Heckenlively, playing the PC net in the second half, made two saves and gave up a score to Sergio Barrera at the 76-minute mark for the final tally.

Peninsula’s men host Whatcom on Oct. 28 before playing Edmonds on Oct. 31

to close the regular season.With the North Division

title, Peninsula gets a first round bye and a Nov. 7 home match against either the East Division No. 2 team (currently Walla Walla) or the South Di-vision’s No. 3 team (currently Southwest Oregon).

The NWAC tournament final four is set for Nov. 14-15 at Starfire Sports Complex in Tukwila.

The Pirates lost in the quarterfinals last season. They posted NWAC title vic-tories in 2010, 2012 and 2013.

SoccerFrom page B-5

by MICHAEL DASHIELLSequim Gazette

The Olympic Trojans came in as a top 10 state-ranked team boast-ing a powerful offense and stingy defensive crops.

Friday night did little to dissuade the doubters.

The Trojans scored on seven of their first eight drives and routed the host Sequim Wolves, 48-7.

“They got the breaks but they were playing at a high level,” Sequim coach Erik Wiker said. “They were on fire today. They played the best game they’ve played all season.”

Olympic quarterback Matt Becker threw for 131 yards and three scores and ran for another 163 yards and a score, and Trojan running back Geordyn Shinard added 123 rushing yards and three touchdowns.

The win keeps the No. 7-ranked Olympic squad (5-0 in Olympic League play, 8-0 overall) in line for an Olympic League title, one they’ll have to earn on Oct. 30 when they take on North Kitsap (5-0, 6-2).

Despite the loss, Sequim (3-2, 5-2) sees its playoff hopes remain alive with one more game to go, an Oct. 29 matchup with the Bremer-ton Knights. (See playoff scenarios below).

Sequim was one of just two teams (Kingston was the other) to score at least seven points against Olympic. The Trojans had given up just 13 points all season.

“We would have liked to scored more — and we could have,” Wiker said. “We had too many mistakes to be happy.”

Gavin Velarde provided the lone Sequim scoring highlight, an arc-ing 10-yard touchdown pass from

Riley Cowan on a fourth down that trimmed Olympic’s lead in the third quarter to 36-7.

Velarde said he expects his team to be more prepared than last year’s squad, one that dropped a one-point decision to Bremerton in the season’s final game that forced the tiebreaker.

“We’ve got to come back and prac-tice harder,” Velarde said.

Quick start for visitorsOlympic forced a three-and-out

on Sequim’s opening drive, then found pay dirt by putting Shinard behind a big offensive line and plow-ing their way down the field. Becker capped the 10-play, 79-yard drive with a two-yard score on fourth down.

Olympic made it 15-0 on their next possession, taking advantage of a turnover on downs to go 50 yards in just five plays. Shinard took it in from a yard out, followed by Becker’s

two-point conversion.Sequim managed just one first

down on its next possession and Olympic came right back with an eight-play scoring drive highlighted by Becker’s 55-yard scramble on third down-and-20. Becker found Colton Wade from 12 yards out for a score and 22-0 lead.

The Trojans made it 29-0 soon thereafter, with Becker racing through the Sequim defense for a 47-yard play and Shinard finding pay dirt two plays later.

Becker found Wade once again from 12 yards out for a TD pass and 36-0 Olympic advantage before Sequim put together their only scor-ing drive. The Wolves went 70 yards in 15 plays, getting a key, 10-yard run from Mark Feeney on a fourth down before their drive stalled at the 10-yard-line. Cowan, a freshman QB, found a leaping Velarde across the middle, breaking up the shutout.

“He (Velarde) plays super hard all

the time — that’s why good things happen,” Wiker said.

Cowan would finish the night 9-for-23 for 103 yards and a fourth-quarter interception.

“He (Cowan) has put a lot of work into it,” Wiker said. “He’s the prod-uct of a lot of hard work. I think the world of him. He does all the things right.”

Olympic capped the scoring with two scores in the fourth. Becker found Shinard from 11 yards out to make it 42-7 with 11:54 to play, and Shinard added an eight-yard plunge with 6:14 left.

Olympic finished with 334 yards rushing and 465 yards overall. Sequim managed 93 yards rushing and 196 total yards.

Arnold Black led Sequim with 44 yards on 10 carries. Velarde had six catches for 75 yards.

Sequim looks like they’ll be with-out the services of linebacker Chris Whitaker, who suffered an injury

in the first half against Olympic. Coupled with SHS defensive back Kane Stoddard’s injury against Port Angeles a week previous, the Wolves are missing two key defen-sive pieces heading into this week’s game against Bremerton.

Playoff scenariosA win Thursday night against

the Knights secures a No. 3 seed for Sequim, setting up a pigtail playoff game against the Seamount League’s No. 3 team.

A loss? That makes things a bit murkier.

Last season, Sequim, Port An-geles and Kingston ended in a three-way tie and played 16-minute tiebreakers to decided the advanc-ing team (PA beat Sequim, then got beaten by Kingston).

This year, there isn’t an extra week to solve the deadlock with a tiebreaker, with pigtail games set for Nov. 2. So league athletic directors are looking into how to solve the situation without adding a game (or two).

The Knights (2-3, 2-6) are coming off a 44-0 win at North Mason.

Bremerton football has been in the news of late, but not for its play on the field. District officials have asked assistant coach Joe Ken-nedy to stop offering a personal prayer after football games or face possible termination. Since that notice earlier this fall, Kennedy has continued the practice and hired legal counsel for some postgame press conferences.

Olympic’s Trojans trump Wolves, 48-7FOOTBALL

SHS still in hunt for playoff berth

Olympic League standingsTeam L.g. Over.Olympic 5-0 8-0North Kitsap 5-0 6-2Sequim 3-2 5-2Kingston 2-3 2-6Bremerton 2-3 2-6North Mason 1-5 1-7Port Angeles 0-5 1-7

Sequim’s Gavin Velarde looks for running room after making a reception in Friday night’s 48-7 loss to Olympic. Sequim Gazette photo by Michael Dashiell

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Page 24: Sequim Gazette, October 28, 2015

DISTRICT

Parent conferences continue Oct. 28-30. On Oct. 28 at the ele-mentary schools and middle school, parent conferences continue, with an early release to the school day. On Oct. 29-30, parent conferences are conducted at all schools and all schools will have early release.

The last public forum on the

Nov. 3 school construction bond will be at 6 p.m. Thursday, Oct. 29, at the Transit Center, 190 W. Cedar St. For more information about these events, call Director of Com-munications Patsene Dashiell at 582-3264.

The next school board meeting is at 6 p.m. Monday, Nov. 2, in the board room. The public is welcome to attend. An agenda is available for viewing on the district website. Time is set aside for public comment at each board meeting. For more information, call Marilyn Walsh at 582-3260.

GREYWOLF ELEMENTARY SCHOOLParent/teacher conferences

are in the afternoons, Oct. 27-30. School has early release at 11:15 a.m. on each of those days. Our staff has scheduled personal appoint-ments with each family. This is a wonderful opportunity to share the great work students are doing with their parents!

A reading tutor training takes place Oct. 28 from 3:30-4:30 p.m. in Room 142. Come learn about the 3 Ps of tutoring and how to success-fully help our young readers grow.

Koenig Subaru sponsored all first-grade students and staff. At a first-grade assembly, Bill and Carole Koenig, owners of Koenig Subaru, and Bill Koenig Jr. an-nounced that the entire first grade received much-needed playground equipment including footballs, soc-cer balls, basketballs, jump ropes and playground balls.

Also, each student was given a cinch-sack with school supplies, treats and a book.

First-grade teachers Monique Brasher, Cathy Green, Alex Ogilvie and Leigh Ann Koenig also received supplies essential for instruction. A HUGE Greywolf H-O-W-L goes out to Koenig Subaru for its generosity!

OLYMPIC PENINSULA ACADEMY

Parent/teacher conferences are from 11:30 a.m.-3 p.m. Oct. 27-30. Parents signed up in advance for con-ference appointments at the office.

OPA students in grades 5-12 take part in show choir class once a week under the direction of Jeanny Holtkamp. The class performed recently in the OPA talent show and is practicing for an upcoming performance in “A Night of Excel-lence,” an upcoming annual winter student showcase event.

HELEN HALLER ELEMENTARY SCHOOLThe Scholastic Book Fair is com-

ing! An exciting and high-interest variety of books will be for sale in the Helen Haller library from 8 a.m.- 3 p.m. through Oct. 30. Books also may be purchased from our Book Fair at the online sale through Nov. 6. Orders may be shipped for free to Helen Haller.

Sales support the Haller Library collection and book giveaways for students. Use the following link for more information: bookfairs.scholastic.com/homepage/helen-hallerelementaryschool.

We invite our Haller families in kindergarten through third grade to come celebrate the joy of reading at our Family Literacy Night from 5-7 p.m. Thursday, Oct. 29. Dinner is included, but you need to phone 582-3200 to make reservations. There will be four activity sessions to choose from, with each session lasting 20 minutes. A book drawing will take place at 7 p.m. the book fair will stay open until 7:30 p.m.

Stephanie Grotzke-Nash’s kin-dergarten helped usher in autumn by exploring the season outdoors. Students searched the campus for leaves, sticks, bark, grasses, flowers and even bugs! In the class-room, they sorted their materials and made observations, using their five senses.

SEQUIM MIDDLE SCHOOL

Parent/teacher conferences are scheduled on Oct. 27-30. Students will have early release each of these days at 10:55 a.m. Student-led con-ferences are Oct. 27-28; these con-ferences are by appointment only.

Arena-style conferences take place from 3:30-7 p.m. Thursday, Oct. 29, and from 11:45 a.m.-3:15 p.m. Friday, Oct. 30. These are drop-in type conferences where parents can meet with their child’s teacher.

The Scholastic Book Fair takes place during the week of Oct. 26-30 in the library. Volunteers are needed to help with this event. If you are interested in volunteering, call the librarian at 582-3515.

September’s students of the month were selected for exhibiting good citizenship. They are Kelsi Bergesen, Jesse Bobst, Bishop Budnek, Zach Budnek, Skyler Cole, Gavin Conway, Kjirstin Foresman, Anthony Hernandez, Virginia

Kelvy, Katarina King, Arnulfo Lo-pez Vasquez, Mary McAleer, Zach-ary McCracken, Richard Meier, Michael Prendergast, Rozlyn Raychel, Marley Reeder, Darren Salazar, Peter Silliman, Amanda Weller and Emerson Wright.

SEQUIM HIGH SCHOOL

Parent/teacher conferences will be conducted on Oct. 29-30. Both days are early release days for the students at 11 a.m. On Thursday, Oct. 29, conferences will be from 4-7 p.m. in the main gym. On Friday, Oct. 30, conferences will be from noon-3 p.m. in individual teachers’ classrooms. Students are encour-aged to attend with their parents.

There will be a choir concert at 7 p.m. Wednesday, Oct. 28, in the auditorium.

News from Madeline Patterson, journalism student:

Two weeks ago, Sequim domi-nated Port Angeles at the annual Rainshadow Rumble, claiming the trophy. This game was very special to us because it was our Homecoming.

At halftime, the Sequim High School band led by Hall of Fame band director Vern Fosket, marched onto the field. They played their song “25 or 6 to 4” while having their drum majors Eric Anderson, Holly Eiland and Betsy Merrikin

direct them. Soon after that, the

class floats started roll-ing out around the track. First was the freshman float with their “Under the Sea”-themed trailer after Animal Planet. The sophomores followed with a unique boat sporting life preservers decorating the sides representing the Dis-covery Channel. Right after came the colorful addition of an old fire engine for the juniors supporting the ABC network. Last, but not least, the seniors drove around blaring loud music and bright colors in tribute of the MTV channel.

After the last float came around, Home-coming royalty for

freshmen, sophomores and juniors stepped up. Decided a week before by the student body, these royals in the Homecoming court already were known.

Congratulations to freshmen Nate Despain and Erin Gordon, sophomores Hayden Gresli and Aylee Bennett, and juniors Curtis Beery and Rose Erickson.

In a big finish, after they were announced, the 7 Cedars Casino stretch limousine rolled up, chauf-feuring the senior royalty. Prior to being announced, not even the nominees knew their final placings.

Congratulations to Duke Evan Hurn and Duchess McKenzie Bentz, Prince Jack Shea and Prin-cess Karen Chan. Finally, King Nick Barrett stepped out of the door, followed closely by Queen Katie Rogers, to shouts of approval by the crowd, largely made up of students.

Congratulations to the entire Homecoming court of 2015 and to our victorious Sequim Wolves football team!

The annual Haunted Hallways event will be from 1-4 p.m. Satur-day, Oct. 31, at the “H” building, at 601 N. Sequim Ave. Parents and grandparents can bring children dressed in costumes for Halloween activities and fun. No admission is required, but canned food dona-tions will be added to the high school’s annual Boo Hunger food drive to benefit the Sequim Food Bank. For more information, call the office at 582-3600.

During the last week of October, students will conduct their annual Boo Hunger food drive Leadership class students will collect dona-tions of non-perishable foods for the Sequim Food Bank from Oct. 26-31.

First period classes will compete against each other to bring in the most food. There also will be individual prizes, donated by the community, for students who bring in the most food.

On Oct. 31, students are encour-aged to “trick-or-treat” for canned foods to add to the food drive.

On Nov. 3, the school will host the Puget Sound Blood Center from 8 a.m.-2 p.m. in the auxiliary gymnasium. This event is open to the public and to students age 16 and older with parental permission, so keep an eye out for those permis-sion slips.

Halloween is a favorite of chil-dren. How nice to go up to people and ask them to give you something and they give it to you. Then you go ask someone else and the same thing happens. No other holiday is like this.

Adults don’t always have as positive a feeling about this day. But they really should look at this day as one of the few that they have such a positive relationship with so many children.

What can you do to make it espe-cially nice for your child or for other children this year? The most impor-tant thing is to make it a safe holiday. That begins by making sure you child is properly supervised. Don’t let your young child go alone. Then you can be sure that they pay attention to what is happening at street corners and they

HAC L K KTAL2+2=4 6-3=3 SchoolSMaking Halloween safe

Greywolf Elementary School first-graders from Alex Ogilvie’s class with their new backpacks given to them by the owners of Koenig Subaru. Photo by Patsene Dashiell

Lillian Talbot and Daymian Francis, kin-dergarteners at Helen Haller Elementary School, take a close look at leaves gathered from outdoors to study the effects of the fall season on nature. Photo by Stephanie Grotzke Nash

Turning Over new Leaves

Thanks fOr The ’Packs!

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Page 25: Sequim Gazette, October 28, 2015

Halloween is a favorite of children. How nice to go up to people and ask them to give you something and they give it to you. Then you go ask someone else and the same thing happens. No other holiday is like this.

Adults don’t always have as positive a feeling about this day. But they really should look at this day as one of the few that they have such a positive relationship with so many children.

What can you do to make it espe-cially nice for your child or for other children this year? The most impor-tant thing is to make it a safe holiday. That begins by making sure your child is properly supervised. Don’t let your young child go alone. Then you can be sure that they pay attention to what is happening at street corners

and they use traffic signals and cross-walks properly. This is a good time to

make sure they look both ways before the cross the street. They can only do this if they have put all their electronic devices down and they have their heads up when they get ready to cross the street.

Always have them walk on the sidewalks

and not in the street. Even though drivers are careful on this night because of the many children every-where, the child also must be careful.

Make sure your child’s costume is safe. You even can use some reflective tape or stickers to help him be visible at night. Use face paint and makeup instead of masks which make it dif-ficult for a child to see. Even having them use a flashlight helps them be seen by drivers.

Consider going to especially safe areas. We are lucky in Sequim that many of the businesses are helping make Halloween safe by offering treats to the kids who come to their place of business.

Always avoid the areas that are dark or where you have to cross a lot of streets. It is even best to go trick or treating in a neighborhood where you know people. Let your child know that he never should go into anyone’s house unless he knows them.

If you aren’t sure about going to a house, check if the porch light is on. If not, that’s usually a sign that they aren’t home or they don’t want any trick-or-treaters.

After all the treats are gathered and before your child starts eating the treats in his bag, you’ll want to get a good look at them. Make sure your children know that the treats have to wait until they get home.

At home, have him dump every-thing out and let you see what he has.

You can help get rid of stuff your child shouldn’t eat. For instance, you don’t want him to eat anything that’s loose or not in a wrapper.

Anything unwrapped, including fresh fruit, should be thrown away. Without a wrapper, it’s hard to tell if food is clean and safe to eat.

Make sure your child knows that you will be saving most of the candy for another day. It is certainly always best not to overdo it. Let him pick a reasonable amount to eat and let him know he can have some tomorrow and in the days and weeks to come. Halloween can be even better by mak-ing it last a little longer!

Help make this day as sweet as pos-sible by keeping children safe. Your child doesn’t think about safety. He is thinking about sweets.

Cynthia Martin is the founder of the First Teacher program and director of Parenting Matters Foun-dation, which publishes newsletters for parents, caregivers and grandpar-ents. Reach Martin at [email protected] or at 681-2250.

SCHOOLS CALENDAR

Oct. 283:30-4:30 p.m. — Grey-

wolf Elementary School reading tutor training. In Room 142 at school, 171 Carlsborg Road. Call 582-3300.

7 p.m. — Sequim High School choir concert. At school auditorium, 533 N. Sequim Ave.

Oct. 295 p.m. — Helen Haller

Elementary School Fam-ily Literacy Night (grades K-3). Reservations needed for dinner; call 582-3200. At school campus, 350 W. Fir St. Call 582-3200.

Oct. 311 p.m. — Sequim High

School Haunted Hall-ways. At school campus, 601 N. Sequim Ave. Call 582-3600.

Nov. 26 p.m. — Sequim

School Board of Directors meeting. At school board-room, 501 N. Sequim Ave. Call 582-3260.

Nov. 56:30 -8:30 p.m. —

Sequim Middle School Fine Arts Night. At school campus, 301 W. Hendrick-son Road. Call 582-3500.

Parenting Matters

Cynthia Martin

SEQUIM GAZETTE B-9

SchoolSMaking Halloween safe

SEQUIM GAZETTE SEQUIM GAZETTE Oct. 28, 2015 • B-9

OLYMPIC BIBLEFELLOWSHIP

Weekly programs provided foryouth and adults, such asAWANA and Precept Bible studies

Pastor Rich Hay

360-683-6731

414 N. Sequim Ave. (in the Olympic Theatre Arts Building)Website: www.obfchurch.org

10:00 a.m. Worship, Nursery & Children’s Church

5:45 p.m. Awana - 3 years through High School

1205487

First Church ofChrist, Scientist337 West Spruce • 683-9174

Sunday Service: 10:00 a.m.Wednesday: 7:00 p.m.

Sunday School: 10:00 a.m.(held at Reading Room)

Christian Science Reading Room121 North Sequim AvenueTuesday through Saturday12 noon until 3:00 p.m.ALL ARE WELCOME

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Sequim Worship Center

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

sequimworshipcenter.org

Rev. David L. Westman

640 N. Sequim Avenue360-683-7981

SUNDAY MORNING SERVICE 10:45 AM

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DungenessCommunity Church

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and Sunday SchoolPastors: Scott Culver, Wayne Yamamoto

David Piper45 Eberle Lane

3.9 miles N. on Sequim-Dungeness Way from Highway 101

Church Office 683-7333 • Fax 681-0524Hours: Mon.-Fri. 8am-4pme-mail: [email protected]

Web Site: www.dcchurch.org

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FAITH LUTHERANCHURCH L.C.M.S.

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1205450

Sunday Worship Services 8:30 & 11 a.m.

Bible Classes 9:45 a.m.Christian Preschool (ages 3-5)

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

www.FLCsequim.org

HARVEST FESTIVALOct. 31, 5-7pm

Sequim Community Church950 N. Fifth Avenue - (360) 683-4194

Sunday WorshipContemporary@ 9 & 11 am

Traditional @ 10 amSunday School for all

Loving infant care

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

Dr. Scott E. Koenigsaecker, Senior PastorRev. Rick Dietzman, Minister to Adults

Rev. Tony Toth, Pastor to YouthJoel Rosenauer, Director of Worship Arts

Peggy McKellar, Director of Children’s Ministries

1205459

1205480

1-800-22-UNITECall 683-5520 or 683-3285

The Baha’i Faith

1205466

“War shall cease between nations,and by the will of God the Most

Great Peace shall come; the world will be seen as a new world, and

all men will live as brothers.” — ‘Abdu’l-Baha

Weekly study sessions

Sequim Center forSpiritual Living

A Center For Positive LivingHolds

Sunday Service10:00

Pioneer ParkRev. Lynn Osborne

INFORMATION CALL 681-0177

1205570

TriniTyUniTedMeThodisT ChUrCh100 South Blake Ave.

1205444

Sunday School & Nursery: 10:00 a.m.Worship Service: 10:00 a.m.

Bill Green, Pastor683-5367

[email protected]

Sequim Seventh-dayAdventist Church

Sat. 9:30 a.m. Sabbath School10:45 a.m. Worship Service

Church683-7373

30 Sanford LaneMountain View Christian School

683-6170255 Medsker Rd.

Pastors: Mark & Collette [email protected]

1205512

Dungeness Valley Lutheran Church

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

www.dvelca.orgPastor Jack Anderson

681-0946

1205530

Worship Times8:30 a.m. & 11:00 a.m.

Christian Education: 9:45 a.m.Wednesdays

5:45 p.m. Potluck6:45 p.m. Education Hour

Pastor Lonnie JacobsonFamily Oriented Ministry Emphasizing Bible Preaching & Teaching

Faith Baptist Church

Traditional Worship ServicesSunday School .........................................................................9:45 A.M.Worship ..................................................................................11:00 A.M.Praise & Fellowship Service ......................................................6:00 P.M.Wednesday Night Prayer Meeting ............................................7:00 P.M.

Nursery Available

www.faithbaptistsequim.com7652 Old Olympic Hwy., Sequim • 360 683-7303

1205563

Here individuals developtheir spirituality free fromimposed dogma and creed

Olympic Unitarian Universalist Fellowship

SundayService & Childcare10:30

417-2665

73 Howe Rd.Agnew

Off N. Barr Rd.Between Hwy 101

& Old Olympic

Welcoming Congregation

www.OlympicUUF.org

1205442

101 E. Maple St., Sequim360-683-6076

www.clallamcatholic.com

Mass Schedule:Saturday Vigil: 5:00 p.m.

Sunday: 8:30 & 10:30 a.m.Monday & Tuesday: 8:30 a.m.Thursday - Saturday: 8:30 a.m.

Spanish Mass every 2nd Sunday 2 p.m.Confession:

30 minutes prior to all daily MassesWeekend Confessions:

Saturday 3:30 - 4:30 p.m.

Saint Joseph Parish

1205492

SUNDAY WORSHIPTraditional Worship - 9:30 a.m.

Contemporary Worship - 11:00 a.m.Bible Studies & Classes for all ages

Check web or phone for more information

MONDAYPrecepts - 7:00 p.m.

WEDNESDAY Middle School Youth - 5:30 p.m.

Adult Bible Study & Prayer – 6:00 p.m.AWANA – 6:30 p.m.

.

847 North Sequim Ave. 683-4135

www.sequimbible.org

Dave Wiitala, Senior PastorShane McCrossen, Youth Pastor

1205510

1394918

CHURCH OF CHRISTIn Sequim

107 E. Prairie StreetJerry MacDonald, Minister

Sunday:Bible Study 10:00am

Worship 11:00amWednesday:

Bible Study 7:00pm360-808-5540

www.fbcsequim.comPastor Wes Funkhouser

360-683-2114

SUNDAYS Life Groups 9:15 a.m.

Morning Service 10:45 a.m.Evening Service 6:00 p.m.

WEDNESDAYS Prayer Meeting 6:00 p.m.

THURSDAYS Youth Group 6:30 p.m.

1424817

1323 Sequim-Dungeness Way

FIRST BAPTIST CHURCH SEQUIM

(SBC)

1443635

GARDINER COMMUNITY CHURCH

1040 Old Gardiner RoadService Time: Sundays at 10:30am

Pastor David Kobelin360-929-1845

gccsof� [email protected]

Gardiner Community Church

1040 Old Gardiner Road Service Time: Sundays @ 10:30am

Pastor David Kobelin 360-929-1845

[email protected]

Welcome Home! This page is proudly brought to you by:

“You Otter Be Saving”

Member FDICLearn more > Open Account Online > ourfirstfed.com > 360.417.3204

Page 26: Sequim Gazette, October 28, 2015

by ALANA LINDEROTHSequim Gazette

Heritage fruit trees found thriving within the area, including deep reaches of the Olympic National Park, are providing insight into the area’s past.

Through their efforts to find, collect and preserve genes from local orchards dating back to the turn of the century, members of the Olympic Orchard Society are beginning to piece together

historic hints of Clallam County and the Sequim-Dungeness Valley.

“We’re largely finding cider apples,” Jim House, Olympic Orchard Society president, said. “This tells us people then were mostly using apples to make something to drink through the winter.”

But, exploring heritage orchards and taking the scionwood (a shoot of a tree collected for grafting) to re-build the gene pool of local, historic fruit tree varieties is

only one aspect of what the Olympic Orchard Society does.

“Education is really the pri-ority of our club,” House said.

Stemming from the soci-ety’s interest in education, members are preparing to host their Fall Fruit Show, Saturday, Oct. 31.

“It’s a really fun, family friendly event,” said Marilyn Couture, Olympic Orchard Society secretary and chair-man of the fruit show. “Chil-dren love to taste and see all the different kinds of fruit.”

Couture anticipates about 100 fruit varieties known to prosper in this region to be

A fruitful fallOlympic Orchard Society to host show rooted in education

Those attending the upcoming Fall Fruit Show can learn tips and pruning methods, such as those often implemented by Jim House, Olympic Orchard Society president, to train tree growth and maximize fruit production. Sequim Gazette photo by Alana Linderoth

on display, including apples, pears, Asian pears, kiwis and quinces. Of those varieties, a wide array will be available for tasting, she said. If, for exam-ple, a particular type of apple is one an individual specially enjoys, they’ll be able to place a custom grafted tree order.

For those unfamiliar with grafting and proper pruning techniques, Gordon Clark of Clark Horticulture will be conducting demonstrations.

“Grafting is used to get desirable characteristics and a specific variety,” House said.

If you plant an apple seed from a specific variety, it’s extremely unlikely that the tree grown will produce the same type of fruit, House ex-plained. Thus grafting instead of growing a tree from seed ensures both the variety and its associated characteristics.

“Apple seeds contain many, many genes,” he said.

Other demonstrations in-clude an iodine test to deter-mine apple ripeness, cider pressing, a pollination presen-tation by Mark Urnes, North Olympic Peninsula Beekeep-ers education and beekeeper trustee and Master Gardeners will share their knowledge on fertilizing, care and disease.

At 11 a.m., Bob Norton, a longtime professor special-izing in plant physiology and founder of Vashon Island Fruit Club, will speak on stone fruit rootstock and interstem compatibility. Plant patholo-gist Joseph Postman with

the United States Depart-ment of Agriculture Clonal Germplasm Repository will follow Norton at 1 p.m., with a discussion on heritage pear trees, disease control and practical information.

“We always try to provide a wide range of speakers and bring a deeper understanding of what varieties do well here,” House said.

Given the wide breadth of fruit tree and small fruit varieties, also fostered by the Olympic Orchard Society, the focus of the show is nar-rowed geographically.

“There are more than 5,000 known apple varieties, so at the show we really try to high-light the varieties that do well here in our cooler climate,” Couture said. “A lot of people flock to the ID station.”

People are encouraged to bring their mystery apples, as Joanie Cooper and Shaun Shepherd of the Home Or-

chard Society in Portland, Ore., assisted by Lori Brakken of Seattle and Jean Williams of Bremerton, will provide their apple identification expertise throughout the show.

To help with the identifica-tion process, House and Cou-ture recommend bringing three to five apples from each tree of interest and the more details provided on the tree, like its age, the better.

Fitting for a fall fruit show, both coffee and apple cider will be on hand, as well as a tree sale.

The Olympic Orchard So-ciety alternates hosting the annual Fall Fruit Show with the Jefferson County-based fruit club, the North Olym-pic Fruit Club. Both clubs operate under the Western Cascade Fruit Society.

For more information call 681-3036, e-mail [email protected] or visit wcfs.org.

Fall Fruit ShowWhen: 10 a.m.-3 p.m., Satur-day, Oct. 31Where: Trinity United Meth-odist Church, 100 S. Blake Ave. Cost: Admission is a sug-gested donation of $3 per person or $5 per family.More info: Call 681-3036 or e-mail [email protected].

SEQUIM GAZETTEB-10 • Oct. 28, 2015

650 W. Hemlock St., Sequim, WA 98382360.582.2400

www.sequimskillednursing.com

Time for a “tune-up” at Sequim Health & Rehab with our outpatient therapies. Slip and fall or take a tumble and injure yourself, Sequim Health & Rehab is ready to help you get back on your feet with our seven-day-a-week therapy department.

Falling Leaves, Falling Temperatures...

Rainy Days, Slippery Steps.

5A1440426

650 W. Hemlock St., Sequim, WA 98382360.582.2400

www.sequimskillednursing.com

outpatient therapies. Slip and fall or take a tumble and injure yourself, Sequim Health & Rehab is ready to help you get back on your feet with our seven-day-a-week therapy department.

THIS HALLOWEEN PUT YOUR CHILD’S

ALWAYS TRICK OR TREAT IN GROUPS OR

WITH ADULT SUPERVISION. NEVER GO INSIDE A STRANGER’S HOUSE.

683-4321139 W. Alder St., Sequim

HAVE YOUR PARENTS INSPECT

YOUR CANDY BEFORE YOU EAT IT.

683-1418

GET A DESIGNATED DRIVER. DON’T

DRINK AND DRIVE.

ALL POINTS CHARTER & TOURS

565-1139325 W. 14th St., Port Angeles

TRICK OR TREAT CLOSE TO YOUR

HOME OR IN YOUR COMMUNITY

683-7261

Sequim

683-1500460-4903

CARRY A GLOW STICK OR FLASHLIGHT

TO SEE AND BE SEEN BY DRIVERS.

Claire Koenigsaeker

REVIEW YOUR TRICK OR TREAT ROUTE

WITH MOM & DAD & COME HOME WHEN YOU SAY YOU WOULD.

460-6507452-6822683-4850

STOP AND LOOK IN BOTH DIRECTIONS BEFORE CROSSING

THE STREET.

SEQUIM SMILESDr. Richard

Davies, DDS

PAINT YOUR FACE INSTEAD OF WEARING

A MASK... IT’S MUCH SAFER.

683-7510

FOLLOW ALL TRAFFIC LAWS AND SIGNALS AND CROSS STREETS

ONLY AT CROSSWALKS.

683-3626645 N. 5th Ave., Sequim

Have a Safe and Happy Halloween!

WEAR COSTUMES THAT FIT PROPERLY SO YOU DON’T TRIP

AND FALL.

683-7286

Page 27: Sequim Gazette, October 28, 2015

FREEBIESAll merchandise up to $100Deadline Thursday at 5 p.m.

Private party only, some restrictions apply

WHEEL DEALS$29.95 for 3 months!

Sequim Gazette • Forks ForumPeninsula Daily News

GARAGE SALES 5 lines - $18.00

PLUS Free Garage Sale Signs $1.00 each additional line

SERVICE DIRECTORIESLarge (per week) $20.00Small (per week) $12.00

ONLINE: Visit our website, click “Classifieds” then “Submit an Ad.”EMAIL: Send ads directly to us, [email protected]: Call us Mon. - Fri. 8:30-5:00 at (360) 683-3311 or Fax: 582-9638IN PERSON: Visit our office, 147 W. Washington Mon. - Fri., 8:30 am-5 pm

It’s EASY to place a classified adOCTOBER 28-NOVEMBER 3, 2015

C BUILD YOUR DREAM HOME HERELEVEL MOUNTAIN

VIEW LOT in new subdivision.

Excavation for a 1,400 sq. ft. home has been done and all city utilities are available.

Close to shopping and services.

A� ordably priced and ready to build on.

$25,000 ML#271991/404020

Sequim Gazette’s real estate guide to homes and land in Clallam CountySee more at www.sequimgazette.com/classi� ed | See locator map on Page 2Sequim Gazette’s real estate guide to homes and land in Clallam CountyMARK IT SOLDMARK IT SOLDMARK IT SOLDMARK IT SOLDMARK IT SOLDMARK IT SOLDMARK IT SOLDMARK IT SOLDMARK IT SOLDMARK IT SOLDMARK IT SOLDMARK IT SOLDMARK IT SOLDMARK IT SOLDCounty Wide Classifieds

Your Real estate search ends here!

F 2 MASTER SUITES

LARGE 3 BR, 3 BA HOME + huge bonus room; 2 master suites with “sitting room areas” & separate den. Kitchen o� ers lots of storage. Easy care solid surface � ooring; Corian counters. Landscaped acre, fencing for pets, fruit trees & garden space. Close to town. ML#291762/836484 $329,900

D MOUNTAIN VIEW

AMAZING CUSTOM 3 BR, 3 BA home. Attention to detail using high end � nishes and materials throughout. Home with covered porch and attached 2 car garage on 2.67 acres PLUS 1700+ SF shop with its own septic system plumbed for kitchen and bath. Fully fenced and landscaped park like setting. The master bedroom and one guest room are downstairs. Call Gail Sumpter (360) 477-9361. ML#291939 $695,000

E

SUPERB QUALITY THROUGHOUT this custom 2+ BR, 3 BA low bank waterfront home in Diamond Point. This well thought out open � oor plan boasts a water view from every window. Step out the french doors to a beautiful stone patio. Watch the eagles soar, seals & minke whales swim by & even spot the majestic orca pods! Call Team Tenho� (206) 853-4743. ML#291399 $667,000

BEACH FRONT HOME

G COMMERCIAL - INDUSTRIAL50 ft. deep, 15x16,

� nished, heated and secured multi-purpose

RV condo with easy access to Hwy 101.

Endless storage possibilities, water on

site for RV washing, dedicated RV

circuit, 220 and 110 outlets, wired for

phone, close to Costco and popular shopping

area. A must have! MLS#292081

$53,000

H WELCOME HOME

LARGE KITCHEN & FLOOR PLAN, 4BR/3BA home. Covered porch overlooks SW & city views. Fenced back yard. Warm recessed lighting & big bright windows. Family room w/propane FP,

comfy bay window seating & built in surround sound. ML#291989/854848 $385,000

A GREAT LOCATION CARRIE BLAKE PARK AREAB

IMMACULATE 3 BR, 2.5 BA HOME on a very quiet street yet close to shopping. This 2 level home features hardwood � ooring on the main level, kitchen w/cooking island, pantry & stainless appliances, living room w/tall ceilings, master suite on the main level. Upper level o� ers 2 bedrooms, sitting room, plus a large bonus room. ML#291944 $279,500.

UNIQUE 3 BR HOME with an attached 1 BR guest home. The total combined living area is around 3164 SF. The 3 BR side o� ers a large living room w/propane stove, kitchen w/laminate � ooring, and attached 1 car garage. The 1 BR guest home features an open kitchen & family room, large living room, attached 1 car garage, plus an atrium with observation loft with great views of the park & mountains beyond. ML#292113 $259,000.

Call today! 683-3311HOMETOWN PAPERHOMETOWN PRIDE

Real Estate for SaleClallam County

FSBO: 8.3 acres South fac i n g Happy Va l l ey p r o p e r t y w i t h s m a l l l i v a b l e c o t t a g e . $259,000 negotiable.

(360)775-7208.

Real Estate for RentClallam County

SEQ: 941 E. Alder, 3 b r . , 2 b a t h , n o smoke/pets. $1,150, dep. (360)460-8291.

SEQUIM: 2 Br., 2 ba, garage, new paint and carpet. $950 mo., dep

(503)757-2170.

SEQUIM: Darling 2 Br. cha le t , beach r igh ts. $900. (360)681-6308.

FOR MORE INFORMATION PLEASE CALL

683-3311

“Nobody does it better.”

Real Estate for RentClallam County

(360)417-2810HOUSES/APT

IN PORT ANGELES

HOUSES/APTIN SEQUIM

COMPLETE LIST @1111 Caroline St.

Port Angeles

A 1BD/1BA $625/MH 2BD/1BA $700/MH 2BD/1BA $750/MA 2/1 TOWNHOUSE $775/MH 2BD/1BA $875/MH 3BD/1.5 $1150/MH 3BD/2BA $1250/MH 3BD/2BA $1700/MH 4BD/3BA $1800/M

H 2BD/2BA $1600/M

5A1415413

“I FOUND IT IN FREEBIES!”

Real Estate for RentClallam County

PUBLISHER’S NOTICE All rental and real estate for sale adver tising in this newspaper is sub- ject to the Fair Housing Act which makes it ille- gal to advertise any pref- erence, limitation or dis- cr iminat ion based on race, color, religion, sex, handicap, familial status or national origin, or an intention, to make any such preference, limita- tion or discrimination Fa- mi l ia l status includes children under the age of 18 living with parents or legal custodians, preg- nant women and people securing custody of chil- dren under 18. This n e w s p a p e r w i l l n o t knowingly accept any advertising for the rental or sale of real estate which is in violation of the law. Our readers are hereby informed that all dwellings advertising in t h i s n ew s p a p e r a r e available on an equal oppor tuni ty basis. To complain of discrimina- t i o n c a l l H U D a t (206)220-5170.

“I FOUND IT IN FREEBIES!”

Apartments for Rent Clallam County

SEQ : 1 Br. duplex, in Discovery Bay, very pri- va t e , o n t h e b e a c h . S h a r e d l a u n d r y. N o smoking/dr inking/pets. Ful ly furnished. $695 mo. includes utilities.

(360)271-6247

WA Misc. RentalsRooms for Rent

Gentleman has room to rent in PA. Female only $150. (360)452-7582.

Mature lady to share home with senior gentle- man in exchange for light housekeeping and cooking. Pr ivate room and bath, House privi- leges in Sequim.

(360)460-5161

FOR MORE INFORMATION PLEASE CALL

683-3311

“Nobody does it better.”“I FOUND IT IN FREEBIES!”

Commercial RentalsOffice/Commercial

TWO OFFICES INDOWNTOWN

SEQUIM GAZETTE BUILDING FOR

SUB-LEASE448-sq-ft for $500 mo., 240-sq-ft for $350 mo. Perfect for accountant or other professional. Shared con fe rence room, restroom, wired for high-speed Inter- n e t . C o n t a c t J o h n Brewer, publisher,

(360)417-3500

General Financial

Are you in BIG trouble with the IRS? Stop wage & bank levies, liens & audits, unfi led tax re- turns, payroll issues, & resolve tax debt FAST. Call 844-245-2287

Call now to secure a su- per low rate on your Mortgage. Don’t wait for Rates to increase. Act Now! Call 1-888-859- 9539

Lowest Prices on Health Insurance. We have the best rates from top com- panies! Call Now! 855- 895-8361

Page 28: Sequim Gazette, October 28, 2015

C-2 CountyWide Classifieds D Serving Clallam County D October 28, 2015

Certified JewelerServing Port Angeles and Sequim

for over 30 years.We buy estates!

Jewelry, gold, silver, platinum, diamonds, costume jewelry

& silver flatware. Free estimatesBy appointment only

255410 Hwy. 101, Port Angeles 360-417-1344

Michael D. Smith’s

1279044

5A1424221

101 and Deer Park Rd, Port Angeles www.wilderauto.com

SPECIAL of the WEEK

Stk#P3807. Preowned. One only and subject to prior sale. Photo for illustration purposes only. Sale Price plus tax, license and a negotiable $150 documentation fee. See Wilder Auto for complete details. Ad expires one week from date of publication.

2015 Dodge Challenger2015 Dodge Challenger2015 Dodge Challenger2015 Dodge ChallengerSXT $22,995

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Call Today!

Welfare for Animals Guild

(360) 460-6258www.pet� nder.com

[email protected] by caring pet lovers.

PLEASE ADOPT ME

BELLA is 2 years old and is the perfect house dog. She loves her female people but is slow to warm up to men. Bella is smart & knows a ton of commands. She is perfectly house trained & has learned to go on a

schedule. No small children or animals. She would do well in a quieter setting where she has some freedom to play outside, run & chase. Bella had a knee injury & surgery done to repair both knees w/ minor restrictions.

360-477-2883www.stinkydogubathe.com

Self-Service Dog Wash & Hourly Rate Kennel

Would you like to sponsor this

pet page?

Call 683-3311 ext. 1550

pet page?

SHADOW is a purebred Shih Tzu, is 6 years old and weighs about 21 lbs. He’s a sweet boy, loves his people and is happy just to sit on your lap or cuddle up next to you. He gets along with other dogs, but no cats.

Shadlow has had his wellness checkup, neutered, up to date on shots and microchipped.

ANNIE is very typical of a cattle dog, she gets along with most dogs and loves to play. She has completed our dog training program at Clallam Bay Correctional Center learning basic

obedience. She would love a person that is willing to play ball with her. She will do best with a family that knows the cattle dog breed.

BUDDY is an adorable 2 year old Dachshund/Chihuahua mix who loves to snuggle. He gets along well with large and small dogs as well as cats. Buddy walks ok on a leash, knows

come and stay. He is not a barker and loves his people, please no small children. This fun little guy has lots of energy and loves to run and play, so a home with another small dog is a must and he will need a secure fenced yard.He is housebroken, neutered and has had all his vaccines.

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7th

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Miller Rd.Miller Rd.

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Happy Valley Rd.Happy Valley Rd.

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Vista Del Mar

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Chicken Coop Rd.

Corriea

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Hardwick

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SUNSHINE ACRES

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Firew

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Burling Rd

Blue Grouse Run Rd Dia

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Heron Hill Rd

Mindy Ln

Rhapsody Rd

Holland

Jamestown

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WoodcockWoodcock

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Avellana

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Lorraine

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Bellway

Barbara

Ann

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Josl

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Humble Hill

Toad Rd

Carlsborg

PikeOl son

Marinatha

SenzSenzWild

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Roupe

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SunnyView

SunnyView

Runnion

Gupster

McCawley

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Spath

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Gasm

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Rd

LillyEmery

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Rd

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Bringing the news of the Dungeness Valley

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General Financial

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Investments

$125K note paying 6% secured by waterfront lot in Sequim, WA.

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EmploymentGeneral

BOOKEEPER : Fu l l Charge, experienced a must. (360)683-4149

CAREGIVERS NEEDED$100 h i re on bonus, $11.88 hr., benefits. No experience. Free train- ing. Caregivers Home Care. 457-1644, 683- 7377, 379-6659

EmploymentGeneral

7 CEDARS RESORT IS NOW HIRING FOR THE

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EXECUTIVE Director : P /T Non -p ro f i t , exp. req., Arts background a plus, email resume [email protected]

“I FOUND IT IN FREEBIES!”

EmploymentGeneral

CAREGIVERS: Our new management team is dedicated to serving the needs of our residents at Sherwood Assisted Liv- ing. We are looking for caring and compassion- ate caregivers to be- come a part of our new team and join our mis- sion of enhancing the l i ves o f ag ing adu l ts throughout our commu- nity. We have a variety of shifts available with compe t i t i ve pay and benefits. Find out more about this fulfilling career opportunity. Apply at 550 W Hendrickson Road or call Casey, the Staff De- ve lopmen t Manage r, (360)683-3348

Experienced auto de- tailer needed, full time, full benefits.

Price Ford Lincoln457-3333 contact Joel

RETAIL SALES: Experi- ence in retail sales and or building industry pre- ferred. Details at:

www.angelesmillwork.com

EmploymentGeneral

Construction Project Assistant

Jamestown S’Kla l lam Tribe Economic Devel- opment Authority (EDA) has an opportunity for a ful l - t ime, exper ienced construction project as- sistant to provide opera- tional and clerical sup- por t to our excavating division; prepare esti- mates, ensure contract compliance, track costs. Requires 3-5 years sup- port exp. in a profession- al or construction envi- r onmen t ; excava t i ng exp. preferred. Competi- t ive salary & benefits. To apply, please visit

http://jamestowntribe.org

to complete an EDA ap- plication or pick-up an application at 257 Busi- ness Park Loop, Carls- borg, WA. Indian prefer- e n c e f o r q u a l i f i e d candidates.

Home Care Supervisor in PT

Supervisor and care giv- ing experience. Comput- er/data skills, organized, able to do In Home Sup visits and meet dead- lines. $200 hire on bo- nus. Call 360-379-6659. Fax resume 360-379- 5620.

LICENSED NURSE’S Come join our team at Sherwood Assisted Liv- ing. Flexible hours, with benefits. Fill out an ap- plication at 550 W Hen- dr ickson Rd, Sequim, WA or contact Casey, Staff Development.

(360)683-3348

RN’s up to $45/hr, LPN’s up to $37.50/hr, CNA’s up to $22.50/hr, Free gas/weekly pay, $2000 Bonus, AACO Nursing Agency, 1-800-656-4414 Ext2

ROUTE SALESMANLoca l , fas t -growing company seeks route salesman for estab- lished route. $10-$20 hour and 401K. No CDL needed, but need clean driving record. Sales experience help- ful. Apply in person at 253 Bus iness Par k Loop, Carlsborg.

“I FOUND IT IN FREEBIES!”

EmploymentGeneral

Manager Plant Operations and

ConstructionNewly opened, rare oppor tunity. Will be respons ib le fo r fa - ci l i t ies management functions, repair and m a i n t e n a n c e p r o - grams and leading our ac t i ve cons t ruc t ion program. Degree in engineering or related field, with five+ years’ experience in building maintenance and fa- cil it ies management, preferably in a hospital setting. Excellent su- per v isor y sk i l l s re - quired. For additionaldetails and to apply online, visit

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Support StaffTo work with adul ts w i th deve lopmenta l disabilities, no experi- e n c e n e c e s s a r y , $10.50 hr. Apply in person at 1020 Caro- line St. M-F 8-4 p.m.

Surgical Technologist: 30 hours a week. North- west Eye Surgeons is seeking a trained Surgi- cal Technologist to join our Sequim ASC team. A qualified candidate will be a graduate of an ac- credited program of sur- gical technology or cen- tral processing and hold a current WA Surgical Technologist registra- tion. Visit

www.nweyes.com/careers

for complete details and instructions how to ap- ply.

Employment Wanted

AFFORDABLE GUT- TER CLEANING. Basic c lean ing w i l l remove leaves, dir t, pine nee- dles, debris, grime, etc. to make sure your gut- ters are running freely. $75. (360)461-1962.

B R U S H H A U L I N G , hedge trimming, pruning, mowing and odd jobs.

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DOG WALKER: After- noons, Sequim area, reasonable rates.

(360)461-6458

YOUR TRASH IS SOMEBODY’S TREASURE.

ADVERTISE IN GARAGE SALES

Page 29: Sequim Gazette, October 28, 2015

CountyWide Classifieds D Serving Clallam County D October 28, 2015 C-3

Thumbelinais as gentle, loving and sweet as a cat can be. She’s an exceptional brown tabby with big, expressive eyes. She came to the shelter as a stray, and everyone loves her.

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Feline Fun ResortPurr Parties

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Doreen Emerson, Owner

Scarletis a young mom who came to us after her kittens were adopted. She’s a lovely, longer hair brown tabby with gorgeous green eyes. She is highly hugable!

Lynxiehas been an exceptional and loving mother to her � ve adorable kittens. She’s a young, pretty Siamese-tabby, and will make someone a marvelous companion.

Scooteris one of Lynxie’s � ve kittens. She was born without a tail and has some degree of Manx syndrome. She is bonded with her brother, Dakota.Dakota is another of Lynxie’s kittens, the only one to inherit Lynxie’s Siamese side. He is bonded w/ his sister, Scooter, and need to � nd a forever home together.

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cros

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dCo

mpl

imen

ts o

f Wild

er A

uto

crossword answers from last week

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USEDCARS

Looking for some used-but-nice office gear? Don’t go dumpster div-ing. You can find whatever you need at a price you can afford in Countywide Classifieds.

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Schools & Training

A I R L I N E C A R E E R S Start Here – Get hands on training as FAA certi- f ied Technic ian f ix ing je ts . F inanc ia l a id i f qualified. Call for free in- formation Aviation Insti- tute of Maintenance 1- 877-818-0783 www.Fix- Jets.com

E A R N YO U R H I G H S C H O O L D I P L O M A ONLINE. Accredited - Affordable. Call Penn Fos te r H igh Schoo l : 855-781-1779

Announcements

ADOPTION – A Loving Choice for an Unplanned Pregnancy. Call Andrea 1-866-236-7638 (24/7) for adopt ion informa- tion/profiles, or view our l o v i n g c o u p l e s a t W W W . A N A A d o p - tions.com. Financial As- sistance Provided

Advertise your product or service nationwide or by region in over 7 mil- lion households in North America’s best suburbs! Place your classified ad in over 570 suburban newspapers just like this one. Call Classified Ave- nue at 888-486-2466

A PLACE FOR MOM. The nation’s largest sen- ior living referral service. Contact our trusted,local experts today! Our service is FREE/no obli- gation. CALL 1-800-717- 2905

C A M P B E L L S S O U P USERS! Thank you for sav ing the labels for Olympic Christian School! Keep up the good work! Please leave at Gazette f r o n t d e s k fo r B e r t . (Complete labels, we’ll trim to spec.) Thank you!

ERROR AND CORRECTION NOTICE

A d v e r t i s e r s p l e a s e check your ad on the first date of publication. While we are happy to make any necessar y changes or corrections, we can not be respon- sible for errors appear- ing after the first publica- tion.

PROMOTE YOUR RE- GIONAL EVENT for only pennies. Reach 2.7 mil- lion readers in newspa- pers statewide for $275 classified or $1,350 dis- play ad. Call this news- paper or (360) 515-0974 for details.

WELFARE For Animals Guild (WAG) is looking for “shor t term” foster h o m e s . P l e a s e c a l l : (360)460-6258.

Found

FOUND : Bike, men’s, Roadrunner 76, 10/20.

(360)912-2174

FOUND: Childs police car, at garage sale on W 11th. 9/26.

(360)460-1022

FOUND: Keys, Olympic Hot Springs Rd. 10/19.

(360)457-0427

FOUND: Keys, on DNR trail east of Blue Mtn Rd. Call and describe.

(360)775-9328

FOUND: Ring, Sequim Co-Op, 10/13.

(615)881-6969

Found

FOUND: Wrist support. 11th & I, 10/19. (360)460-1022

Lost

LOST: Black iPhone 4s. Soft plastic/rubber case, in Sequim on Friday.

(360)808-5422

LOST: Cat., E. 9th St. area, 10/20. Siamese Manx (360)797-1132

L O S T : K e y s , P. A . DSHS, 10/25, with key- chain (360)775-8830

L O S T YO U R P E T ? Please call us, we may have it! Olympic Penin- sula Humane Society. 452-5226. 2105 High- way 101, Port Angeles.

Professional ServicesLegal Services

DIVORCE $155. $175 with children. No court appearances. Complete preparat ion. Inc ludes custody, support, prop- er ty division and bills. BBBmember. (503) 772- 5295. www.paralegalal- te r na t i ves.com lega- [email protected]

Home ServicesProperty Maintenance

All Things Basementy!Basement Systems Inc. Call us for all of your basement needs! Water- p r o o f i n g , F i n i s h i n g , Structural Repairs, Hu- midity and Mold ControlF R E E E S T I M AT E S ! Call 1-800-998-5574

Home ServicesWindows/Glass

PUBLISHER’S NOTICE Businesses promoting home improvement, including but not limited to, electrical services, in- sulation, hardwood floors, roof- ing, carpentry, painting/wallpa- p e r i n g , p l a s t e r / d r y w a l l , construction, tile, masonry, ce- ment work or landscaping are required to operate with a con- tracting license if advertising in this section. If you have ques- t ions or concerns regarding h o m e s e r v i c e a d ve r t i s i n g , please contact the Washington State Department of Labor and Industry, toll free 1-800-647- 0982

Electronics

Dish Ne twor k – Ge t MORE for LESS! Start- ing $19.99/month (for 12 months.) PLUS Bundle & SAVE (Fast Internet for $15 more/month.) 800-278-1401

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Mail Order

CPAP/BIPAP supplies at little or no cost from Al- lied Medical Supply Net- work! Fresh supplies de- livered right to your door. Insurance may cover all costs. 800-902-9352

Mail Order

Canada Drug Center is your choice for safe and affordable medications.Our licensed Canadian mail order pharmacy will provide you with savings of up to 90% on all your medication needs. Call today 1-800-418-8975, for $10.00 off your first prescr ipt ion and f ree shipping.

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Miscellaneous

Acorn Stairlifts. The AF- FORDABLE solution to your stai rs! **Limited t ime -$250 O f f You r Stairlift Purchase!** Buy Direct & SAVE. Please call 1-800-304-4489 for FREE DVD and b ro - chure.

BEST SALE EVER! ! ! Need New Car pet or Flooring??? All this Spe- cial Number for $250.00 off. Limited Time. Free In Home Estimate!! Call Empire Today@ 1-844- 369-3371

Find the Right Carpet, F l o o r i n g & W i n d o w Treatments. Ask about our 50% off specials & our Low Price Guaran- t e e . O f fe r E x p i r e s Soon. Call now 1-888- 906-1887

KILL BED BUGS! Buy Harr is Bed Bug ki l ler C o m p l e t e Tr e a t m e n t Program/Kit. Harris Mat- tress Covers add Extra Protect ion! Avai lable: ACE Hardware. Buy On- line: homedepot.com

KILL SCORPIONS! Buy Harris Scorpion Spray. Indoor/Outdoor, Odor- less, Non-Staining. Ef- fective results begin af- t e r s p r a y d r i e s . Ava i lable : The Home Depot, Homedepot.com, ACE Hardware

SAVE ON HOME INSU- RANCE WITH CUSTO- M I Z E D C OV E R AG E . Cal l for a free quote: 855-502-3293

Musical Instruments

PUMP ORGAN: Antique Kimbal l , good shape. $250. (360)683-7664

Sneak-a-Peek

BOOKEEPER : Fu l l Charge, experienced a must. (360)683-4149

“I FOUND IT IN FREEBIES!”

Sneak-a-Peek

7 CEDARS RESORT IS NOW HIRING FOR THE

FOLLOWING PT/FT POSITIONS:

• Banquet Server• Gift Shop (on call)• Cooks• Busser/Host• Dishwasher (Nights)• Dishwashers• Slots Cashier• Totem Rewards Ca-

sino Ambassador• Table Games DealerFor more informat ion and to app ly on l ine, please visit our website at

www.7cedarsresort.com

Native American preference for

qualified candidates.

Hometown Paper

Hometown Pride

Sneak-a-Peek

Executive AssistantFull time opportunity for skil led Executive Assistant to work for Chief Physician Offi- cer. Must have 2 + years experience as an executive assistant, preferably in a health- c a r e e nv i r o n m e n t . St rong c ler ica l and people skills is a must for this important posi- tion. This is a great op- portunity to work in a fr iendly professional environment. Apply online at

www.olympicmedical.org.

YOUR TRASH IS SOMEBODY’S TREASURE.

ADVERTISE IN GARAGE SALES

Sneak-a-Peek

Manager Plant Operations and

ConstructionNewly opened, rare oppor tunity. Will be respons ib le fo r fa - ci l i t ies management functions, repair and m a i n t e n a n c e p r o - grams and leading our ac t i ve cons t ruc t ion program. Degree in engineering or related field, with five+ years’ experience in building maintenance and fa- cil it ies management, preferably in a hospital setting. Excellent su- per v isor y sk i l l s re - quired. For additionaldetails and to apply online, visit

www.olympicmedical.org

YOUR TRASH IS SOMEBODY’S TREASURE.

ADVERTISE IN GARAGE SALES

Tools

MISC: Briggs/Stratton 5000w generator, pull star t, runs great. $300 o.b.o.Water heater, 50 gal., 2 years old, lightly used, propane, electric pilot, pa id $650 new. $400 o.b.o. (650)219-3817

Wanted/Trade

OLD GUITARS WANT- ED! Gibson, Martin, Fen- der, Gretsch, Epiphone, Guild, Mosrite, Ricken- backer, Prair ie State, D’Angelico, Stromberg, a n d G i b s o n M a n d o - lins/Banjos. 1920’s thru 1980’s. TOP CASHPAID! 1-800-401-0440

TOP CA$H PAID FOR OLD ROLEX, PATEKPHILIPPE & CARTIER WATCHES! DAYTONA,SUBMARINER, GMT- MASTER, EXPLORER,M I L G AU S S, M O O N - P H A S E , DAY DAT E , etc. 1-800-401-0440

YOUR TRASH IS SOMEBODY’S TREASURE.

ADVERTISE IN GARAGE SALES

Page 30: Sequim Gazette, October 28, 2015

C-4 CountyWide Classifieds D Serving Clallam County D October 28, 2015

Call today! (360) 683-3311 • Fax (360) 683-6670

Tell us about your business!

We want to know! Your business news could be the kind of community news we want to

report to our readers. We appreciate you providing your information to us!

New business? Moving? Remodel or expansion? Won an award or certi� cation? Added a partner or manager? Have a spe-cial event, class, speaker or demonstration? A change or addition to your business?How do I submit my business news? Email: [email protected] Fax: 360-683-6670 Mail: 147 W. Washington St. Sequim WA 98382 ATTN: News Deliver: 147 W. Washington St.Questions? Call 360-683-3311

WHAT TO INCLUDE:• Name of Business• Your name• Business owner’s or

manager’s name• Type of business• Phone, address, hours• Opening date OR date of change

OR date of event(s)• Contact information (phone, email,

website)

WILDER RVYou Can Count On Us!

1536 Front St., Port Angeles • 360-457-7715www.wilderrvs.com M-F 9-6 • Sat 9-5:00

5A1424311

SALESSERVICE

CONSIGNMENTS

1 Year Trial Membershipwith each new purchase. This special offer expires Nov. 1st

WON’T LAST LONG SO HURRY IN

1 Year Trial MembershipTHOUSAND TRAILS

Call today! 683-3311

SOFT MONEYThere’s change in those cushions

$6 merchandise up to $500

private party only

With more than 15,000 readers every week, CountyWide Classifieds is the #1 local place

to buy and sell your stuff!

You’ll fi nd what you’re looking for in

360-683-3311Subscribe today!

Horses

HORSE: 9 yr old AQHA mare, broke, calm and l eve l headed . Wou ld make a good 4-H pro- ject. $2000. with tack. Please leave message.

(360)670-5307

Motorhomes

MOTORHOME: Damon ‘95 Intruder. 34’, Cum- mins Diesel, 2 air condi- tioners, satellite dish, re- built generator, all new f i l te rs and new t i res $17,000/obo.

(360)683-8142

RAVEN: ‘95, 32’ , low miles, GM turbo diesel, solar panels, great con- dition, many extras, be- low book. $12,900/obo.

(360)477-9584

TIFFIN: ‘04, Phaeton, 40’, diesel, 4 slides, full kitchen, W/D, enclosed shower, 2nd vanity in br., auto jacks, duel AC, generator, inverter, pull- out basement storage, back up camera, lots of ins ide s torage, great condition. $59,950. Se- quim. (720)635-4473.

Tents & Travel Trailers

‘02 27’ Shasta Camp trailer : Never used, in storage, $12,000 obo. 1995 Nomad, 18 ft. in s t o r a g e , $ 4 0 0 0 (360)765-3372

TRAILER: 24x8.5’ en- closed concession/car. Heat and air, $8,500.

(360)683-1260

TRAILER: ‘99 Sierra, 2 5 ’ , n e e d s T L C . $6,000/obo. 417-0803.

5th Wheels

5TH WHEEL: 2000, For- est Ranger, 24’, 6 berth, slide out, A/C. $6500.

(360)797-1458

Forest River : S ier ra Lite, ‘00, 21’ clean, 8’ slide, sleeps 6, every- thing in excellent condi- tion. $6,000.

(360)452-2148

MarineMiscellaneous

Bayliner : ‘79 Mut iny, 16’, engine needs work, $1,100/obo. Leave mes- sage.(360)452-1611

MarineMiscellaneous

BOAT: ‘88 Invader, 16’, 1 6 5 H P M e r c r u i s e r, open bow, low hours. $2,900. (360)452-5419.

B OAT : S e a r ay, 1 8 ’ , 135hp Mercury. $8,000 obo. (360)457-3743 or (360)460-0862

C-Dory: 22’ Angler mod- el, 75hp Honda, 8hp Nis- san, E-Z load trailer, like new. $16,500/obo 452- 4143 or 477-6615.

DURA: ‘86 , 14’ Alumi- num ‘81 15 hp Johnson, electric motor, new bat- t e r y, 5 g a l l o n t a n k . $2,000. (360)640-1220.

FIBERFORM: ‘78, 24’ Cuddy Cabin, 228 Mer- cruiser I/O, ‘07 Mercury 9 . 9 h p , e l e c t r o n i c s , d o w n r i g g e r s . $11,000/obo 775-0977

GLASSPLY: 19’ Cuddy cabin, inboard 470, 15 hp Johnson kicker, ra- dio, fish finder, $3,000.

(360)457-7827

Motorcycles

HARLEY DAVIDSON: ‘ 04 Low R ider. 3700 miles, loaded, $8,500.

(360)460-6780

Harley Wide Glide: ‘93we l l ma in ta ined Low miles, custom paint ex- tras. $6,800 TEXT 360- 300-7587

H/D , ‘ 05 Dyna Wide Glide, blk with lots of chrome, lots of aftermar- k e t s t u f f + e x t r a s . $9,500. (360)461-4189.

HONDA: ‘ 83 VF750 , $1,500. (360)457-0253 evenings.

Tires & Wheels

TIRES: For Logging or dump truck. 11R22.5, Goodyear, G357, new unmounted. $350. pair. (360)640-4293

AutomobilesClassics & Collectibles

BMW: ‘ 07 Z4 3 .0 S I Roadster. 47K mi les, we l l main ta ined, l i ke new. $17,999.

(360)477-4573

“I FOUND IT IN FREEBIES!”

AutomobilesClassics & Collectibles

CADILLAC: ‘84 El Dora- do Coupe 62K ml., exc. cond. 4.1L V8, $8,500.

(360)452-7377

CADILLAC: ‘85, Eldora- do Biarritz, clean inside a n d o u t . 1 0 9 k m l . $3,800. (360)681-3339.

MAZDA: ‘88, RX 7, con- vertable, nice, fresh mo- tor and tans. $7,000.

(360)477-5308

VO L K S WAG O N : ‘ 7 8 Beetle convertable. Fuel injection, yellow in color. $9000. (360)681-2244

VW: ‘85 Cabriolet, con- vertable., Red, new tires / b a t t e r y , 5 s p . $1,900/obo

(360)683-7144

AutomobilesOthers

ACURA : ‘ 11 , MDX 1 Owner Low Miles, excel- lent condition 4wd, 57k miles, new battery, new tires, call or text Michael. $29,500.

(360)808-2291

ACURA: ‘98 Model 30. 171K mi. Loaded. Runs g o o d , l o o k s g o o d . $2,300. 681-4672

AU T O I N S U R A N C E S TA RT I N G AT $ 2 5 / MONTH! Call 877-929- 9397

AutomobilesOthers

CHRY: ’04 PT Cruiser - 77K Miles, loaded, pow- er roof, new tires, looks great, runs great, clean, s t rong, safe, re l iable transportation. call and leave message $5,200.

(360)457-0809

DODGE: ‘73, Dart, good cond i t ion , r uns we l l , bench sea t , 88K ml . $5,000. (360)797-1179.

FORD : ‘05 Focus Hatch back. Clean and reliable, 122K mi. $5,500 obo.

(360)912-2225

HONDA: ‘08 Civic EX-L sedan. Auto, A/C, pow- er, leather, sunroof. 75K mi.. $13,000. 582-6613

HYUNDAI: ‘92 Sonata, l ow mi les, 5 sp. de - pendable. $1,250.

(360)775-8251

MAZDA: ‘01 Miata. Sil- ver w/beige leather in- terior. 53K mi. $8,000. (360)808-7858

SMART CAR: ‘09 23k miles, Barbus, loaded, $7,900. (360)344-4173

TOYOTA: ‘14 Pr ius C. 1200 mi les, l ike new, with warranty. $16,900.

(360)683-2787

TOYOTA : ‘ 98 Camr y, 217K ml. 2 owner car. $3,700/obo.

(360)928-9645

VW: ‘86 Cabriolet, con- ver tible. Wolfberg Edi- tion, all leather interior, new top. Call for details. $4,000. (360)477-3725.

AutomobilesOthers

You cou ld save over $500 off your auto insu- rance. It only takes a few minutes. Save 10% by adding proper ty to quote. Call Now! 1-888- 498-5313

Pickup TrucksOthers

CHEV: ‘02, Avalanche 1/2 ton, 5.3 L, tow pkg, 4x4, air bags. leather, excellent in and out. 84k m i . , $ 1 2 , 5 0 0 / o b o . ( 9 0 7 ) 2 0 9 - 4 9 4 6 o r (360)504-2487

CHEV: ‘95 3/4 ton, 4x4 ex. cab, long bed. with canopy. $3,000. Sequim

(425)220-1929

CHEVY: ‘89 Silverado, full bed, 74K miles, new tires, runs great. $2500. (360)504-1949

FORD: ‘08 Ranger. 4 door, 4x4 with canopy, stick shift. $16,000.

(360)477-2713

FORD: ‘90, F250, runs good, new tires, $1,500.

(360)452-7746

GMC: ‘91 2500. Long bed, auto. 4x2, body is straight. $4,100 obo.

(360)683-2455

Sport Utility VehiclesOthers

CHEVY: (2) Suburbans. ‘87 and ‘83. $500 ea. (360)928-9436

C H E V Y : ‘ 9 9 , Ta h o e , 4x4, 4 dr. all factory op- tions. $3,500. (360)452- 4156 or (361)461-7478.

Sport Utility VehiclesOthers

GMC : ‘95 Yukon, 4x4, good body, runs wel l . Winter ready. Studded t i res, leather, loaded. $1,600/obo.

(360)461-4898

JEEP: ‘01 Grand Chero- kee, runs good, clean, good tires. $3850.

(360)683-8799

KIA: ‘08 Rondo LX V6, low miles. Auto., loaded runs great. $6800/obo.

(360)460-1207

NISSAN: ‘00 Exterra XE 4x4. Runs great, has all the extras, yellow with yellow leather int., new Toyo tires and custom alloy wheels. Must see! 2 7 1 K m i l e s . K B B a t $2,800. Want to trade for commuter car, must be reliable and economical. (360)477-2504 eves.

Vans & MinivansOthers

CHEV: ‘03 Astro Cargo Van , 102 ,000 m i l es , $4,500 o.b.o.

(360)477-8591

CHEVY: ‘06 Uplander, nice cond. 92K miles. $6,500. (360)683-1260

FORD: ‘90 Econol ine van, 1 ton, runs and drives good. $750.

(360)457-4383

THE RULES: Free to subscribers of the Gazette; $1.00 per ad for non-subscribers. Multiple items OK, but grand total cannot to exceed $100. No pets, firewood or farm produce. Private party items only. There is a two ad limit per household per month. Ads may be submitted through e-mail, mail or dropped off at our office. Freebies are NOT accepted over the phone. For ads which don’t qualify for Freebies, ask us about our budget rates. Please, no phone calls, thank you. Drop-off or mail your Ad: CountyWide Classifieds 147 W. Washington St. Sequim WA 98382 E-mail us: [email protected].

All merchandise up to $100

Advertise for free! Advertise for free! Advertise for free!

CountyWide

FREEBIESWeekly Deadline: Thursday at 5 p.m. Ads received after that time will run the following week.

ABRASIVE BLASTER: Rand 20 lb, l i ke new. $65. (360)477-3834

AMMO: Federal Premi- um 25-06, (3) boxes 260 REM, (1) box. $25.ea

(360)808-6430

ANCHOR: Danforth type and chain. $60.

(360)457-9037

A N T E N N A : W i l s o n trucker, cellular, excel- lent condition. $20.

(360)531-0735.

ART: Rie Munoz “Mend- ing the Nets” very nice frame. $95. 681-7579

BABY JOGGER: ( 3 ) wheels, older by racing stroller. $40. 582-9703

BALDOR GRINDER: 1 hp., 8” wheels, heavy duty on stand. $75.

(360)452-7743

BIKE: Schwinn 3 speed. $75. (949)241-0371

BIRD CAGES: Decora- tive, victorian themed, must see. $20.-$50.

(360)379-2902

BIRD FEEDERS: With accessories and 4 way shepherds hook. $40.

(360)457-4022

BOOKS: Harry Potter, ha rdcover, #1 -7 se t . $69. (360)775-0855

BOOTS: Women’s, Browning, leather, worn once, size 7C, $50. (360)582-1280

B OX I N G BAG : Tu f - Wear, heavy bag. $45.

(360)582-0180

CAMERA LENS: Vivitar ser ies 1 , 70-210mm, Nicon mount, new. $70.

(360)808-6430

CAMPING COT: L ike new, sturdy, used two times. $40. 928-9764

CHAIR: Black leather, w i t h a r ms, r ec l i nes , swivels, metal base.$95. (360)681-7996

CHRISTMAS LIGHTS:Vintage C9 lights plus replacement bulbs. $10.

(949)241-0371

CHRISTMAS TREE: 6’, , f i b e r o p t i c , 2 c o l o r wheels, like new. $65.

(360)683-7161

C H R I S T M A S T R E E : Ceramic, 20” tall, beauti- ful. $35. (360)683-7161

C H R I S T M A S T R E E : Pre- l i t , 7.5 f t spruce. $25. (360)582-1280

COFFEE TABLE: Oak, 54” x 24” x 15”. $20.

(360)775-0855

COMPOSTER: Revolv- ing. $25.obo.

(360)681-5217

CRAB POT: Large com- mercial. $10.

(360)683-6242

DISHES: Candlewick, 22 serving pieces. $90 all. (360)683-9295

DEHYDRATOR: Elec- tric, works great, 5 trays and timer. $35.

(360)928-9764

DOLLS: Collectible, Vic- torian themed, must see. $20 - $40.

(360)379-2902

DOORS: (2) New 28” pre-hung L/R. $20.each.

(360)809-2771

DRESSER: Very good condition, (9) drawers with handles. $100.

(360)683-6242

D RY E R : M e d s i z e , stackable, Maytag. 32” tall, 23” wide, excel con- dition $100. 457-9002

DUCK DECOYS: Carry bag, goose silhouettes, small blind. $40.

(360)460-9226

EXERCISE MACHINE: Nordic Track, Special Medalist Edition 2490. $75. (360)681-4275

FIGURINES: (7) co l - lectable, starwars, mar- tian, startrek, superman. $75.obo. 452-6842

FLOAT COAT: Great for s a fe t y a n d w a r m t h , men’s medium. $10.

(360)457-6431

FOLDING BIKE: 20 ” Port runner, very good condition. $100.

(360)452-2264

FOREMAN GRILL: Ex- cellent condition. $10.

(509)366-4353

F R E E : L a t ex p a i n t , many different colors for small projects.

(360)477-8474

FREE: Player p iano. O.W. Wuer tz, std., ac- tion. (360)683-7664

F R E E : S i n g l e p a n e glass 22x36.

(360)797-1053

FREE: Top soil. about 1 yard. You load and haul.

(360)683-1646

FREEZER: Upright, $50. (360)457-5827

FRIDGE/FREEZER: Me- dium size, good condi- tion. $100. 477-4838

GLOVES: Wool, (1) pair, fingerless with flap, Thin- sulated, (1) pair with fin- gers. $10. 457-6494

GOLF GAME: Electronic 18 hole, Sega, four peo- ple can play, great gift. $15. (360)452-1106

HEATER: 1500 watts. $50. (360)928-9659

JACKET: Leather, men’s medium, zip lin- ing, perfect condit ion. $40. (360)457-6431

JACK: New, 2 ton, hy- draulic trolley jack. $20.

(949)232-3392

LADDER: Ex tens ion. $20. (360)809-2771

LIFT CHAIR: $25. (360)928-9659

LEAF BLOWER: Gas powered. $60.firm

(360)460-2105

LEAF BLOWER: Mulch- er, vacum, Worx brand, electric. $45 681-3522.

LIGHTING: Minka brand vanity bathroom lighting, (4)lights. $90.

(949)232-3392

LUGGAGE: (2) p iece matched , so f t - s ided . $65. (360)477-4755

MISC: Microwave oven, n e w, c o l o r T V a n d stereo. $90 o.b.o.

(360)681-3339

PILLOWS: (2) bed pil- lows. $10. 504-2160

PLANT STAND: I ron. $10. (360)681-5217

PLATE: Collection (8) Birds Ltd., Ed., Hamilton. $45. (360)681-4275

POKER TABLE TOP: e igh t pos i t ions, w i th chips, new. $50.

(360)452-7377

PORTABLE SPEAKER: System and charger for iPod & MP3 p layers. $50. (360)457-3274

POWER SAW: Makita recipro with blades, like new. $50.obo. (360)775-9631

PRESSURE COOKER: New, 5 quart. $15.

(360)202-0928

PRESSURE COOKER:Presto 6 quart. $25.

(360)452-1106

PURSE: Seatt le Sea- hawks, new. $100.

(360)452-7647

RADIO FLYER: All ter- r a i n c a r g o w a g o n , unopened. $95. firm

(360)344-3445

RAIN BARRELS: White, plastic. $25. 775-5269

RECLINER: Tan leather, large. $75. 775-5269

ROD: Fenw ick FS70 casting rod in hard case, like new. $60.

(206)550-2094

ROTISSERIE: Show- time, lightly used, extra baskets & accesories. $35. (360)531-0735

ROTO TILLER18”, Ariens, $75.(360)452-7743

RUBBER STAMPS: For crafting, lot of (26). $50.

(360)457-3274

SCALE: Hunters pocket balance meat scale with hook, wghs up to 336lbs. $25. (206)550-2094

S H E E T S : F l a n n e l , Queen, Red Cardinal. $10. (509)366-4353

SHELVING: White mela- mine, 12” X 72”, hanging hardware, like new. $45.

(360)460-3253

SWING: With slide. $75. (360)452-7225

Ski lsaw: 7 1 /4 inch. Mag77 Lt. New. $100.

(360)460-5762

SLEIGH: Pretty wicket metal, Display for store or party. $50. 582-0180

SPEAKERS: For a com- puter, A l tec-Lans ing. $45.obo. 681-2643

SPEAKERS: “Technics” 200 watts. $100. for pair. other sets $5.-$10.

(360)452-9685

SPRINGS: Overload for Toyota Tacoma. $50.

(360)417-1930

TA B L E WA R E : N e w, plastic, plates, utensils, cups, etc. $10.

(360)477-4838

T E A K E T T L E : c o l - lectable, copper wi th brass trim. $20.

(360)681-7579

TEXACO BANKS: vari- ous models and years, mint in boxes. $20.-$50.

(360)452-2264

TIRES: (2 ) s tudded , P2115/25R14 $30. (2) tires/wheels P185/70/r14 $40. (360)477-3834

TIRES: (4) 235/75R15, on Ford F-150 wheels, good tread. $50.

(907)738-3940

TOOL SET: B lack & Decker 24V, dr il l, tr im saw, battery,case and more. $50. 797-1106

TRAIN: Lionel Polar Ex- press train set, used 3 times, good condition. $50.firm (360)344-3445

T R AY S : C o c a C o l a , some vintage, (6). $5 ea.

(360)683-9295

TRIMMER: String trim- mer, cordless-electr ic. Recharger, like new.$50.

(360)681-3522

TRUNK: Antique Steam- er trunk, mid-sized, with latches and rust. $50.

(360)460-3253

TRUNK: Wooden, leath- er handles. $100 o.b.o.

(360)683-6519

T.V: 27 ” s te reo f l a t - screen with built in dvd and vhs recorder. $50.

(360)452-9685

VINTAGE BANK: Cast iron, basketball player, needs fixing. $27.obo.

(360)452-6842

WATER FILTERS: (3) Amana, model wf4015. $100. (360)452-7377

Wii: and Wii fit with bal- ance board, includes (2) remotes, (1) nunchuck. $75. firm (360)681-5127

WOOD TRUNK: O ld , metal corners and trim, double front hasps. $75.

(360)670-3310

“I FOUND IT IN FREEBIES!”

FOR MORE INFORMATION PLEASE CALL

683-3311

“Nobody does it better.”

Page 31: Sequim Gazette, October 28, 2015

CountyWide Classifieds D Serving Clallam County D October 28, 2015 C-5

For aHealthy & Beautiful

yard this spring, now is the time for clean-ups!

KEN REED683-1677

Licensed & Insured

LAWN SERVICE

1206

108

ROOF MANAGEMENTNew & Re-RoofMaintenance & RepairCertificationsInspections

ROOFM**035P2

RALPH W. CLOSE(360) 683-2272

195 DEER RIDGE LANESEQUIM, WA 98382

ROOFING

1206

316

Hytinen Landscaping25 YEARS EXPERIENCE

Husband & wife ready to serve all your

landscaping needs.

683-3058HytinL*977JA

LANDSCAPING

1205

959

SCREENS

LIC#PENIN*961CF

220 Carlsborg Rd. Sequim, WA

SCREENS

(360) 681-2442 1206

111

VACUUMFactory authorized service center for

Riccar, Fantom, Royal, Miele.We repair “ALL”makes & models.

Great selection of new and reconditioned vacuums.Trade-ins welcomed.

250 W. Washington, Sequim(between 2nd & 3rd)

681-7420 1202

333

AWS Certified WeldersGates & Operating SystemsTrailer Hitches • Handrails

Portable Welding • RepairsFabrication • Structural Steel

Look for theBIG American Flag!81 Hooker Rd., #9 • Sequim

360-681-0584 • Fax: 360-681-4465Cont. Reg. ALLFOW1023CB

www.allformwelding.com

WELDING AT ITS BEST!

1206

162

MAKE YOUR BUSINESS EVERYONE’S BUSINESS!

SERVICES DIRECTORY

Residential - Commercial - Industrial

349 West Washington Street • Sequim Insured, licensed, bondedJARMUEI*438BH

(360) 683-4104Serving the Peninsula since 1956

ELECTRICAL

1206

163

Serving the Olympic Peninsula since 1966,30+ years experience

EXCAVATINGBoone’s Does All Phases of ExcavatingSitework, from Start to Finish• Driveway Repairs/Drainage • Brush Chipping / Land Clearing• Lot Development / Driveways / Utilities

General ContractorsCommercial & ResidentialProfessional Results

Mike & Brian CameronCell # 670-1130/460-6026 • Office (360) 452-9392 • Fax 452-7440

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Legal NoticesGeneral

IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON

IN AND FOR CLALLAM COUNTYIN THE MATTER OF THE ESTATE

OFORVILLE EUGENE GRAHAM

Deceased.No. 15-4-00336-4

NOTICE TO CREDITORS

The personal representative named below has been appointed and has qualified as personal rep- resentative of this estate. Persons having claims against the decedent must, prior to the time such claims would be barred by any otherwise applicable statute of limitations, serve their claims on the per- sonal representative or the attorneys of record at the address stated below and file an executed copy of the claim with the Clerk of this Court within four months after the date of first publication of this no- tice or within four months after the date of the filing of the copy of this Notice with the Clerk of the Court, whichever is later or, except under those prov is ions inc luded in RCW 11.40.011 and 11.40.013, the claim will be forever barred. This bar is effective as to the claims against both the pro- bate assets and nonprobate assets of the dece- dent. Date of filing copy of notice to creditors, October 8, 2015. Date of first publication, October 14, 2015

Dennis J. GrahamPersonal Representative

Judith H. Peace Attorney for thePersonal Representative720 E. Washington, Suite 109P.O. Box 2315Sequim, WA 98382(360) 683-6984Pub: SG October 14, 21, 28, 2015Legal No. 662357

Case No. 15 4 00354 2PROBATE NOTICE TO CREDITORS

RCW 11.40.030IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OFTHE STATE OF WASHINGTON

IN AND FOR THE COUNTY OF CLALLAMIn re the Estate of:ELAINE MAE FETEN, DECEASEDThe Personal Representative named below has been appointed as Personal Representative of this estate. Any person having a claim against the dece- dent must, before the time the claim would be barred by any otherwise applicable statute of limita- tions, present the claim in the manner as provided in RCW 11.40.070 by serving on or mailing to the Pe rsona l Rep resen ta t i ve o r t he Pe rsona l Representative’s attorney at the address stated be- low a copy of the claim and filing the original claim with the court. The claim must be presented within the later of: (1) Thirty days after the Personal Rep- resentative served or mailed the notice to the credi- tor as provided under RCW 11.40.020(1)(c); or (2) four months after the date of first publication of the notice. If the claim is not presented within this frame, the claim is forever barred, except as other- wise provided in RCW 11.40.051 and 11.40.060. This bar is effective as to claims against decedent’s probate and non-probate assets.DATE OF FIRST PUBLICATION: October 28, 2015PERSONAL REPRESENTATIVE: Dennis Duane FetenATTORNEY FOR PERSONALREPRESENTATIVE:W. Jeff Davis, WSBA, #12246of BELL & DAVIS PLLCADDRESS FOR MAILING OR SERVICE: PO Box 510Sequim, WA 98382 Pub: SG October 28, November 4, 11, 2015 Legal No: 664171

CLALLAM COUNTY FIRE PROTECTION

DISTRICT 3NOTICE OF SPECIAL M E E T I N G C l a l l a m County Fire Protection District No. 3 Board of CommissionersPlease be advised that Clallam County Fire Pro- tection District No. 3 will hold a public hearing to take comments on i ts proposed 2016 f iscal year revenues and bud- get. The hearing will be held on Tuesday, No- vember 10, 2015, at a Special Meeting of the Board of Commissioners beginning at 1:00 p.m. and held at the head- quarters station located at 323 N. 5th Ave., Se- quim, WA 98382.DATED: Oc tober 22 , 2015Clallam County Fire Pro- tection District No. 3Ch ie f Ben And rews, Secretary to the BoardPub.: SG. October 28, November 4, 2015Legal No: 665082

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Page 32: Sequim Gazette, October 28, 2015

C-6 CountyWide Classifieds D Serving Clallam County D October 28, 2015

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Sequim

Trinity United Methodist Church

10th Christmas Lane Fair

Saturday, November 14, 20159:00am-3:00pm

� More than 40 local crafters� Chili, soup and pie at the Holly Daze Cafe

� Bake tableTrinity United Methodist Church

100 S. Blake Ave., Sequim

Jamestown S’Klallam Tribe’sJamestown S’Klallam Tribe’sJamestown S’Klallam Tribe’s

Saturday, November 79am-4pm

Red Cedar Hall Tribal Community Center

1033 Old Blyn Highway, Sequim

Sixth Annual

Featuring25 vendors

selling handmade

wares, a bake sale,

and raffles!

(on water side of Highway 101 just east of the Longhouse Market and 7 Cedars Casino)

All proceeds from our popular Bake Sale and Raffles of Vendor items go to replenish the Tribal Food Bank. If you

prefer to donate directly, please bring non-perishable food and/or personal hygiene items to the bin located in

the lobby of Red Cedar Hall during the Fair.

Native and Native and Native and Native and Native and Native and Non-Native Non-Native Non-Native Non-Native Non-Native Non-Native Holiday FairHoliday FairHoliday FairHoliday FairHoliday FairHoliday Fair

Sequim

P.E.O. Chapter JC, SequimProceeds Support Education for Women

7th Annual

Saturday, November 79 a.m.-1 p.m.

Sequim Community Church foyer950 N. 5th Ave.

Holiday Gifts & CraftsHomemade Baked Goods, Books and“Home for Christmas” Basket Raf� e

Saturday, November 7

P.E.O. Holiday Bazaar

Sequim

November 7th • 9am-4pmPioneer Park387 E. Washington

Open Rain or Shine or Snow!

2nd Annual

Holiday Bazaar

Handmade Crafts by Local Artisans

Frosty’s Flakes

Sequim

Handmade Crafts • Silent AuctionSoup & Pie LuncheonBakery • Boutique

Friday, November 6th • 9am-3pmSaturday, November 7th • 9am-2pm

121 E. Maple St., Sequim

St. Joseph Church

AUTUMN BAZAAR

Sequim100 S. Blake Ave., Sequim

Sequim

Sequim

Nov. 21st • 9am-3pmGuy Cole Center, Carrie Blake Park

Holiday Market

“Shop Local this Holiday Season!”

9x16

Saturday & Sunday,November 21st & 22nd

10am-4pm171 Carlsborg Rd., Sequim

Sponsored by: � e Greywolf Elementary School PTA

For more information call Dede 670-1320

• 70+ Handicra� s Booths• Live Music Performances

• Santa will have gi� s for � rst 500 kids, 12 & younger on Sunday

• Kitchen by � e Blackbird Co� ee House

Sequim

Greywolf Elementary

Holiday Bazaar

Sequim

Sequim High SchoolBand Boosters Annual

Down Home Holiday Bazaar

at Sequim High School Gym

Fri. & Sat., Nov. 27th & 28th 10am-4pm

Featuring QualityHandmade Gifts & Crafts

Several Raf� es!Proceeds bene� t the Sequim HS Band

601 N. Sequim Ave., Sequim Handicap accessible

30+ Fabulous Vendors

Sequim

Shipley Center (formerly Sequim Senior Activity Center)

921 E. Hammond Street, Sequim

Fri. & Sat., November 6th & 7th9:00am-4:00pm

Lunch available for purchase, starting at 11am

Holiday Bazaar