Ski to Sea Team Formed Years Ago Looks Forward To Annual Bellingham Return For Race, Tradition, Family & Fun

ski to sea
The Tumwater Shady team returns to Bellingham for the Ski to Sea race.

 

By Stacee Sledge

ski to sea
The Tumwater Shady team returns to Bellingham for the Ski to Sea race.

There is some confusion as to whether the Tumwater Shadies Ski to Sea team formed 21 or 22 years ago.

“I believe our first year was 1994, but being Shadies from Tumwater, we cannot do the simple math to figure this out,” jokes Adam Stocks.

The crew has no t-shirt from 1993 or earlier, but does have cotton-blend evidence from 1994 onward.

“Judging by the attire, hairstyles, and equipment, I think 1994 is correct,” Stocks says.

Longtime teammate Greg Rabourn disagrees.

“We thought we first started in 1994, but then I found race results from 1993,” Rabourn says. “Adam has chosen to ignore this bit of evidence since he printed up some awesome shirts [erroneously celebrating the team’s 20th anniversary] with the wrong number of years on it.”

Regardless of exactly when the team formed, what isn’t in question is the longevity of the Tumwater Shadies and the bond between them – even with an evolution of newer members joining the veterans over the years.

And there’s no doubt that fun will ensue – though perhaps of a tamer variety than the early years – when the Shadies reconvene in Whatcom County on May 25 for the annual Ski to Sea race, a nearly 100-mile course that starts at the slopes of Mount Baker and ends in Bellingham Bay.

This year’s team is made up of Gregor Myhr, who will take on the cross-country skiing leg; Kris Stocks with the downhill ski; Hollie Myhr running; Dan Jones on the road bike; Adam Stocks and Mary Rabourn in the canoe; Kati Halmos Jones on the mountain bike; and Greg Rabourn closing out the course in the kayak.

The Tumwater Shadies team grew out of a core of childhood friends who graduated together from Tumwater High School in Tumwater, Washington.

ski to sea
Although the year of their first race is still in question, the Tumwater Shady Ski to Sea team has been traveling to Bellingham for more than 20 years.

“In the first phase of races, early to late 90’s, most of us knew each other as friends from childhood and some of us were related,” says Stocks, whose sister Hollie was also part of the early team. “There were two brothers – Tommy and Brian Lowe – and several couples.”

Gregor Myhr, now Adam Stocks’ brother-in-law, married to Hollie, is the only member to have raced every year since the team’s formation.

“Hollie and I were at Western Washington University when we first heard of the race, says Myhr. “It sounded like a good adventure. I think there were only about 230 teams. The first race was a blast and sealed the deal.”

A tradition was born.

“The 90s was a vibrant era for the Shadies,” Myhr jokes. “Mullets, bandanas, high-stake wagers, and big parties at Key Street.”

The team improved its race time over the years – an accomplishment Myhr attributes to the purchase of better gear.

“That compensated greatly for any lack of training,” he says. “Our first canoe was a late 70s model plastic Coleman. What a tank.”

When Gregor and Hollie moved back to Olympia in 1998, the gang turned the annual event into a family vacation. Everyone travels north to Whatcom County and rents a house for the weekend.

“We’ve stayed at well over a half dozen places in the Bellingham area, from Birch Bay to Lake Whatcom to Alger – each one with a good story.”

Though the team’s antics have certainly mellowed with age, they share a story about the year they stayed at a local motel, which didn’t work out so well. “Something about us having a bonfire in the back parking lot,” says Myhr.

ski to sea
The Tumwater Shadies bring their families to Whatcom County each year to enjoy the atmosphere surrounding the Ski to Sea race.

“Bellingham and Whatcom County is such an awesome place,” Myhr continues.  “The mountains, water, and outdoor pursuits are top notch. The people are energetic and fun. This event keeps you young.”

Not everyone on the Shadies has been with them team since the get-go; that’s part of the beauty of this evolving bunch. The crew has had turnover and last-minute substitutions that bring total member numbers up around 18.

“All have been Tumwater Shady-worthy, true to the way of life,” Stocks jokes. “Even the person we found on the Ski to Sea ‘singles’ list, a racer looking for a team to participate on. He pedaled the fastest time the Shadies ever recorded on the road bike. We gave our road biker a hard time and questioned if we should invite him back.”

“I appreciate being brought onto the team by the Shadies in 2005,” says Dan Jones, whose wife, Kati Halmos Jones, is also a current member of the Tumwater Shadies. “Great people, great families – and great racers!”

“It’s not a coincidence that this is when our team started to place well,” says Myhr. “It was great when Dan and Kati joined the crew. They’ve participated in various legs of the race throughout the years.”

Several other teams have sprouted from the Tumwater Shadies experience, made up of friends and family.

“Last year my wife’s cousin formed a team who flew in from the Bay Area, Boston, and across the nation just for Ski to Sea,” says Stocks. “They’re young and in shape and way more into fitness than the Shadies. And, for the record, we beat them by five minutes or so.”

So while fun is a huge part of the Shadies experience, so is good dose of healthy competition.

“I can’t imagine how Ski to Sea is for others, because it is so exact for us,” says Stocks. “We know what to expect, what there is to do, how to do it, where we need to be, and at what time. We’ve got the logistics that so many teams struggle with down to a fine science.”

“Veteran status has worked well for us in this race,” says Myhr.

“We’ve experienced just about everything over the years,” says Rabourn, “including capsized canoes, swimming for shore with a cast on, skiing wipeouts, flats without a repair kit and kayaking during a small craft warning.”

It’s all just a part of being a Tumwater Shady – a tradition they fully expect to pass on to their kids.

“When we started, we were kids,” says Stocks. “Now we all have kids.” Current team members have seven children ranging from ages two to fifteen. “Add in other members who aren’t currently racing with us but are still very much Shady members, and that’s at least six more kids.”

All team members agree it’s been fun to watch the children build life-long memories alongside their parents, all of them looking forward to Ski to Sea every year and really getting into it.

“None of our kids know life without Ski to Sea,” Rabourn says. “From kegs to kids, we have grown a lot over the years.”

 

‘Sips and Cigars’ at Silver Reef Hotel Casino Spa: Helping Bellingham Sunrise Rotary Help So Many Others

silver reef casino

 

New Grand Entrance - CopyInterested in spirits, craft brews, cigars, fun, and helping your community? Bellingham Sunrise Rotary throws its inaugural “Sips and Cigars” event at Silver Reef Hotel Casino Spa on Saturday, May 31st, with all proceeds benefiting the many charities the rotary supports each year.

“I love it because it’s something different,” says Randi Axelsson, Bellingham Sunrise Rotary board member and hotel sales manager for Silver Reef. “We’re hoping it’s something we can do annually.”

“It’s an idea the Rotary came up with and it just dovetailed perfectly with us opening our new Cigar Lounge,” says Silver Reef food and beverage director Rian Greer.

Silver Reef is donating the function space and all of the food. “We really like supporting the community,” Greer continues. “We donate hundreds of thousands of dollars a year to charities.”

A limited number of tickets are now on sale for “Sips and Cigars” at www.SilverReefCasino.com. Each ticket includes a goodie bag and lanyard with punch card, allowing a choice of four premium cigars, six spirit samples, two beer samples, appetizers and a door prize entry.

“They then have the opportunity to purchase additional punch cards, if that isn’t enough,” Axelsson says with a laugh.

“They’ll be able to choose the cigars and spirits they want to try and the beers they’ll have,” she continues. “They’ll also get a raffle ticket for giveaways.”

Prizes include a new golf wedge, rounds of golf and a sleeve of balls from Shuksan Golf Course, Silver Reef hotel stays, Silver Reef Steak House and Wine Room dinners, and much more.

In addition to the individual cigars received with each punch card, participants have the opportunity to buy boxes of cigars at a hefty discount. With every box purchased come additional raffle tickets.

“We’re going to have four or five different cigar vendors, as well as some local folks,” says Greer. “We always like to involve local business as much as possible.”

Cigar samples will include those from popular suppliers My Father Cigars, Rocky Patel, CAO, Linga Privada, Undercrown, ACID, PSyKo and Project 805.

Jose Ortega, vice president of sales for My Father Cigars out of Miami, will be at the event. “He’s a super fun guy to talk to,” says Greer, “and hugely knowledgeable.”

Spirits will include Mount Baker Distillery, BelleWood Acres, Balvenie Single Malts, Monkey Shoulder Bourbon, Tullamore Dew, Hendricks Gin, Woodinville Whiskey, Casa Noble Tequila, and Crystal Head Vodka.

Beers will come from Widmer Brothers and Cigar City Brewing, Boundary Bay Brewery – who is crafting a special infused beer just for the occasion – and Kulshan Brewing, who will serve its Russian Imperial Stout.

J.D. Merris, head mixologist and co-owner of the Fireside Martini & Wine Bar, will be featured as guest bartender.

“He makes a heck of a Manhattan with Templeton Rye,” says Greer. “And Templeton is another of the liquor folks that will be there.”

Event Center entranceGreer expects a total of 20 liquor vendors in attendance at the event.

This special evening is also a celebration of the brand new Silver Reef Cigar Lounge, a sophisticated space offering fans of cigars and spirits a spectacular place to enjoy both.

“And in February, who wants to sit outside and smoke a cigar?” asks Greer, cracking a smile. “Not me.”

After 12 years, it was time for Silver Reef to remodel its bar. “It had been heavily used,” Greer jokes. “We had served a lot of drinks.”

Rian and his team searched for a way to offer something new and different to their guests with the remodel. “There was a lot of interest in cigars from the local community,” Greer says, “and we have an exception to the indoor smoking ban, which is something the community doesn’t have.”

Greer went directly to a local cigar source to learn more, speaking with Mike Waters, proprietor of downtown Bellingham’s Senate Smoke Shop.

“When I first went in there, I was a little gun shy because, well, I’m going to be selling cigars,” Greer says. “I asked Mike if he wanted to help me and he was incredibly happy to do so. He said, ‘We absolutely need this.’”

Silver Reef plans to offer about 40 different cigars in its Cigar Lounge, while Mike Waters’ shop is stocked with hundreds.

Waters will also be on hand at “Sips and Cigars,” to talk with participants. “He’s such a great resource for cigars,” says Greer.

Silver Reef is building relationships with spirit and cigar folks to help make the Cigar Lounge a truly unique experience for its guests.

“We hope to regularly have vendors here and – first come, first served – those 21 folks in the room can then hang out and talk with the people making the products they enjoy,” Greer says.

The Cigar Lounge is schedule to open before the May 31st event, with “Sips and Cigars” as its official kick-off. The stunning new space will seat 21 guests and hold a limited number of private lockers in which regular guests can store their stogies.

Other sponsors of “Sips and Cigars” include Mancave Ministries, Wilson Motors Mercedes-Benz, and KISM Radio.

Tickets are $60 and available at www.SilverReefCasino.com. For more information, contact Randi Axelsson at 360.543.7142.

 

Sips and Cigars

May 31, 2014 from 6:00 pm to 10:00 pm

Silver Reef Hotel Casino Spa

Haxton Way at Slater Road in Ferndale

866.383.0777

 

Whatcom County Green Schools Summit

 

Submitted by Sustainable Connections

The first gathering in Whatcom County of K-12 school administrators, teachers, green building professionals, students and parents next month signals the beginning of a growing trend that sees the ‘greening’ of our schools as a way to conserve energy, save money, and improve student’s health and achievement.

The Green Schools Summit, scheduled for June 3, 2014 at Broadway Hall in Bellingham is being coordinated by Sustainable Connections, Cascadia Green Building Council and RE Sources for Sustainable Communities. It includes an impressive line-up of speakers with diverse backgrounds sure to spark creativity and action:

·         Riley Grant, Sustainable Schools Manager of RE Sources’ Green Classroom Certification , a free program that provides teachers a meaningful, simple way to integrate conservation education into curriculum and initiate sustainable changes in the classrooms and beyond.

·         Stacy Smedley, Executive Director of The Seed Collaborative, a Seattle non-profit committed to creating environmentally restorative learning spaces that educate and inspire children to be the next generation of environmental stewards. The non-profit is based largely on her experience managing the Bertschi School living building in Seattle- the first project in the world to be certified under Living Building Version 2.0 standards- and witnessing the transformational impact it had on its students

·         Tim Jewitt, Managing Principal at Dykeman, an architecture firm where his expertise includes a wide range of retail, commercial, public and housing projects with emphasis in the design and construction of educational facilities. Dykeman has recently participated in over 12 education projects in Bothell, Monroe, Snohomish, Everett, and Whatcom Middle School in Bellingham.

The term “green schools” can mean everything from energy-efficiency to school gardens to recycling to healthier options in the lunchroom. “This conference aims to focus on the built environment for our children’s schools and highlight what is happening regionally for creating the most sustainable schools in the world,” notes Rose Lathrop, Green Building and Smart Growth Manager for Sustainable Connections.

“With a focus on individual behavior and collective action, we aim to inspire and empower youth to make positive changes for our community and their lives,” says Riley Grant, RE Sources Sustainable Schools Manager. “We want future generations to understand the problems and solutions necessary to protect our ecosystem and create sustainable communities.”

Students of all ages are welcome to attend as they are the heart of the movement and are often the ones initiating changes. Activities for kids will be provided.

Green Schools Summit will take place on Tuesday, June 3, from 5:30 p.m.-7:00 p.m. at Broadway Hall. For more information, visit Sustainable Connections’ website here.

Whatcom County Teams Compete in District Games

austin shenton baseball

 

Baseball

2A District I/II Tournament

Tuesday, May 13

Sehome vs. Squalicum @ Daniels Field (Anacortes) 2 p.m.

Lynden vs. Anacortes @ Volunteer Park (Anacortes) 6 p.m.

3A District I Tournament

Tuesday, May 13

Ferndale vs. Meadowdale @ Ferndale High School, 4 p.m.

Boys Soccer

2A District I Tournament

Tuesday, May 13

Sehome vs. Lakewood High School @ Civic Stadium

 

Lydia Place and Charter College Host 2nd Annual Handbags For Housing

 

handbags for homeless
Handbags For Housing was born as a creative and fashionable way to raise awareness about programs and services offered through Lydia Place.

Calling all up-cycled, re-styled and new-styled fashionistas!

On June 5, from 5:30pm to 8:30pm, Lydia Place – along with event partner Charter College – will host the second annual Handbags For Housing at the Downtown Bellingham Depot Market Square for an evening of fashion and fun benefiting homeless families.

Program highlights include the re-fashion handbag and accessory bazaar, the Labels Women’s Consignment fashion show featuring fifteen local boutiques, winery tastings from Samson Estates Winery, beer tasting from Boundary Bay Brewery, and gourmet appetizers from Crave Catering and Old World Deli.

Handbags For Housing has become the every-ladies night out with a special focus on combining new and used clothing and accessories to refresh and renew your wardrobe.

To gain admission to the event, attendees must purchase their choice of a General or VIP ticket, and also bring a gently used handbag from their closet to donate to the handbag bazaar. Handbags will then be quickly “fluffed” and put for sale in the bountiful “Handbag Bazaar,” where bags and accessories range from $5 to $25.

Attendees will look great and can feel great about their purchases, knowing their contributions throughout the event support homeless families.

Handbags For Housing was born as a creative and fashionable way to raise awareness about programs and services offered through Lydia Place – a non-profit agency working to end homelessness in Whatcom County since 1989. Lydia Place supports families in establishing sustained independence.

In the past 12 months, Lydia Place has assisted over 180 homeless families in finding housing and achieving their dreams for themselves and their children. Thanks to growing partnerships with the Bellingham Housing Authority and Whatcom Homeless Service Center, Lydia Place is serving more families than ever before.

HandbagLogoHandbags for Housing is presented in partnership with Charter College and other local and national businesses that believe in the Lydia Place mission that every family deserves a home.

Local fashion collective Labels Women’s Consignment presents the re- and new fashion show featuring hair from Toni & Guy Hairdressing Academy. Dozens of local businesses – including Bellis Fair, texture clothing, Merry Maids, Girl Meets Boy DJ Services, Joy Of Pilates, Peoples Bank, The Bellingham Herald, Kali Rose Boutique, LuLu – Wonderful Things, 4 Starrs Boutique, Polished, Signs By Tomorrow, OH Snap! Photo Booth, Evolve Truffles, and more – have lent their support for this annual fundraiser.

Bring your friends, family and colleagues for an unforgettable evening for a great cause!

Limited VIP and general admission tickets are now available online at www.lydiaplace.com.

 

Alternative Rockers Collective Soul Complete NW Washington Fair Entertainment Slate

northwest washington fair

 

The Northwest Washington Fair’s Facebook fans asked and were rewarded.

In response to a Facebook poll of possible acts, the Northwest Washington Fair in Lynden announces that alternative rock group Collective Soul will perform on the grandstand stage Saturday, Aug. 16.

The addition completes the slate of grandstand entertainment, scheduled Aug. 11-16. It will begin Aug. 11 with the demolition derby, a perennial fan favorite, followed by two days of the world’s top cowboys competing Aug. 12-13 in the Lynden PRCA Rodeo. Country star Gary Allan performs Aug. 14, then Huey Lewis and The News, one of America’s greatest rock-and-roll bands, will entertain fairgoers Aug. 15.

Tickets for Collective Soul go on sale to the public at 9 a.m. June 4 at www.nwwafair.com. They also will be available then at the fair office, 1775 Front St., Lynden, and by phone at (877) 699-FAIR. Tickets to see Collective Soul, which include gate admission to the fair, are $42 apiece for reserved grandstand seats and $57 for preferred seats. In contrast to most entertainment tickets sold online, there are no extra service fees or convenience charges.

Tickets for the demolition derby, Gary Allan and Huey Lewis and The News already are available.

Collective Soul is releasing its ninth studio album, “See What You Started By Continuing,” this summer as part of its 20th anniversary. Founded by vocalist and guitarist Ed Roland, Collective Soul shot to international fame with its 1993 release, “Hints, Allegations and Things Left Unsaid,” and its mega No. 1 hit “Shine.”

The self-titled “Collective Soul,” released in 1995, would be the album that would help define its sound of catchy melodies and guitar driven songs. Containing four outstanding singles (three of which reached No. 1) – “December,” “The World I Know,” “Where The River Flows,” and “Gel” – it became Collective Soul’s highest-selling album to date. The album went Triple-Platinum and spent 76 weeks on the Billboard Top 200 charts.

Collective Soul dramatically expanded its fan base by performing on the soundtrack to one of the hottest movies of 2008 – “Twilight.” It also has become a Facebook favorite, followed by more than 625,000 fans.

 

Salish Sea Kayak School Offers Classes for Beginners to Intermediate Paddlers and Ski to Sea Racers

sea kayak bellingham

 

kayak school bellinghamSalish Sea Kayak School co-owner Kelly Patrick was born and raised in Idaho, but always hoped to one day live near the water.

“There’s not a lot of water in Idaho,” she says with a laugh. “It’s usually either dry or frozen.”

Patrick moved to Bellingham several years ago and took her first kayaking lesson within six months of landing in Whatcom County.

“I immediately fell in love with it,” she says. “And I decided that not only did I want to enjoy the sport for my own appreciation, but also to help others explore this area and learn to love the sport as much as I do.”

Ted Wang had been a sea kayak instructor for years before Patrick started paddling. The couple met and was soon teaching the sport together.

When Patrick and Wang opened their Salish Sea Kayak School in Bellingham last fall, their goal was to bring an improved experience to area kayaking students.

They’ve done exactly that.

Through changes of management at their previous employer, the couple’s teaching experience – something both Patrick and Wang have long felt passionate about – began to deteriorate.

“We wanted to limit the number of students in a class so that not only did they get more out of it, but the class was safer for everybody involved,” says Patrick.

kayak school bellinghamWang and Patrick are both certified American Canoe Association instructors, and that organization’s guidelines require that any class with over four students have two instructors. At the time the couple left their previous positions, they were teaching classes of eleven, often in rough water.

“It just got to the point where it wasn’t safe and it wasn’t fun,” says Patrick.

The couple also wanted to have direct hands-on control over the gear they put their students in, for greater safety.

“And we wanted the flexibility of being able to develop our own curriculum and to teach wherever we wanted,” she says.

Now, completely in charge of their own school, Patrick and Wang call all the shots.

“If a student wants to learn how to deal with eddies and currents we can take them to Deception Pass,” says Patrick. “If we have a student who is going to paddle Ski to Sea for the first time, we’re able to teach them basic skills on Bellingham Bay.”

Patrick and Wang’s ultimate goal with Salish Sea Kayak School is to allow people to make the sport their own.

The primary teaching season, depending on weather, starts near the end of April and runs through September to mid-October.

Patrick and Wang paddle year-round and are happy to teach throughout the winter, too.

“Having said that, we’re not able to provide dry suits to our students, so a student who wants to go out in the winter time would need to have some of their own gear because it’s so cold.”

Salish Sea Kayak School does supply wet suits to all students – in fact, they provide just about everything needed to learn the sport, from boats and paddles to life jackets and spray skirts. A list of extra things students should bring to class is detailed on the Salish Sea Kayak School website.

The school offers several options for kayak classes. One is a 10-hour series of lessons that takes place over the course of three weeks.

“That takes you from square one,” says Patrick. “This is what a kayak looks like, this is where you sit – the very basics.” Students will end the class able to rescue themselves if they go over, rescue their paddling partners, maneuver the boat, and brace themselves to keep from going over.

sea kayak bellinghamPatrick and Wang are adding a class for those individuals who don’t have time for the 10-hour course or may want to just dip in there and see if they enjoy the sport. “That will be a three to four-hour course taking them through the very basics in one day,” says Patrick, “basically getting in a boat to see if they want to take that next class.”

The couple frequently teaches in Bellingham Bay, on Lake Padden, and on Lake Whatcom, but is flexible about other locations; they’ve taught at Bowman Bay in Skagit County and are willing to go as far north as Birch Bay, among other areas.

“Some people have phobias about salt water so we can teach in the lakes,” Patrick explains. “If conditions are adverse, we may be able to change locations.”

They are able to customize both class schedules and content to meet students’ needs.  “Our objective is to maximize accessibility and convenience for our students,” Patrick says.

With Ski to Sea just around the corner, Salish Sea Kayak School provides a refresher course for people paddling the kayak leg who may not have been in a boat since last year’s race.

They also offer a basic skills course for Sea To Ski participants – folks who may have been asked to be on a team but have never been in a kayak.

“That actually happens frequently,” Patrick says with a laugh.

Patrick and Wang have both been rescue boaters for Ski to Sea, and watched many novice boaters go over – often in rough water and plunged into cold water.

sea kayak school“It should be such an exciting and fun event, but by the time they get to the end, they’re tired, miserable, and cold,” Patrick says. “It would just be great to see people enjoy it – and a crash course will help them do that.”

Patrick and Wang love to teach and love to kayak – so of course, it’s fulfilling to do both – and to do so with their own company.

One of the most satisfying parts of the job, for Patrick, is watching beginners discover that they can kayak – even if they think they won’t be able to.

“I can’t tell you how many students I’ve had say, without even thinking about it, ‘I can’t do that,’” says Patrick. “Watching them overcome that – whether it’s a fear or discovering they do have an aptitude or the physical strength – it’s very fulfilling.”

Salish Sea Kayak School offers discounts on kayak lessons for Ski to Sea participants throughout the month leading up to the race. Learn more about the Ski to Sea Refresher and Basic Skills courses here, and email info@salishseakayakschool.com or call 888.858.8411 for more information.

Salish Sea Kayak School

www.salishseakayakschool.com

888.858.8411

 

Bellingham TheatreWorks Launches Two Projects

bellingham theatre works

 

Submitted by Bellingham Theatre Works

bellingham theatre worksLocal director Mark Kuntz had a big problem.  “For the past decade I have been the artistic director of the Mount Baker Repertory Theatre.”  His summers were a whirlwind of casting, producing and directing up to four summer rep shows for the Mount Baker Theatre.  “Now that I am no longer with the Mount Baker, what am I going to do with all that free time during the summer?”  Whereas others might take the summer off to go swimming, camping and fishing, Kuntz needs to feed his artistic soul.  “I am happiest when I am creating art,” he declares.

Kuntz teamed up with local playwright Steve Lyons, a recent transplant from Berkeley, and formed the no-mad theatre company, Bellingham TheatreWorks.  They don’t have a physical theatre space, but they do have enthusiasm.

Kuntz, a professor of theatre arts at Western Washington University, continues: “I am excited to take on projects that I have wanted to pursue for years.  Our little theatre company gives me artistic freedom and I look forward to producing high quality, meaningful, contemporary theatre.”

Their first production is a play that Kuntz has had his eye on for several years.  Border Songs, first produced by Seattle’s Book-It Theatre, is the stage adaptation of Jim Lynch’s beloved book.

This whimsical adaptation of Border Songs explores the tensions, struggles, law and lawlessness at the Peace-Arch border through the eyes of Brandon, a quirky, dyslexic, socially-awkward border patrolman.  A cast of ten plays over twenty different characters, including drug smugglers, massage therapists, illegal immigrants, EPA agents, farmers, and surly border dwellers.

bellingham theatre worksThe play is being produced by Bellingham TheatreWorks in association with Village Books.  “A focus of our organization is to collaborate with community partners, and Village Books has been a great booster for Washington’s own Jim Lynch,” stated Kuntz.  “They will be featuring Jim’s books, selling tickets, and supporting us as we jump off the cliff into the crazy world of producing theatre.”

Border Songs plays at the Firehouse in Fairhaven and the Claire Theatre in Lynden during June and July.

Then in August, they team up with the Wayne Morse Center of the University of Oregon, the Oregon Historical Society, and World Affairs Council of Oregon to tour a play penned by producing director Lyons, called The Ghosts of Tonkin.  Just in time for the 50th anniversary of the Gulf of Tonkin incident that ignited the Vietnam War, this 60-minute drama tells the powerful story of how seemingly well-intentioned public officials brought about one of the most devastating chapters in the history of the United States.

Incorporating verbatim dialog taken from Senate transcripts, telephone recordings, recently declassified NSA documents, and other sources The Ghosts of Tonkin will debut at Bellingham High School over Labor Day weekend and then tour to Portland, Eugene, Seattle and other towns in the Pacific Northwest.  Bellingham TheatreWorks was just awarded a $25,000 grant in support of their ambitious plans for this play.

To stay abreast of the summer plans of this dynamic new theatre company, visit www.BellinghamTheatreWorks.org

 

Organized At Last: Calming the Chaos, Improving Your Spaces

Julie Clarke is a professional organizer who can give you quick tips to de-clutter.

 

professional organizer
Julie Clarke, owner of Organized at Last, is a professional organizer.

“I was raised in a really disorganized, chaotic home,” says Julie Clarke, owner of Organized At Last, a professional organizing company. “My mom was diagnosed with MS when I was two and passed away my senior year of high school.”

“My dad was a good provider,” Clarke says, “but he wasn’t the kind of guy who was going to get help in our house. They did the best they could.”

With four daughters, a hard-working father, and a mother decreasingly able to keep up with even the simplest of tasks, the family home was in an endless state of disarray – to put it mildly.

Dirty clothes mixed with clean, while piles of stuff obscured every surface. Pathways wove through the mounting mess.

“We girls had bedrooms upstairs and mom would just throw the clothes or shoes – whatever she was able to reach – onto the stairs,” Clarke says. “It would create this huge mountain, an avalanche of chaos.”

Clarke vividly remembers, in second grade, being at a friend’s house and realizing that things there were done very differently.

“I started paying attention,” Clarke says. “I watched how things were done, the systems and routines. I asked a lot of questions.”

She sought answers to seemingly simple questions: Why do other people seem to be able to get to school on time, with combed hair and socks that match?

professional organizer“All those things were difficult for me,” Clarke admits. “We had socks in a drawer in the kitchen. It was rare that I could easily find two shoes in the same place.”

Over the next few years, she looked in good friends’ cupboards and drawers, figuring out how other people organized their lives.

In seventh grade, Clarke put her growing knowledge to work in her family’s home.

“I spent about eight months working every day – cleaning out a drawer or cupboard, working underneath the bathroom sink. I just took it one space at a time.

Clarke left her Edmonds home after high school to study home economics at Western Washington University; she stayed in Bellingham after graduating and marrying husband Steve.

Just as she started to work as a professional organizer, her first son came along, and Clarke pulled back, instead teaching and speaking about organizing for many years.

“When my youngest son started kindergarten, I really got serious about starting a business.” She named it Organized At Last, a fitting moniker representing her own journey.

Clarke’s now heading into her 16th year of business. “It’s been a great career,” she says, smiling.

Most customers reach out to Clarke by email or phone, and she schedules a consultation.

She – and often an accompanying employee – meets with the clients, photographs the space, and talks through what’s going on in each particular situation.

professional organizerAfter so many years helping others create efficient spaces, she’s seen it all. “Sometimes we walk in and I can pretty much write the script,” Clarke says.

Though she’s successfully taken on her fair share of extreme situations, most projects are straightforward: someone is moving and needs help downsizing or is dealing with an illness or injury that causes them to fall behind on home front upkeep. Many times, it’s simply busy lives that make it difficult to manage the day-to-day, until the pantry is overflowing and cars can’t be pulled into the garage.

Clarke and her staff don’t always supply hands-on help; sometimes they simply offer recommendations for changes.

“I charge $100 to come in and walk through your space with you,” she explains, “but a lot of times I’ll say, ‘If you just move your couch to this wall, change the location of that shelf, de-clutter that area, put hooks here instead of bars, and remove this, you’ll free up so much space.’”

Clarke is able to see a room and in an instant know how to transform it. “Often they just need me to guide them with a few ideas using items they already own,” she says.

For larger, more involved projects, Clarke has learned that it’s always way more than just about stuff. Time and again, she’s watched a client’s entire demeanor change, become lighter, as their space becomes more efficient. The Organized At Last motto says it all: Creating emptier, fuller lives.

That means buying fewer things and enjoying life more. “Living with less is really the way to appreciate life,” she says. “You don’t need a lot of toys to be happy.”

Clarke is passionate about her work and attributes that to her upbringing.

professional organizer“When you spend 25 minutes searching for a hairbrush, that’s a lot of your life wasted,” she says. “When your house is efficient and organized and you know exactly where things go, it takes just a few seconds to put items away, because everything has a home. It makes life so much easier.”

Those childhood experiences have made a profound impact on her career. “When I walk into a really chaotic situation I just want to reach out and hug my client and tell them it’s going to be okay,” she says. “I always say that I grew up to become the person my mom desperately needed.”

Organized At Last

www.organizedatlast.biz

2950 Newmarket St., Suite 101-119

Bellingham WA 98226

360.319.2417

 

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