Wednesday, January 4, 2012

in the January 4, 2012 issue...

Click Classifieds above to read this week's ad page (Alex fixed the link).

Photo by Karen Lynn
Until a La Conner woman stepped into their lives, tourists just stepped around these children as they slept huddled together on a street in Nepal. Here from left are Rahul Bk, Susil Bk, Jamuna Nayarni and Abisek pose in their new clothes. The boys are about 10, and the girl is 13. 
 Street orphans capture woman's heart
Read the heart warming story of these children written by Karen Lynn, an instructor at Crescent Moon Yoga.  In today's paper

  Photo by Don Coyote

The good, the bad, the ugly...
Reporter Alexander Kramer, now a journalism major at Western Washington University in Bellingham, is conducting a study on our readership.
Please take a few minutes to take our 10-question survey and tell us what you like and what you think we should be doing better. The button is on the right of the page.


 
Sea scouts program is afloat
Writer Adrian Sharpe has the story on the Rotary Club's efforts to revive the La Conner Sea Scout program is back.  Skippers and a crew have been recruited.
  To join or volunteer please contact Lee Carlson at lee.carlson211@gmail or 360-466-0127 or Sea Scout Kane Stokes at 360-610-5179. 



From the Police Blotter: 
4:57 p.m.: Found – A customer left their keys in a business in the 100 block of First Street in La Conner and they were later returned. Yep, it's been real exciting around here.

Read your favorite columnists in today's paper. Jim Smith, Mickey Bambrick and Mel Damski are in fine form.

Paper hit the streets today, it's in the red quarter-consuming news boxes and on the counters at both gas stations, in the liquor store, book store and drug store. Or call and have us send it to your home or office for $30 per year. 466-3315.
 
  

Braves Sports, Jan. 4, 2012

Photo by Bill Reynolds
LADY WRESTLERS -- La Conner's Amber Drye placed her Mount Vernon High foe in a headlock during Thursday's non-league dual meet at the elementary gym. 
 Braves wrestle Mount Vernon on equal footing
By Bill Reynolds
Bigger wasn’t necessarily better Thursday when La Conner wrestlers hosted Mount Vernon in a non-league dual match.
The two squads split eight pairings, with La Conner’s Dahlton Zavala, 160 pounds, Todd Hoagland, 170, and Nathan Parker, 285, each winning by pin in their respective weight classes.
Zavala was especially dominant, while Kevin Aske turned in perhaps his best effort of the campaign by claiming a crisp 8-6 victory at 138 pounds.
La Conner head coach Barry Harper was very pleased afterward by his team’s performance against the Bulldogs.
“Hoagland,” he stressed, “really looked good. He pinned his guy in the first round. He really went out there and took it to him.
“Nathan Parker,” added Harper, “also had a good match with a third round pin.”
La Conner’s Ben Harper, 132, and Jimmy Garcia, 145, both wrestled exceptionally well before dropping close decisions to top-flight foes.
The Garcia match, in particular, was a wild affair, highlighted by several lead changes before ending with a 14-13 verdict.
“I really think Jimmy can beat that guy,” coach Harper said. “He was ahead late in the match and got rolled to his back. That was a real heartbreaker.”
In the girls’ division, Amber Drye and Frances Zeimantz each wrestled twice, with the latter winning both times.
Harper said the Braves are definitely headed in the right direction.
“As a whole,” said Harper, “we are continuing to improve. Everybody is working real hard in practice. We still have some little things to correct, but the coachesare pleased with the progress we’re making.”

 Photo by Melissa Reynolds
Braves survive Duck calls to post big win
By Bill Reynolds
La Conner head coach Scott Novak knew going home for the holidays could put his team in a hostile setting.
But that was okay, even after a tough 45-42 loss Thursday at Adna, Novak’s high school alma mater.
“We could’ve scheduled somebody not nearly as good at home,” Novak offered afterward, “but what would we have gained from that?”
On the other hand, traveling to Adna and later to Toutle Lake – where La Conner emerged with a crucial 67-59 bounce-back win on Friday – the Braves instead learned how to deal with adversity.
“It was a hard loss,” Novak said of the Adna game, a contest in which La Conner led by as many as seven points down the stretch before falling prey to several unfavorable calls and a couple costly late turnovers.
“It was the kind of thing you come to expect on the road,” said Novak. “You just have to learn how to play through it.”
La Conner, it turned out, proved to be a quick study.
The Braves responded the next night at Toutle Lake, where they faced an unforgiving crowd and another round of rough officiating, to school the upset-minded Ducks.
La Conner sharpshooter Landy James, despite playing much of the second half with four fouls, scored a game-high 26 points that included two outside treys and a transition dunk.
And that doesn’t include James’ best play of the night, a full-speed spin move that broke a desperate fourth quarter full-court Toutle Lake press, and led to a clinching Braves’ score.
Versatile Mike Wilbur added 17 tallies – and so much more – for the victors.
Wilbur, who regularly fills the stat sheet, added five rebounds, four assists, and a steal to his night’s work. Plus he held his ground and took a charge.
He was also solid at the charity stripe, converting eight of 10 free throws.
Wilbur’s opposite number in the La Conner backcourt, Spencer Novak, finished with a dozen points.
Ten of Novak’s points came during a crucial part of the second period when La Conner quickly turned a six-point deficit into a 37-27 lead at the break.
Novak hit two straight treys and teamed with Wilbur and Bobby Poulton on a suffocating perimeter zone trap that erased what had been an early 18-12 Toutle Lake edge.
Novak and Poulton, the latter of whom does much of La Conner’s necessary blue collar work, finished with two steals apiece.
Tyler Howlett chipped in eight points, including a first half trey, for the victors. Perhaps just as important, he played exceptional defense, drawing two charges.
La Conner post Jonah Cook, who drew plenty of attention from the Ducks in the early going, finished with four points despite taking just three shots.
The Braves shook off any ill effects from the Adna game, responding at Toutle Lake with one of their best shooting nights of the campaign. La Conner was 24 of 42 (57 per cent) from the floor, including six of 11 (54 per cent) from beyond the three point arc.
Still, it took an intense effort to defeat a scrappy Toutle Lake squad.
“They’re definitely a hard-nosed bunch,” acknowledged La Conner assistant coach Dustin Swanson, who offered a quick chuckle upon remembering Toutle Lake’s mascot is a duck.
“I’m just happy,” added Novak, “that we were able to put this one away.”
La Conner improved to 8-1 going into Monday’s exhibition game with a traveling Australian team.
The Braves, who hosted Orcas late Tuesday, return to the road this Friday, Jan. 6,  for a league clash at Concrete. La Conner is at Friday Harbor Jan. 10.
In related notes:
*La Conner traveled well to the Adna and Toutle Lake games despite the three-hour distance. Among those in attendance Friday were Braves’ alums Doug Alvord, a rare four-year letter winner, and John Agen, who like Alvord was a key member of LaConner’s 1974 team that earned a No. 2 ranking going into State play. Agen wryly noted that had Husky placekicker Erik Folk not missed a field goal attempt, the Baylor-UW Alamo Bowl score would’ve matched Friday’s La Conner-Toutle Lake final.
*During a break in Friday’s action, a Toutle Lake fan was heard to yell: “This officiating is horrible!” A La Conner fan retorted: “at least we can agree on that!”
LA CONNER         12    25   14   16 –  67
TOUTLE LAKE     18     9    12    20  --  59
(LC)—67—L. James 26, Wilbur 17, Novak 12, Howlett 8, Cook 4.

 Photo by Bill Reynolds
Lady Braves nurse wounds over holidays
By Bill Reynolds
Their pride wasn’t what hurt most after the La Conner High Lady Braves dropped a couple tough non-league hoop decisions over Christmas break.
It was the fact key inside players Anna Cook and Taysha James remained sidelined with nagging knee injuries going into an anticipated tough road trip Friday to Toutle Lake.
And, to literally add insult to injury, dynamic La Conner guard Priscilla Ponce-Venegas was knocked out in the second half of La Conner’s physical bout with the Fightin’ Ducks after taking a sharp elbow to the mouth.
Blood splattered on the floor, and Ponce-Venegas – who had scored a game-high 21 points – was escorted to the locker room for medical attention.
Fortunately, within a few minutes, she was deemed okay by Dr. Wilbert James.
But, by then, La Conner had suffered a 38-28 loss in a seesaw affair that had seen Ponce-Venegas fuel a 9-2 Lady Braves run to end the first half, including a darting coast-to-coast layup at the buzzer.
Toutle Lake responded with an 11-0 run of its own to break a 15-15 halftime tie.
La Conner frontliner Aubrey Stewart, turning in her second straight strong performance in the paint, broke the drought with 1:20 left in the third period on a short jumper in traffic off a nice feed by Nikki Finley.
Prior to being hurt, Ponce-Venegas ignited a fourth quarter La Conner comeback. She hit three straight layups, two on full-court run-outs and one an inbounds pass, to pull the Lady Braves within 34-25.
A Stewart charity toss trimmed the Toutle Lake lead to 34-26 with 2:34 remaining.
But La Conner, minus Ponce-Venegas, could get no closer.
Finley managed a deft drive and bank in the lane with just over a minute left to play, but that was off-set by two foul shots and a step-through by the Ducks’ Shelby Wason, one of seven Toutle Lake players to land in the scoring column.
Breezy Hockett led the hosts’ balanced attack with 10 tallies.
La Conner was coming off a 48-40 defeat at home to Adna, whose stifling press proved the difference.
The game turned when Adna point guard Madison Beasley stole an inbounds pass and hit a short bank shot – her only field goal attempt of the night – as time expired in the third quarter.
“I thought, overall, that we did well against a really good Adna team,” La Conner head coach Scott Novak said afterward. “We were playing a little shorthanded with Anna and Taysha still out and Priscilla’s minutes limited due to her having been ill earlier in the week.
“It was the turnovers and give-away points that probably hurt the most,” he said.
Novak liked the fact his charges battled to the end, with Finley hitting a pair of deep treys and freshman Katie Novak meshing a long three-pointer in the waning moments.
Stewart’s play in the blocks was another bright spot. She joined Ponce-Venegas (12) and Finley (10) in double digit scoring for La Conner, netting 11 points, all coming in the key or at the foul stripe.
The Lady Braves, who hosted Orcas late Tuesday, resume league action this Friday, Jan. 6, at Concrete.
La Conner, which entered the week 5-4 overall, travels Jan. 10 to Friday Harbor.



Wednesday, December 28, 2011

in the December 28 issue

Photo by Gary Cole

Winds gusting at 50 miles per hour on Christmas Day in the Snee-Oosh Beach area knocked down a power pole at the corner of Keith Johnson’s yard. Doug Cole, reporting from the scene, said the power outage didn’t deter the Barbara Hoover family holiday celebration; they just fired up generators and carried on. Utility crews worked through the night to replace three poles and power was restored by 8:10 a.m. Monday.

2011 in Review
     OK, when you see a "Year in Review" or a "Look Back" on the front page of a newspaper, that's newspaper code for NOTHING IS HAPPENING. That's the real reason these things show up between Christmas and New Year's Day. It's the quietest time of the year for news...
     Nevertheless, some people enjoy looking back; and for those of us in La Conner the year had some events worth talking about.


 Photo by Ben Davidson
A happy memory: Canoe Journey
Swinomish Indian Tribal Community hosted the annual Canoe Journey, which drew about 80 family canoes carrying tribal people from throughout the northwest in July.
Almost everyone in the La Conner area participated in the event. Thousands of people lined up on both sides of the channel to witness the spectacular canoe landing, which included a surprise visit from Washington Governor Christine Gregoire, who was a paddler in Tribal Chairman Brian Cladoosby’s canoe.
Swinomish invited the whole town to dinner every night during weeklong gathering, which ran from July 25 through 31 and included Native American dancing and performances every day.
The event left the community with wonderful memories and a beautiful reminder – the three cedar hat-shaped pavilions at Swadabs Park across the channel from Gilkey Square mark the site of the historic canoe landing.

 Photo by Don Coyote
Scary day: Cops shut down the town
We’ll be telling the grandkids about the afternoon that quiet La Conner suddenly started swarming with police, their assault rifles at the ready ordering residents to take cover indoors while a low-flying Blackhawk helicopter circled overhead with armed officers looking out.
The Skagit County Sheriff’s Office, acting on a credible tip that a man who had just committed two murders in Oak Harbor had come to La Conner called in officers from six other law enforcement agencies to shut down the town.
The accused murderer, Joshua David Lambert, 30, was captured in Oak Harbor. He is charged with stabbing both his 80-year-old grandfathers to death in separate attacks on Monday, Oct. 3. Lambert has told the Island County Superior Court he plans to represent himself in his defense and that he is insane.

 Photo by Kane Stokes
Remember these guys?
 Town turkeys evicted
La Conner’s wild turkey flock, which once numbered 18, was run out of town.
Resident complaints about the birds’ foul habits, including digging up flower beds and pooping on porches, prompted the Town Council to order town employees to trap, chase and net the birds.
Public Works crews nabbed the last tom in May as he was taking refuge in the public restroom on Morris Street. That bird spent about a month in “solitary” in the old dog pen at the old public works department until Marci and Bob Plank took him in. Now the turkey has a name, Monty, and a job. He is overlord of the chickens, who stand around and admire him at the Planks’ ranch.


Columnists Mel Damski and Mickey Bambrick gave us some very personal information for Christmas. Look inside the paper for some great reading from these two amazing local writers.

From the Police Blotter:
11:57 a.m.: Animal mix-up – A resident in La Conner reported a suspicious package on her front porch, and was concerned it may be dangerous. Deputies found the box contained a near-lethal amount of cuteness in the form of a kitten. The kitten was taken into custody and transported to the Humane Society. Deputies determined that the kitten was intended as a gift for the caller’s daughter. Well, it could have been a bomb.

The paper is on the streets today in the news stands, in both gas stations, the liquor store, drug store and book store.
 

Braves Sports, Dec. 28, 2011

Photo by Melissa Reynolds

Lady Braves rebound, win big over Coupeville
By Bill Reynolds
The La Conner High girls' basketball team was looking for a bounce back game after suffering a tough loss at Darrington.
They found one Wednesday night against another longtime rival, Coupeville.
It was a pairing the Lady Braves won moments after tipoff, bursting to an early 24-2 lead and never looking back en route to an eventual 48-18 romp.
"The Coupeville game was definitely a good one for us following the loss at Darrington," La Conner head coach Scott Novak said afterward. "The team came out and played aggressively, and basically put the game away in the first half."
La Conner parlayed its tenacious full-court press into Coupeville turnovers and easy transition baskets, building a 31-5 cushion at intermission.
The advantage swelled to 38-8 going into the final stanza.
The early and large lead allowed Novak to substitute liberally and keep his squad well rested going into Tuesday's late action with Adna and this Friday's trip to Toutle Lake.
Priscilla Ponce-Venegas finished with eight points to lead 10 La Conner scorers, all of whom benefitted from the Lady Braves' "pass-first" mindset in their halfcourt attack.
"I thought we moved the ball really well on offense," Novak insisted afterward.
Point guard Nikki Finley recorded two assists in playing time limited by the lopsided score.
Solid passing by Finley and her teammates enabled La Conner to shoot 43 per cent from the field (17 of 40), including three of seven trey attempts.
Finley, Katie McKnight, and Katie Novak each buried shots from beyond the arc.
La Conner literally rebounded well in bouncing back from the earlier Darrington defeat.
Aubrey Stewart paced the Lady Braves with seven caroms, to go along with five points.
Emily Anderson (7), Kelly McClung (5), Emma Christianson (2), Lauren Reynolds (2), and Alyssa McCormick (2) rounded out LaConner's scoring.
Coach Novak expected stern tests this week from Adna and Toutle Lake.
"These," he said, "should be two very tough non-league games."
Of that, the Lady Braves are well aware. They know the visit to Toutle Lake, in particular, is no mere holiday vacation.
To that end, they worked out until 7 p.m. the day after Christmas, not expecting gifts from either Toutle Lake or Adna.

 Photo by Melissa Reynolds
Braves earn praise as road warriors
By Bill Reynolds
The La Conner Braves passed their first big road test of the season with flying colors.
But head coach Scott Novak isn't quite ready to say his club, which remained unbeaten with a convincing 66-53 win last week at 3A Sedro-Woolley, is in the driver's seat yet.
"The Sedro-Woolley game was a nice win for the team," Novak said after the much anticipated clash, which was broadcast live on radio. "The boys played well, executing on offense and playing good defense."
Landy James, Jonah Cook, and Mike Wilbur paced a balanced La Conner attack at Sedro-Woolley that saw seven Braves land in the scoring column.
Wilbur literally filled the stat sheet, meshing 12 points on five-of-nine shooting while also recording three steals and dishing off a pair of assists.
James led the La Conner point parade with 18 points, including a perimeter trey.
Cook, meanwhile, punished the Cubs inside with 17 tallies and three blocked shots.
He converted six of nine attempts from the floor and made Sedro-Woolley pay when the hosts fouled him in the paint.
Cook converted five of six charity tosses – nearly half the Braves' team total.
But despite the impressive triumph, in which La Conner led throughout, Novak remained the soul of caution even after the Sedro-Woolley win was safely in the books.
His focus was instead on this week's longer road trip to southwest Washington.
"Things don't get any easier," he stressed, "as we play at Adna (Thursday) and Toutle Lake (Friday)."
So it was left for La Conner fans to savor Wednesday night's victory.
They saw contributions by the entire roster against a bigger school featuring in Isaac Bianchini one of the top scorers in the area.
Bianchini paced the Cubs with 13 points, but it wasn't nearly enough against a deep La Conner squad.
Consider that Tyler Howlett responded with a season-best nine points, hitting four of seven field goal attempts.
And that Bobby Poulton drained the only shot he took, and was one of five Braves to register assists – confirming Novak's praise about how well his club ran its offense.
In addition to Wilbur and Poulton, James, Jared Fohn, and Spencer Novak also passed off for buckets, helping trigger LaConner's motion offense.
The Braves bolted to an early 16-12 lead, but used a 21-9 run in the third period to set the tone.
LaConner led by double digits much of the second half, entering the final frame with a comfortable 51-35 edge.
Thursday's tipoff at Adna, which is coach Novak's high school alma mater, is set for 7 p.m. The Friday matinee at Toutle Lake gets under way at 4:30 p.m.
  
 La Conner grapplers give peak effort at Mt. Baker
By Bill Reynolds
La Conner High's Jimmy Garcia wasn't being asked to move mountains last weekend.
It just seemed that way.
The Braves’ wrestler found himself paired against Concrete's Johnny Evans, ranked No. 2 in the State at 145 pounds, during one of his four matches at the highly competitive Mount Baker Invitational Tournament.
It proved to be a peak moment for Garcia, who upset Evans for one of his two victories on the afternoon – competing mostly against foes from the 2A through 4A ranks.
"I was very happy with Garcia's day at 145," La Conner head coach Barry Harper said afterward. "He went 2-2, but it was probably the toughest weight class in the tournament."
La Conner's Dahlton Zavala placed fourth in the 160s, while teammate Cameron Wischhusen clinched fifth place in the 182s.
Kevin Aske (138), Todd Hoagland (170), and William Zeimantz (285) won one match apiece for La Conner at the Mount Baker meet.
It was a 16-team tourney which saw La Conner grapplers continue to make progress, despite often facing uphill battles against wrestlers from larger schools.
The Braves placed 12th overall on the boys' side.
In the girls' competition, La Conner's Amber Drye and Frances Zeimantz each won two matches.
"We fared pretty well, I thought," said Harper. "I'm continuing to see improvement every week, which is good. That's exactly what we need."
La Conner resumes mat action 2 p.m. on Thursday at home opposite Mount Vernon.


 

Wednesday, December 21, 2011

in the December 21 issue

The winter solstice occurs at 9:30 p.m. local time.

 Photo by Kirsten Morse
This is the view of Gilkey Square from the Swinomish side of the channel.

 Photo by Joy Neal
Many Christmas wishes granted
With more people struggling this year, the generosity of the La Conner community is the top story. The Kiwanis Club, students in La Conner schools and merchants’ donation jars helped bring Christmas to 34 local families this year. Here is the Bank of America’s giving tree and bank employee Monica Wickstrom with many gifts received during the toy drive. Local residents also helped the more than 80 families served by the La Conner Sunrise Food Bank. A concert featuring all local talent sponsored by the town and  La Conner Institute of Performing Arts raised $1,170 for the food bank in donations from people who came to enjoy Christmas music. Our caring and generous community is one of the season's greatest blessings.

Photo by John Doyle, courtesy of Kathie Hubbard
 Councilman Don Wright's last Town Council meeting
Wright spent more than three decades serving on the town council. For the first time since he was first appointed to the council in 1980, Wright was defeated in an election when Dan O’Donnell challenged him in November. Writer Adrian Sharpe has the story on today's paper -- and she pulled it off without interviewing Don, who is not real big on tooting his own horn. Fortunately, there are plenty of others who know him well and are willing to go on record, including his Council colleagues and the Mayor shown above toasting him with sparkling cider at his final meeting.


Pets at risk of predators
By Adrian Sharpe
As the chill in the air gets frostier, the local wildlife may become scarier.
In recent months coyotes have been blamed for a handful of pet deaths in the La Conner area. By leaving garbage out and allowing pets free reign of outdoor areas, humans are inadvertently inviting predators to dinner.
“There are coyotes running all over,” said Rich Petteys whose cat was recently attacked. Details in today's paper.

From the Police Blotter:
10:41 a.m.: Dog attack – A woman on Reservation Rd, toward Anacortes, let her Chihuahua out and a few minutes later heard barking and a commotion. She went outside and found her dog cornered by a large, brindle colored, long-hair pit bull-mixed dog. She picked up her little dog and the big attacked her, causing a possible broken arm and severe lacerations on both arms. When her husband came out and pulled the dog off her, the animal attacked him, as well. The bad dog ran off and authorities have been unable to locate the animal. The woman was treated in a hospital emergency room for her injuries. This is a bad one, please call 911 if you spot this outlaw dog.

On a brighter note, our award winning columnists have plenty of good things to read in today's paper. Jim Smith and Mickey Bambrick will get you giggling and Mel Damski will get you thinking. Bob Skeele has some unusual Christmas prose. And Joy Neal  has some great book suggestions; keep the library in mind when you unwrap that new e-reader on Christmas morning.

Come in to our office and get a free cookie with your paper. Or feed quarters into our red news stands or pick up a copy at both gas stations, the liquor store, book store and drug store. 


Thank you La Conner, for keeping the newspaper going.
Our readers, our generous and loyal advertisers, and our talented local writers, poets and photographers are the reason the award-winning La Conner Weekly News is here. 

We wish you a wonderful holiday season followed by a prosperous and healthy 2012.