Wednesday, May 2, 2012

We have a new website

Looking for a peek at today's paper? 
Go to  www.laconnerweeklynews.com

With the help of Derek Furman, we quietly launched a "real" website last week. We plan to keep linked to this blog, but as we get better at this, we'll be adding content to LaConnerWeeklyNews.com.
Right now it has news, sports and classifieds. The Police Blotter will be another regular feature.

Photo by Don Coyote

Photo by Mickey Bambrick

Photo by Karla Reynolds

And finally ...
RIP Mr. Nibbles
Steve Pierce shares a tragic tale...

Wednesday, April 25, 2012

in the April 25, 2012 issue ...

Reasons people love La Conner:
We're in bloom!                Photo by Don Coyote

Brody's lunchtime puppet show    Photo by Kirsten Morse

Swinomish canoes on the channel      Coyote photo
Thrilling rides                                  Coyote photo
We're blooming!                   Karla Reynolds photo
Waterfront dining                  Coyote photo

We're in for a dry spell...
Homeport Liquor will close on Saturday, May 5 – two weeks earlier than originally planned.
As one of 163 contract liquor stores, the La Conner Homeport Liquor’s inventory is all owned by the state, which will be out of the liquor business May 31, since voters approved Initiative 1183 in November.
For La Conner, there will be no retail liquor available in town for more than three weeks, until at least June 1, when Pioneer Market expects to start carrying spirits in addition to the beer and wine already available there. In today's paper!

Tribal tideland ordinance public hearing set for Thursday
People concerned with shorelines on the Swinomish Reservation will have a chance to voice their opinions on a revision of the tribe’s proposed tidelands ordinance tomorrow, Thursday, April 26.
The Swinomish Indian Tribal Community Planning Commission will hold a public hearing at the Swinomish Social Services building at 4 p.m.
Longer trek on La Conner transit
By Adrian Sharpe
Proposed changes to public bus routes may have La Conner residents spending more time on trips to Mount Vernon and back.
Skagit Transit will hold several public meetings to introduce the proposed changes and take public comments. The meeting in La Conner is scheduled for Wednesday, May 3, from 5 to 6 p.m., in Maple Hall.
The schedule changes would take effect in September. Read Adrian's story in today's paper.

Photo by Scott McDade
M*A*S*H comes to La Conner Auditorium By Scott McDade
   Remember the TV sitcom M*A*S*H? Or the 1970 blockbuster film starring Elliot Gould, Tom Skerrit and Donald Sutherland?
   If you do, you've already been introduced to some of the craziest and most lovable military doctors and nurses you'd ever want to know.
   Next weekend, May 4, 5, and 6, you'll get to meet them all again at La Conner Auditorium as the high school drama department presents the stage version of this beloved story.
   M*A*S*H will be performed three times. The show opens Friday evening at 7:30 p.m., Saturday's matinee is at 12 noon. The final performance is Sunday evening at 7 p.m.
   Tickets for the production are $5 per person. You can reserve seats by calling Vicki Jones at the district office, 466-3171. Tickets will also be available at the door. you won't want to miss this!
More M*A*S*H                     Scott McDade photo
More M*A*S*H                     Scott McDade photo


From the Police Blotter
3:30 p.m.: Tourist teasing – The Sheriffs Office received a report of two fellows hiding in the bushes near the area where tulip buses stop at the intersection of South First Street and Washington Ave. in La Conner. They guys were yelling and whistling at the visitors, so the deputy picked them up and  transported them away from town.

Pick up the paper today in all the usual spots or from one of our red news stands. Don't have enough quarters? No worries! Our stands also accept rupees from India!





Braves Sports April 25, 2012


Photo by Karla Reynolds
La Conner linksters not rusty despite rain, long layoff
By Bill Reynolds
They say the best things in life are well worth the wait.
And for golfers, that includes a day on the course – even in the pouring rain.
The La Conner High golf teams returned to action Thursday after going nearly a month without a match, and had little trouble shaking off the rust.
The Braves kept their undefeated season intact, easily downing visiting Grace Academy and Highline Christian in a downpour at nearby Similk Beach Golf Course.
The Lady Braves, meanwhile, boasted medalist Hilary Edwards, who shot a 59, one stroke under the round shot by teammate Bailey Wyles.
"I'm proud of the effort," La Conner head coach Sean Skiles said afterward. "The rain made it tough, but everybody stuck with it and really turned in some impressive scores considering the elements."
La Conner's Jake Silva took top honors on the boys' side, carding a 37. Teammate Brendan McLeod fired a 39.
The Braves' Spencer Finley finished at 42, while Wilson Crawford shot a 44 in his varsity debut.
Pretty remarkable scores given there was standing water on some greens, and the
La Conner boys were without three of their top five players.
"It was nice to get a couple of the JV golfers a chance to compete in a varsity match," said Skiles, "without a noticeable drop off in team score."
The Braves finished with a combined count of 210. Grace Academy was 32 strokes back, at 242. Highline Christian golfers sloshed their way to a 267.
"It was very wet and never stopped raining," said La Conner assistant coach Kelly Silva. "So a team score of 210 was pretty awesome all things considered."
There will be little idle time for La Conner golfers from here on out. The LCHS teams were slated to host Lopez late Tuesday, then return the favor tomorrow, Thursday, afternoon.
La Conner wraps up the week Friday at Snohomish in a dual match with Northwest Christian.
Photo by Karla Reynolds
La Conner thinclads sweep home track meet
By Bill Reynolds
It was two weeks past Good Friday.
But a good Friday, indeed, for the La Conner High track teams.
The Braves boys' and girls' squads each won their half of the five-school La Conner Invitational Track Meet Friday afternoon at Whittaker Field.
The Braves outdistanced runner-up Crescent 122-77, with league rival Concrete, 67, claiming third place in the boys' meet.
On the girls' side, La Conner edged Concrete 110-96 for the meet title, with Crescent, 67,  placing third.
Friday Harbor, 30,  and Christian Faith, 17, rounded out the girls' field.
Christian Faith, 34, and Friday Harbor, 33, waged a close battle for fourth place in the boys' competition.
La Conner's Landy James, Nathan Sybrandy, Jamall James, and Nathan Parker were double victors for the Braves, whose mile relay team also captured top honors.
Landy James claimed the high jump with a personal best leap of 6'-4", easily besting Crescent's Donovan Christie, who finished second with 5’10”.
James, a senior, also won the javelin by a wide margin. His winning heave of 167'-5" was more than 24 feet better than the second best effort, a toss of 143'-0" by Quenton Wolfer of Crescent.
Sybrandy won both the mile and two-mile.
The La Conner distance standout hit the tape in five-minutes flat in the 1600 meters. That was seven seconds better than Friday Harbor's Jose Guerrero.
Sybrandy dominated the 3200 meter field, clocking an impressive 11:19.00, nearly two minutes faster than the rest of the field.
An added bonus in the two-mile was the performance of La Conner sophomores Jack Borusinski, Alec Azure, and Alex Wirth, all of whom placed in the top five.
Jamall James took gold in the long jump with 19'-6" and 110-meter high hurdles at 16:16, winning both events handily. No one was within a foot of him in the long jump. And James was nearly a full second better than Crescent's Matthew Waldrip in the hurdles.
Parker took both the shot put (43'-8") and discus (119'-10") in impressive fashion. His distance in the discus was more than 14 feet better than the second place finisher, Josiah Martin of Concrete.
The Braves' quartet of Todd Hoagland, Jamall James, Mitchell Grant, and Dahlton Zavala added to the La Conner point total by cruising to a win in the 4x400 meter relay.
Their time of 3:43.00 was nearly two seconds faster than that posted by Crescent's mile relay entry.
Grant and Zavala each earned silver in solo events, placing second in the 400 and 200 meters, respectively. Grant's time was :55.60, just back of Hoagland's winning pace. Zavala clocked a :24.38 in a race won by Concrete's Andy Aiken at :23.94.
La Conner's depth was a key factor in the girls' half of the meet.
Kelsie Crawford had a role in four wins, pacing the Lady Braves with triumphs in the 100 meters at :13.75 and long jump of 12'-9" while also running legs of La Conner's meet-best sprint and mile relay entries.
Crawford led a 1-2-3 Lady Braves finish in the 100 as Priscilla Ponce-Venegas placed second at :13.85), just ahead of teammate Madi Cavanaugh’s  :14.44).
Katie McKnight, Emily Anderson, and Ponce-Venegas likewise turned in blue ribbon performances for the Lady Braves.
McKnight was first in the 200 meters at :28.68 winning by more than two seconds over Concrete's Thea O'Brien.
Anderson captured the triple jump with 32'-2.5", an event which saw La Conner teammate Amber Drye place fifth.
Ponce-Venegas sped to a convincing win in the 300 meter hurdles. Her time of :50.75 was almost three seconds faster than her nearest rival, Crescent's Kellie Belford. 
Ponce-Venegas, McKnight, and Anderson joined Crawford on La Conner's winning 4x100 meter relay team, clocking a time of :53.44. 
Ponce-Venegas also finished fourth in the javelin with 93'-7", three slots ahead of McKnight, who turned in a toss of 77'-0".
McKnight, Anderson, Crawford, and Cavanaugh then teamed to claim the 4x400 meter relay, posting a time of 4:29.06, nearly a half-minute faster than second place Friday Harbor.
Cavanaugh, meanwhile, was a strong second to Crawford in the long jump.
On a busy day, Anderson also finished second in the 100 meter hurdles, a finish matched by La Conner junior Sammie Mesman in the 1600 meters.
Mesman at 6:19.00 was just one tick back of mile winner Kaitlyn Smith, who finished in 6:18.00.
Mesman also joined Lydia Lenning, Marina Kochuten, and Victoria O'Brien for a second place finish in the 800 meter relay, turning in a time of 2:08.34.
Lenning further added to the Lady Braves' tally with a third place finish at 15:38.37 in the 3200 meters.
In related notes:
La Conner head track coach Peter Voorhees said the meet's highlight was the mile relays for both the boys and girls. Braves' sprinter Jamall James closed a 30-meter gap on the leader and seized the lead going into the final exchange. Anchor Dahlton Zavala held on for the win. Voorhees said the Lady Braves met their pre-race goal in terms of time, and are now the sixth ranked 4x400 group in the State. "The girls' relay was a great example," said Voorhees, "of the athletes choosing to make something happen, working hard for it, and pushing themselves through to their goal. I'm very proud of them."
Another highlight, stressed Voorhees, was the performance of Robert Duckworth, who established personal bests in four events.
Voorhees was grateful for the community's support of the meet. "The people in La Conner do a great job supporting school activities. I'd like to thank everyone who came out to help. It was our last home meet for our seniors and they all had a great day."
Photo by Lauren Reynolds
Braves defense falters in two tough losses
By Bill Reynolds
Baseball is a game that can drive coaches batty – in more ways than one.
Just ask La Conner's Jeremiah LeSourd, who last week saw his club turn in solid mound work and grind out several quality at-bats.
But it was their defense that let the Braves down in tough losses to Concrete and Blaine.
La Conner committed critical errors at crucial points of an eventual 5-3 setback to the Lions, a game marred by wet playing conditions.
"The game was close throughout," said LeSourd, "but errors were the difference. Weather conditions also played a factor, and made things difficult."
Braves' hurlers Taylor Swanson and Tanner Cyr were poised on the mound Thursday while facing a good hitting Concrete team.
"They really performed well and kept their composure," LeSourd stressed.
Cyr also helped his cause with a base hit. 
Hayden Schmidt led La Conner with a pair of base knocks, while Dakota Hartley lined a run-scoring single.
Cyr swung a hot bat Saturday against Blaine, as well. He went three-for-three at the plate, with a double, a pair of singles, and two runs scored in a 14-3 loss.
Erick Reinstra likewise delivered three hits, while Wil James laced two safeties in four trips.
But, again, it was defensive miscues that sealed La Conner's fate.
Starter Matt McCauley and Reinstra, who came on in relief, were victimized by five Braves' errors.
"Matt got his first start on the mound," said LeSourd, "and did well. Erick pitched the final three innings and was very aggressive."
Despite the twin defeats, LeSourd justifiably has a positive outlook on the rest of the campaign.
"Our pitchers are getting experience and improving with each appearance," he said Monday. "Their confidence will be an asset in the playoffs."
It's much the same scenario on offense.
"The Braves' attack is improving," LeSourd told La Conner Weekly News, "with the hitters having solid at-bats. We just need to come through with runners on base."
The key will be shoring up the defense, he said.
"That's where we must improve if we're going to make a run in the playoffs," LeSourd noted. 
It's a mission, he said, that can be accomplished.
"We're working on staying focused and thinking a play ahead," said LeSourd. "When we can do that we'll begin to execute on a more consistent basis."
The Braves (3-4 in league) were scheduled to resume play Monday at home against longtime rival Darrington.
The struggling Loggers entered the week with a 1-5 conference mark.
La Conner is slated to entertain Lummi today, Wednesday, in a non-league twinbill before traveling Friday to Coupeville. 



Wednesday, April 18, 2012

in the April 18, 2012 issue



Photo by Don Coyote
Photo by Don Coyote
Parade, sunshine and tulips; a recipe for invasion
Writer Adrian Sharpe tells what it is like in La Conner on a sunny day, when there are acres of tulips in bloom around the town. Throw in a parade and we have lots of company around here! The local merchants and restaurants owners have been pretty happy as the tulip tourists mean business is in bloom, too.

Boardwalk funding in new State budget
For decades, people in La Conner have envisioned a boardwalk running past all the shops and restaurants along the length of the downtown waterfront.
The boardwalk is finally on track to start taking shape this year. Last week the state Legislature approved a jobs package that includes $750,000 in the state capital improvements budget to start building the boardwalk, said Sen. Mary Margaret Haugen, D- Camano Island.
La Conner Mayor Ramon Hayes said that means the boardwalk construction could begin late this summer or in early fall. In today's paper!

Photo by Jim Itter
Oops!
A semi truck trailer parked on the south side of Caledonia Street near the Swinomish Channel, the truck, owned by Alpac Components was loaded with wooden walls the company manufactures when it suddenly tipped over Friday morning. An employee had un-hitched the trailer from the truck cab portion to switch out cabs, when the trailer just flopped over onto its side. Writer Adrian Sharpe explains this Friday the 13th "mystery" in today's paper.

Saturday's 
Not so Impromptu Parade
Photo by Don Coyote
Photo by Don Coyote
Photo by Don Coyote


From the Police Blotter:
6:02 p.m.: Bothersome boater – A business owner on First Street in La Conner, complained that a live-aboard boater was disturbing customers by shouting and playing loud music. Deputies warned the boat owner that he would be cited for disorderly conduct if they had to come back.

Braves Sports, April 18, 2012

Photo by Kirsten Morse
The South Skagit Little League opening ceremony was Saturday at Bakerview Fields in Mount Vernon, with La Conner’s Oakland A’s playing the same day.

Photo by Karla Reynolds
Lady Braves crush Concrete
By Bill Reynolds
A blowout win over Concrete Thursday was just what the doctor ordered for La Conner High head softball coach Michael Bliss.
The Lady Braves, with Bliss absent due to illness, crushed visiting Concrete 31-12 in a game called after five innings due to the league's mercy rule.
Siomi Bobb and Lauren Reynolds paced a 17-hit La Conner attack.
Bobb ripped a two-run inside-the-park homer and delivered an RBI double for the victors.
Reynolds blasted a two-run fence-clearing roundtripper and plated a pair of tallies with a triple, both shots going to the deepest part of the yard in left-center.
Bobb's home run scored La Conner catcher Hayleigh Summers, who had just accounted for one of her three RBIs on the day with a run-scoring single to right-center.
It was all part of a 13-run third inning explosion by the Lady Braves.
Reynolds' deep shot came during an 11-run La Conner outburst in the fourth. Her circuit clout drove in Olivia Hedlund, who had lined a two-run double.
Leadoff hitter Kelley McClung set the tone for La Conner, patiently drawing six walks as the Lady Braves scored in every frame.
Taysha James, Emma Christianson, and Madison McCoy also lined safeties for the winners, while pinch-hitter Kaitlyn Cultee worked a walk.
La Conner hitters provided more than enough run support for Christianson, who shook off a minor foot injury to toss a complete game victory, logging a pair of strikeouts.
Christianson cruised in the early going, limiting the Lady Lions to a single tally through three innings. Concrete managed four runs in the fourth and seven more in the fifth, but by then the game had long since been decided.
Defensively, Summers erased a Lady Lion baserunner in the second inning by throwing a perfect strike to McClung at second on a failed steal attempt.
Sarah Spaeth led Concrete with a pair of singles and a double. Melissa Clontz chipped in two singles and drove in three runs.
With the win, coming on a chilly and gusty afternoon, La Conner improved to 6-1 in league and 7-3 overall.
The Lady Braves were coming off an impressive doubleheader sweep of Darrington.
La Conner was slated to resume home action late Tuesday with Friday Harbor. The Lady Braves are scheduled to host Lynden Christian April 26 before traveling April 28 to Squalicum.

Photo by Karla Reynolds
Former Braves' standout is two-sport collegian
By Bill Reynolds
A La Conner High alum is getting his kicks clearing hurdles as a college freshman.
Soft-spoken Sten Mejlaender is quietly making a name for himself by competing this year in both soccer and track-and-field at Skagit Valley College.
A midfielder for the soccer Cards, Mejlaender is also running hurdles this spring at SVC.
It isn't easy catching up with the busy Mejlaender for an interview. He works out five to six days per week, mixing powerlifting in the gym with regular sessions on the track and soccer pitch.
He splits workout time between La Conner and Mount Vernon, on whose high school oval he logged laps in chilly, windy conditions Friday afternoon. 
The 5-11, 195-pound Mejlaender geared up for college by putting on 10 pounds of muscle following his days as a multi-sport performer for the La Conner High Braves.
He originally committed to the soccer program at Concordia University in Portland after having played on a pair of La Conner boot teams that advanced to the State playoffs. But ultimately Mejlaender landed close to home at Skagit Valley, where he could be a dual-sport performer and watch younger brother, Bjorn, play for the Braves.
An “A” student at La Conner, Mejlaender has thus far enjoyed the Skagit experience.
"There was some adjusting to do early on," he says, "but SVC is definitely a school that grows on you."
He's currently taking a full academic load, including psychology, an area he might pursue for a four-year degree.
"Next winter or spring I'll make a decision on where I'll go after Skagit," Mejlaender says. "I'm looking at Central and WSU, but I want to visit my friends at their schools and see what it's like."
Mejlaender is also considering a major in fire science, and career as a firefighter.
La Conner High well prepared Mejlaender both academically and athletically, he says.
"I have a lot of great memories of La Conner High School," says Mejlaender, who advises current La Conner students to focus on their school work, assume campus leadership roles, and be mindful of future scholarship opportunities.
"It's important to stay dedicated," he says. "Once you start something, you need to follow through as best you can."
Mejlaender has followed his own advice at SVC, literally staying on track while juggling two sports.
He has spent much of his spring working on footwork technique in the 400 and 110 meter hurdles.
"They've raised the hurdles three inches this year," Mejlaender notes. "But my big challenge is in between the hurdles. Most of the other guys are taller and have longer strides."
Mejlaender, meanwhile, has made huge strides himself, often paired this year against more experienced athletes from larger high school programs.
It's that kind of challenge that has always fueled Mejlaender's competitive drive. In fact, it's what led him to the hurdles in the first place.
"I first got interested in the hurdles when I was in eighth grade," he recalls. "I knew I wouldn't be the fastest runner in the 100 meters, but I'm pretty flexible so I figured I could make up the time in the hurdles."
Indeed, he did. In May 2011, for instance, Mejlaender was named a Seattle Times Athlete of the Week after posting a personal best time of :40.97 in the 300 meter hurdles.
Still, soccer remains Mejlaender's favorite sport – one he can see himself coaching someday at the high school level.
"During my senior year at La Conner we had a good deal of success in soccer," he says, "and that's when I decided to pursue it in college."
Mejlaender, flanked by dynamic teammates Kyle McKnight and David Carr, was often referred to by La Conner head coach Steve De Leon as the "engine" that drove the Braves, who won 18 of 21 starts a year ago.
And, thus far, Mejlaender is an engine that's running on all cylinders.

Wednesday, April 11, 2012

in the April 11, 2012 issue

BREAKING NEWS:
La Conner Boardwalk funding survives state budget process
   La Conner Mayor Ramon Hayes said he received a call from State Sen, Mary Margaret Haugen, D-Camano Island, this morning with news that the state's capital improvements budget hammered out by the Legislature late last night includes $750,000 for the first phase of the boardwalk construction. (This news came too late to make today's paper.)


New totem ties communities together
   La Conner artist, Kevin Paul, who is a Swinomish Tribal Senator, has carved a story pole that will be unveiled at Skagit Valley College in Mount Vernon on Monday, April 16 at 2:30 p.m.
   The Skagit Valley College Foundation commissioned the pole to represent the tie between the college and the local tribal community. It will stand 18 feet tall near the main entrance to the college. Writer Adrian Sharpe has the story in today's paper explaining the symbols carved on the artwork.



Weekend was “Egg-stasy” for kids 
   Writer Adrian Sharpe and photographer Don Coyote attended the two Easter egg hunts in La Conner. One on Saturday in Pioneer Park, and the other on Sunday in the garden at La Crema coffee.

Photo by Don Coyote

Photo by Don Coyote

Photo by Don Coyote




Photo by Don Coyote
Congressman tours a Conway slough
Writer Adrian Sharpe followed Rep. Rick Larsen, D-Everett, on a tour of a local hunting and recreation ground, Wiley Slough, Monday. 
Before the tour, Larsen sat down for an informal lunch with locals including farmers Dave Hedlin, Keith Morrison, and Serena Campbell.  Then Larsen and the group went for a walk along Wiley Slough on Fir Island, noting the many improvements due to  conservation efforts over the last 10 years.
Photo by Don Coyote


From the Police Blotter:
3:32 a.m.: Bad Guest – A resident in the 900 block of Maple Avenue, in La Conner, allowed a guest to sleep in the laundry room. However, sometime during the night the guest tried to enter the apartment and an argument erupted. Neighbors called the police.



Braves Sports, April 11, 2012

The All-Star quality play of La Conner High volleyball standouts Emily Anderson (15) and Priscilla Ponce-Venegas (31) resulted in their selection to the recent 1B/2B All-State Volleyball match, where La Conner's Suzanne Marble (back row, right) was on the coaching staff. The La Conner contingent played a key role as its All-State team won in straight sets.
Braves volleyball enjoys net gains in off-season
By Bill Reynolds
It's no secret La Conner High boasts one of the top volleyball programs in the state.
And, just in case the word hasn't gotten completely out, the play of two La Conner netters at the recent 1B/2B All-State Volleyball match in Fife spoke volumes of the Lady Braves' repeated success.
La Conner seniors Emily Anderson and Priscilla Ponce-Venegas played key roles in a three-set sweep for an All-Star squad that also featured Darrington's Jessica Brooks and Jill Goldman and a half-dozen Eastern Washington standouts.
Anderson, Ponce-Venegas and their All-State teammates posted a 25-21, 26-24, 25-18 triumph.
They fought back from an early 9-2 deficit in the opening set, finishing with a 23-12 run that set the tone for the rest of the match.
"We were down in the first set and came back to win it, and that took the pressure off of us and we were able to relax," said veteran La Conner mentor Suzanne Marble, who has guided the Lady Braves to multiple State titles, and was tabbed as an All-State coach.
Anderson and Ponce-Venegas had much to do with the comeback, Marble said.
"I was really pleased with the way the girls played having had only one two-hour practice," said Marble. "I was so proud of the way Priscilla and Emily represented
 La Conner. They really played fantastic and were a huge part of our success." 
The entire squad meshed well.
"Playing with the other players was one of the best experiences I've had," said Ponce-Venegas, who hopes to enroll this fall at either Gonzaga or Eastern Washington University.
"I seriously had the most amazing team ever," she said. "We were all so supportive and we played like a team despite only practicing a couple hours before the actual match.
"The whole time was awesome," Ponce-Venegas stressed. "The fact that I can say my All-State teammates are now my friends is amazing."
Anderson had much the same feeling afterward.
"I'm really glad I was able to participate in the experience," she said. "It's definitely something I will always remember."
Anderson singled out Ponce-Venegas and Darrington's Goldman, a skilled libero, as favorite All-State teammates.
"Priscilla and I were on the same team and won all our games," said Anderson. "And it was super fun playing with Jill Goldman. She was amazing."
Anderson, who next year plans to play volleyball and run track at Whitworth University, in Spokane, was amazing herself – just mustering the strength to play such a highly competitive match on the heels of a bout with walking pneumonia.
But the rigors of playing at a championship level for La Conner High, said Ponce-Venegas, more than prepared her and Anderson for the All-State match, despite illness and "having not played volleyball in ages." 
"You can't get an experience like La Conner volleyball anywhere else," said Anderson. "You fight through the tough preseason workouts and the sweat because, in the end, it's worth it to be part of such an outstanding team."
Marble laments that Anderson and Ponce-Venegas, who in two months graduate from La Conner High, will no longer be part of that team. Still, she realizes time marches on.
They've accomplished so much in the past four years," noted Marble, "and I'm very proud of them."
Ponce-Venegas and Anderson, in turn, take pride in having been part of the La Conner volleyball tradition, and vow to carry those lessons forward.
"I learned," Ponce-Venegas said, "that when things get hard, push yourself harder. Never settle for less and always push yourself to be the best you can be."
Marble, meanwhile, knows the contributions by Ponce-Venegas and Anderson are lasting, and that their presence will continue to be felt.
"Priscilla and Emily will be missed next year," she stresses. "but I so look forward to hearing about their successes in the future."

Photo by Karla Reynolds
La Conner's Wil James works on his timing, getting in some extra cuts during a soft toss session Monday with Braves' coach Jeremiah LeSourd. La Conner was scheduled to resume league action late Tuesday with a doubleheader at Darrington.
La Conner diamond teams drawing double duty
By Bill Reynolds The La Conner High baseball and softball teams were looking to spring back into action this week after weathering a series of postponements.
Both the Braves and Lady Braves were slated to resume action late Tuesday with league twinbills at Darrington.
For the La Conner baseball team, the doubleheader at Darrington was to kick-start a stretch of five games in a week.
The Braves were able to prep for the schedule crunch with workouts late last week and on Monday.
"Practice went well," La Conner's Sean Hulbert said Monday afternoon. "Everything is getting quicker and we're getting a lot more done in the two hours we have than we were before, so I think we're ready for this week."
That view was echoed by Wil James, one of the team's top run-producers.
"I thought we had a very productive practice," said James, who got in some extra cuts Monday with Braves' coach Jeremiah LeSourd throwing batting practice.
La Conner, with the second half of its regular season looming, hopes to finish the campaign with a surge, despite not having injured pitcher Tyler Howlett available.
"It felt like we got a lot of work in today," the Brave's Taylor Swanson said Monday. "I think the pieces are starting to fall in place and we'll finish this last half of the season off strong."
There was much of the same sentiment on the Lady Braves' softball diamond, where players were getting in some conditioning after a near week-long layoff. The Lady Braves told La Conner Weekly News they expected to pick up in Darrington Tuesday where they left off last week.

Wednesday, April 4, 2012

in the April 4, 2012 issue

Photo by Jane Godfrey
Marilynn Olson, far right, has today's story explaining why she and her Soroptimist International colleagues, Linda Talman Debi Demigilio, Monica Todd-Klopfer and Maureen Harlan strung up 130 bras to "Free the Girls." 

Photo by Adrian Sharpe
Toons of talent
Writer Adrian Sharpe has crafted a profile of La Conner artist Bob Abrams, who spent a career as a film animator for Hollywood studios including Disney and Warner Bros. He's retired from drawing the likes of Daffy Duck, but he hasn't put away his easel and paint brushes. 

New Pavers at La Conner High
The La Conner High School Booster Club is selling tiles in a new quad to those who wish to commemorate an athlete, student, family, or local business. Pavers will be sold for $75 each. Graduating seniors get the discount price of $50.
Order forms are available at the High School office and also the La Conner Weekly News office or can be downloaded from the school district’s website at lc.k12.wa.us – follow the link to “extracurricular” and from there to “Booster Club.”

Photo by Don Coyote
PARTY ANIMALS – These mooching pooches were among several canines who “crashed” a party for retiring Station House owner Rich Wells on Saturday night. The new owners took over on Sunday, and have been working day and night giving the place a make-over.  They plan to re-open the Station House restaurant on  Friday. 

Photo by Don Coyote
GREAT MUSIC – Singers Patti Allen and Kathi McDonald performed with the Swinomish Blues Revue at Maple Hall on Sunday. The musicians, including bluesman Nick Vigarino, (in photo below) Terry Nelson, Chris Leighton and Rob Moitoza drew rave reviews from those who attended.  

Photo by Don Coyote


Photo by Don Coyote
After the show, Amara Grace of La Conner sat down at the piano and entertained the crowd some more. 

See Jim Smith's review of the Swinomish Blues Revue show in today's Notes from Pull & Be Damned.


From the Police Blotter:
    10:22 p.m.: Wacky washer – A report of a disobedient washing machine caused someone to call 911 from the 900 block of Maple Avenue in La Conner. The caller was referred to the Housing Authority for the complex.
    10:39 p.m.: Leaky laundry – A second call was placed about the same utility problem in the 900 block of Maple Avenue in La Conner. A downstairs apartment had water coming in through the ceiling.

The newspaper hit the streets today and is available at the usual places, including in our office where you can often get a little fresh gossip to go with it. Or subscribe and have it delivered. 466-3315.