Wednesday, October 27, 2010

Weekly La Conner High Sports capsule, Oct. 27, 2010


By Amylynn Richards
FOOTBALL
The Braves played the Concrete Lions at home on Friday, Oct. 22. The Lions won 41-12. The Brave points were scored by Conner Anderson and Mikey Wilbur. The Braves are 4-5-0 for the season thus far.
Athletic Director Peg Seeling said the Braves can still pull of a run for District, “it all depends on the last two games; we have to be third in the league to go on.”
The teams’ final game is Friday at 7 p.m. against Darrington and the team’s seven seniors will be honored during halftime:  Alex Teissen; Dan Biladeau; Garrett Wilbur; Conner Anderson; Brandon Drye; Travis Silva; and Sherman Quinn. 
VOLLEYBALL
The lady Braves are the number one seed going into tournament play, and number one in the league.
On Tuesday, Oct. 19, the Braves hosted Mount Vernon Christian. The Braves won in 25-10, 25-10, 25-11. Team highlights: Candice Pedroza had 16 assists and 3 blocks; Lauren McClung had 4 kills and 4 aces; Emily Anderson had 4 kills, 4 blocks and 3 aces; and Priscilla Ponce Venegas had 10 kills and 8 aces. “We played really well tonight from start to finish,” says Coach Suzanne Marble, “I was really pleased with the way the girls were in control the entire match.  Priscilla had a really great night for us and was on fire with her tough jump serve. She went 14/14, had eight aces and was pretty much unstoppable. She also was on fire at the net with ten kills.  It was a great league win for us.”
The girls took the ferry on Thursday, Oct. 21 to play the Orcas Island Vikings. They left at 9 a.m. for the 5 p.m. match, and did not return to campus until 10 p.m. But trip was worthwhile: the Braves won 25-15, 25-15, 25-19.  Team highlights: Candice Pedroza had 26 assists; Lauren McClung had 16 kills, 3 blocks and 15 digs; Kelley McClung had 7 assists, and was 21/21 serving with 4 aces; and Emily Anderson had 15 kills, 4 blocks and 16 digs. Coach Marble reports, “I was really pleased with the way my girls started their first set.  We had a little let down in the second, but kept our composure to finish strong.  My middles, Emily and Lauren, did a great job at the net to combine for 31 kills and 7 blocks.  They were smart and strong, and found a way to put the ball away.
At 9 a.m. on Saturday, Oct. 30 the team will compete in the League Tournament.
GIRLS’ SOCCER
Coach Amy Freeto says that the Tuesday, Oct. 19 home-turf 0-1 loss to Mount Vernon Christian “was a nightmare.”   The last time the lady Braves faced the lady Hurricanes, the Braves won 6-0.
“This time, their keeper had one of the best games I’ve seen in my eleven years of coaching. This, along with some unlucky referee calls and narrowly missed shots” were the team’s undoing, according to Coach Freeto.
The final score was decided by shootout by what Freeto calls a “a strange twist of irony,” Kaylean Weidenbach, a former Brave who transferred to take her senior year at Mount Vernon Christian, scored the winning goal on behalf of the Hurricanes.
The girls took the ferry to Orcas Island on Thursday, Oct. 22 to beat the Vikings 3-0.  “We set the tone early with a completed penalty kick, by Ashlyn Reinstra,” Freeto said.  Reinstra scored soon afterwards, as did Nikki Finley.  “Our team played with tight passing and lots of team defense. This game secured our playoff position and sent us into the District tournament in the number one seed, which is a huge honor as it also secures a quarterfinal state berth.”
This is the seventh season that the Lady Braves soccer team has gone to state in the twelve-year program history.  Still, “There is not much time to celebrate,” Freeto said. The girls will play a non-league game at Seattle Lutheran, and will compete for the Bi-District Championship on Thursday, Nov. 4 at Sammamish high school. The opponent has not yet been determined. 
BOYS’ SOCCER
Five seniors were celebrated during halftime of the Friday, Oct. 22 game against Providence Christian:   Sten Mejlaender; David Carr; Trenton Swigert; Kyle McKnight; and Steven Bell.
The Braves, who are league champions, were the number one team in the State until two losses in the last week; the loss put Bear Creek as the number one team in the state.  La Conner has slipped to fourth, which is what they had been ranked in the pre-season.
Mount Vernon Christian, the first of two teams to beat the Braves this season, took a 1-0 loss to the team ranked dead-last, Cedar Park Christian.
Earlier In the week, the Braves beat Cedar Park 7-0, with a half-time score of 3-0.  Scorers: Sten Mejlaender in the twelfth and fifty-sixth minutes; Kory Duran in the sixty-eighth and seventieth minutes; DJ Carr in the forty-eight; Kyle McKnight in the fifteenth minute; and Todd Hoagland in the twentieth minute.  Assists were provided by: Bobby Poulton, Todd Hoagland, Kyle McKnight, Tyler Baker; and Trenton Swigert. Goal-keeper Taylor Fay gave the Braves the shut-out.
District playoffs will begin for La Conner on Thursday, Oct. 27 in Brave territory at 6 p.m. The boys are the number one seed into the tournament from the 1B Northwest League.  Senior DJ Carr has been the undisputed goal-maker in the state the entire season: with 31 goals by Monday, he was the only athlete to score more than 30 goals this season.  Carr’s closest competitor currently has 24 goals. 

Tuesday, October 26, 2010

La Conner's turkey round-up

On the picket line
 Photo by Bill Stokes
On Tuesday the eight remaining members of the town flock appeared to be staging a noisy protest in the Mayor's neighborhood. They disbanded when the town code enforcement truck pulled up. 
Meanwhile, the turkey trap has been moved to a new location and stocked with the birds' favorite treats.

Friday, October 22, 2010

Friday football

La Conner Braves 12.
Concretians 41


Thursday, October 21, 2010

La Conner's turkey round-up

UPDATE -- noon Saturday, Oct. 23
The four young turkey who ventured into the turkey trap Thursday night are settled into their new digs at a Snohomish County Christmas tree farm, where they are expected to enjoy life as local celebrities. 

Meanwhile, back at the La Conner turkey trap -- the turkeys still won't go near it! But squirrels and deer stop by to eat the sunflower seeds and bread used for turkey bait. 


UPDATE -- 11:15 a.m. Friday, Oct. 22

 Nope! No turkeys in the turkey trap. But it seems other critters like the turkey bait!




UPDATE -- 9:26 a.m. Friday, Oct. 22:

Four of the five young poults obviously did not listen to their parents and walked into the turkey trap Thursday night. They will be taken to their new home today, Friday.
Efforts to catch the rest of the birds continue ...

Turkeys are no dumb clucks
Last year’s turkey round-up was a matter of building a large net cage, baiting it and waiting for the birds to walk in.
But so far this year it’s a different story.
When La Conner Code Enforcement Officer Bill Stokes set out the turkey trap again after the Town Council directed him to catch and relocate the entire flock, the turkeys wouldn't fall for that old trick again.
This morning, “I got them all right up to the trap, but they wouldn’t go inside,” Stokes said.
All but the five new little poults were here last year when they saw 11 turkeys trapped and never seen again. They don't know that the turkeys captured last year are very lucky birds living in the lap of luxury at Precious Life Animal Sanctuary in Sequim.
This year all 12 birds left in town have reservations at another place where they will be similarly pampered.
Not only are the turkeys wise to the trap, they have people aiding and abetting their fugitive status.
Wednesday evening Stokes was walking along South Third Street. He was like the Pied Piper with all 12 turkeys happily following him as he dropped a trail of hot dog bun pieces.
About a block away from the turkey trap, a woman ran out of a house and tore up a whole loaf of bread in the street.
Naturally, the birds quit following the guy with the measly hot dog buns.

Wednesday, October 20, 2010

In the October 20 2010 issue


 Curious about Alex?
Our intern Alexander Kramer is alive and well in college at Western Washington University. He is maintaining a steady string of college-related blog posts. You can find the list of them here, on his blog Seattle Blurbs.

Lock your vehicles
That's the advice of La Conner's town Sheriff deputies. Several people have lost their wallets, valuable tools and other items in recent car burglaries in town. In each case, there has been no sign of forced entry, making officers suspect an opportunistic thief is targeting vehicles that might be unlocked or very easy to break into.

This handsome young biker is Jacob Cladoosby, he rode his cycle home from the dentist's office the other day. His granddad, Mike Cladoosby accompanied him. -- Photo by Amylynn Richards

Anna back in Haiti
Journalist Anna Ferdinand, whose reporting and writing has won awards for La Conner Weekly News, is in Haiti again with a London film crew working on a British TV documentary about elections in the earthquake-ravaged island nation. Read her powerful, compelling first-hand account of conditions there 10 months after the deadly quake in today's newspaper.

 PUMPKINS EVERYWHERE -- Been to Gordon's Farm yet? Feature writer Sue Phillips takes us on a tour of the McLean Road farm where 60 different varieties of pumpkins, treats and cider served by the La Conner High School culinary arts class and a corn maze have become the local "pumpkin paradise." A stop at Gordon's has become an October tradition for generations of Skagit County families. -- Photo by Sue Phillips
And inside ...
Guess what makes Americans giggle when visiting Norway? A word seen everywhere means something completely different than when someone like, say, Bart Simpson says it! Mickey Bambrick's "Nuggets from Norway" column will make you smile.


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