As people throughout the region and all over the world celebrate Earth Month, Puget Sound Energy wants to help customers reduce their carbon footprint.
“Creating pathways to allow our customers to participate in green energy and reduce their carbon footprint is a commitment year-round,” said PSE Director of Customer Energy Management & Renewables Bob Stolarski. “There are many low-cost ways to make your home and lifestyle green this month and every month.”
PSE recommends three easy ways to participate in Earth Month:
Replace inefficient lightbulbs with LEDs. Switching to LEDs may seem like a small change, but they can make a big impact both for your home and the environment. Compared to CFLs or incandescent bulbs, LEDs provide higher quality lighting, have a longer lifespan, and contain zero toxic elements. Look for everyday instant discounts and special offers on LEDs at participating retail stores.
Recycle your fridge responsibly. Proper fridge disposal reduces greenhouse gas emissions and saves more than 120 pounds of recyclable steel from the landfill. From now until the end of May, PSE will take the hassle out of the haul-away and give you $50 to pick up and recycle your old model, plain and simple. For a limited time, upgrade to a new Whirlpool ENERGY STAR® certified refrigerator and PSE will also give you a $50 rebate.
Doable renewable. You don’t have to install solar panels to participate in green energy. For as little as four dollars – or the price of your morning latte – added to your monthly bill, you can match part of your electricity usage with locally sourced, renewable energy.
PSE will also be doing its part this Earth Month by handing out thousands of seeds and seedlings throughout its service area. Check out one of these events near you!
Earlier this month, PSE provided 800 free trees to customers through the Energy-Saving Trees, an Arbor Day Foundation program that helps conserve energy and reduce energy bills through strategic tree planting. Over the next 20 years, these trees are expected to save more than 222,000 kWh of energy and more than 1.6 million gallons of storm water runoff.
To learn more about PSE’s commitment to creating a better energy future, head to www.pse.com/environment.
Micah and his coaches await his short program skating results at the Junior Worlds competition in Sofia, Bulgaria. Photo credit: Ethan Lynette.
Ten years ago, Fai and Ethan Lynette took their twin sons Shane and Micah to a roller rink for their seventh birthday. That trip to the roller rink would become a prophetic moment for Micah. He enjoyed skating so much, he wanted to continue doing it, but there were no roller rinks close to their house. Fai and Micah compromised and she agreed to take him to a local ice rink. It was a good thing she did. Now, at just 17 years old, Micah is the men’s national figure skating champion of Thailand.
The Lynette family live in Bellingham and all three children attend Sehome High School. Photo credit: Ethan Lynette.
Micah was allowed to skate for the Southeast Asian nation because his mother is from Thailand. It’s only Micah’s second year skating professionally for the country, but he hopes to become the first Thai male skater to ever make the Olympics. With the 2022 Olympics in sight, Micah has four years of training left to make his dream a reality.
It’s Thursday April 12, and I’m meeting Fai and Micah for a quick interview before they go catch up on much-needed sleep. They just got back from Thailand two days ago and are on a 14-hour time difference. Micah has just finished his last tournament for the 2017/2018 skating season – the 2018 Thailand National Figure Skating Championship, in which he placed first.
“I started out in hockey actually,” Micah says. “But I hated it. I’m not very coordinated.”
Fai interjects, “Yeah, he’s not. His brother is but Micah – not much.” Fai is just as invested in the skating as Micah is. In fact, she will be the first to tell you she isn’t his fan, but his biggest critic. She may just be the best skater to have never stepped foot on ice.
After Micah told his parents he didn’t like hockey, Fai suggested he try figure skating. His younger sister Sasha was already enrolled in the sport, so Micah wouldn’t be alone as he made the switch.
Micah and his mother, Fai Lynette, travel across the world so he can compete in international skating competitions. Photo credit: Ethan Lynette.
At age seven, Micah started his figure skating career a little later than most. Typically, individuals aspiring to skate at the professional level start when they are as young as three. But that didn’t discourage him as he continued to move up the ranks in both regional and international skating.
Micah says two specific instances made him realize he wanted to become a professional figure skater. It first began in Bellingham, where he’s from. After spending much of his time training in the local rink at Bellingham Sportsplex, he began competing and winning local competitions, which inspired him to move on to bigger things. Fai decided it was advantageous for Micah to start training in Canada, thus began their daily trips across the border.
During the season, Micah travels to Richmond, British Columbia’s Connaught Skating Club five days a week to train. The border agents even know him and his mother by name.
“They check in on us and ask if he is in the Olympics yet,” Fai says with a laugh.
Micah’s second skating epiphany came last year when, for the first time, he was crowned the male national figure skating champion of Thailand. “I’m now performing at the highest level,” Micah says. “I have a whole nation on my back now. I have to get it together.”
There are four years left until the 2022 Olympics that take place in Beijing, China. This gives Micah three years to train and attempt to qualify for the winter games. “It really depends if it’s advantageous for me or not,” Micah says. “On one hand it gives me more time to train, but that also means there’s more time that I could get injured.”
In addition to all the training Micah will go through, he is still a junior at Sehome High School, and wants to have a social life too. “It has been really important for us that he has a normal high school life,” Fai says. “We’re making sure not to put all our eggs in the figure skating basket, but it can be hard finding a balance between staying competitive in figure skating and going to school full time.”
Micah and his coaches await his short program skating results at the Junior Worlds competition in Sofia, Bulgaria. Photo credit: Ethan Lynette.
It helps Micah is close with his Thai teammates. Whenever he’s in Thailand he’s able to hang out with them both on and off the rink. And, social media apps such as Snapchat and Instagram allow him to keep in touch with his friends back in Bellingham when he is on the road, in the air or skating in another country. But social media can only go so far. “Travelling is definitely the hardest part of what I’m doing,” Micah says. “It isn’t easy to be away from school, family and friends as much as I am.”
In the 2017/2018 competitive skating season Micah competed internationally six times. In the last month alone, Micah was in Bulgaria, Thailand, Canada and The United States. Fai is Micah’s main travel companion, but it’s getting to the point where he’ll have to go by himself, she says. Both are in agreement they are getting tired of all the flights and jet lag that comes with it. At the end of the day, Micah is the one skating and Fai isn’t, so those long flights will end sooner for her.
This year, Micah travelled to the ISU World Junior Figure Skating Championships in Sofia, Bulgaria by himself, where he placed 23rd out of 49 skaters. These trips may seem like vacations, but travelling to other countries is all business for Micah.
As soon as he gets off the plane he gets to work. For example, he will compete for the entire week he is abroad if he makes it to the long program section of each competition.
So with all the travel and sacrifices, what drives Micah to keep on skating? It’s an intense love and passion for the sport. “Honestly, I just really love figure skating,” he says. “I like to think that if I wasn’t doing it, I would still be a fan of it. I love the way being on the ice feels; it’s a natural experience for me.”
So far his favorite place he has travelled to is Taipei, but he says he performed his best this past month in Bulgaria. Figure skating performance is surprisingly intertwined with the music you choose, Micah says.
In the past he didn’t like selecting music and left this task up to his coach. But two years ago, his coach picked a piece he just couldn’t compete with. Micah and Fai look at each other in agreement at the memory – it’s unanimous – the program he skated to that song did not go over well.
Micah now picks his own pieces. The problem now is he often wants to pick 10 different songs. One time, he even changed his long program song right before he took the ice in a competition in Tallinn, Estonia.
Now in his off season, Micah will focus on school until his next competition in August – the Asia Open in Thailand. But first things first, Micah needs to sleep off that jet lag before he opens any school books.
There is a lot that goes into scheduling the best performances. Luckily Brad Burdick is up to the task. Photo courtesy: Mount Baker Theatre.
Have you ever had this experience? You’re trying to set an appointment with someone, but they keep stringing you along or repeatedly fail to return your calls, before finally accepting the invite. Imagine doing that with a dozen traveling theater companies each year, while scheduling local shows and trying to curate a diverse set of performances for the community.
There is a lot that goes into scheduling the best performances. Luckily Brad Burdick is up to the task. Photo courtesy: Mount Baker Theatre.
Burdick is the mastermind who orchestrates all the shows scheduled at MBT. The booking process begins at the Western Arts Alliance Conference, which brings together more than 680 presenters, artists and agents to share the programming of live performances.
Here Burdick learns what shows are most likely coming west in the upcoming year. The puzzle pieces are established and laid out on the table. However, they’re always changing.
“Unfortunately, you can’t just pay a fee and have a Broadway performance show up,” Burdick says. “They need a strong route. It’s easier to get routes together on the East Coast where the cities are a lot closer together.”
Brad Burdick is the scheduling mastermind at MBT. Photo courtesy: Mount Baker Theatre.
Creating routes is one of the challenges of booking in the Pacific Northwest. The puzzle pieces might drop out if they can’t fit in with other theaters’ schedules. If there are too many travel days between shows, it can cost a touring company greatly. To resolve this issue, Burdick spends a lot of his time communicating with other theaters in the area.
“Olympia, Tacoma, Yakama, Bremerton, Edmonds, Spokane, Portland – I’m on email with them regularly, looking at all the shows I’ve got in the hopper,” says Burdick, “There’s a lot of give and take. Sometimes I book a show because people in Olympia really want it and sometimes down the road if I need a show to fill out a hole in my season they might jump on it. It’s all about relationships.”
The connection between theaters is strong and these collaborative relationships pay dividends by bringing brilliant shows to all communities.
Bringing Broadway shows like Cabaret to Bellingham requires scheduling up to a year in advance. Photo courtesy: Mount Baker Theatre.
Booking artists is no easy task, but that doesn’t stop MBT from providing arts, entertainment and social interaction with a program of over 400 performances each year. “Artists are worried about going into the smaller markets because of the volatility of the smaller theaters,” Burdick says. “They don’t know what they’re getting into. Artists would much rather play in the big cities because of the volume of business that happens.”
Burdick explains that MBT is becoming known as an exception in the small market rule because MBT has more seats than is typical. Most theaters with Bellingham’s population size are likely to seat anywhere from 750 to 850 people. MBT holds 1,500 seats. This is appealing to larger artists because they are likely to get better revenue as a result.
Today’s artists make the most money from tours, not music sales, thanks to the accessibility of YouTube, Spotify and other streaming platforms. Artists who book at MBT can also be looking for a special experience. Artists like John Legend perform at MBT because of the intimacy of the space. The show John Legend designed was all about reconnecting with the audience – and MBT’s size was ideal.
Broadway shows with big casts like Chorus Line sometimes need special attention, in case MBT is responsible for transporting production and cast. Photo courtesy: Mount Baker Theatre.
Burdick has worked at MBT for over two decades and is excited for the future. “Looking at the diversity [of shows] we have now compared to way back when I started is much more significant than it used to be – but it’s not as significant as I’d like it to be,” he says. “As we continue to grow the audiences we can continue to bring in more diverse shows.”
In curating the show lineup, MBT allows the community to explore performances and styles they might not have been interested in previously. Burdick wants to continue finding new things and stretching the audience’s perception of what’s out there and what they might like. “We’re going to continue to grow slowly,” he says. “I like to view the MBT as very entrepreneurial for a nonprofit.”
Along with professional Broadway shows, concerts and comedic performances, MBT invites the community to use their space for recitals and other performances. These pieces go into the booking process to ensure a fantastic year. What makes MBT so special is the local community that helps it thrive.
Mount Baker Theatre has a history of bringing Broadway shows to Bellingham. Photo courtesy: Mount Baker Theatre.
“I always like to have input from people,” Burdick says. “If you’re interested in having an artist, send me an email or give me a call; that helps me know what Bellingham wants. I’m always interested in what people want to hear and see.”
Burdick’s work brings diverse entertainment to Whatcom County and puts our corner of the Pacific Northwest on the map for future performers to bring their stardom to a community already brimming with starlight.
The store has been around Historic Fairhaven for almost two decades and offers the best selection of gear. Photo courtesy: Fairhaven Runners & Walkers.
From your first jog to your dream marathon, Fairhaven Runners & Walkers can help. These active lifestyle advisers scour the marketplace to find the right fit for all your adventuring needs.
The process begins with an individualized shoe-fitting experience in Fairhaven. The well-lit, cozy store creates a homey sense of warmth. Before you know it, you’re greeted by kind and experienced staff members. “We help you with the whole lifestyle,” says store owner Steve Roguski. “We don’t think of ourselves as sales people; we think of ourselves as coaches and advisors for you on this path, to get where you want to go.”
Steve and Genevieve Roguski own Fairhaven Runners & Walkers. They enjoy running local trails and exploring. Photo courtesy: Fairhaven Runners & Walkers.
Fairhaven Runners & Walkers has been in business for almost two decades. Their website offers a plethora of information including a running list of local races and a community reference guide to local running groups and helpful information. Their knowledgeable local team knows the products and the sport. They work with you to accomplish your goals. “The best feather in our cap is the team of people we have in the store,” Roguski says. “You’re not meeting people that are inexperienced or novice; the opposite is the case. These folks are really into the sport, really love what they do and care about how they do it at Fairhaven Runners.”
The team has perfected a four-step process to help each person find the right shoe and gear. This is known as the “4F Process.”
Function
Everyone who works at Fairhaven Runners & Walkers is educated about each product and dedicated to helping customers find the best gear. Photo courtesy: Fairhaven Runners & Walkers.
Fairhaven Runners & Walkers team members start by asking questions to determine how you plan to use your shoes. They also look at the history of the shoes you’re wearing. Examining your old shoe wear patterns and learning of any past injuries helps determine what will work best for you. The team member will watch you walk and analyze your gait – a fancy term for how locomotion is achieved through limb movement. They will also assess your foot type and biomechanics.
Fit
Stop into Fairhaven Runners & Walkers to find your perfect fit. Photo courtesy: Fairhaven Runners & Walkers.
Finding the right fit requires teamwork. Is it comfortable? Do you need special sizing? How do your favorite walking socks feel inside the shoe? Will an insert help when you run? With experience, knowledge, products and patience, Fairhaven Runners & Walkers will help you find the right fit.
Fun
Are you excited by the shoes? Have you been dreaming about bright green footwear forever and here they are – laced up and ready to go? The staff loves to run, climb, walk, jump and, most importantly, make sure you leave with a smile and pep in your step.
Analysis
The store has been around Historic Fairhaven for almost two decades and offers the best selection of gear. Photo courtesy: Fairhaven Runners & Walkers.
The staff will summarize the features and benefits of the shoe based on your needs and desires. Customers can try the shoes in-store or outside the store. This final check on fit, color and excitement level ensures that you want to wear those new shoes right out the door.
“We love the whole process with everybody,” Roguski says. “We’ve helped people that don’t even walk – people in wheelchairs – they just need help with some footwear. We love that. One of the cool things with this store is we pay so much attention to each individual person – what their needs are, how we can help and what kind of issues they might have with their feet – walking or running.”
Medical providers often refer clients to Fairhaven Runners & Walkers because of the store’s wealth of knowledge. They’re a great resource to help you run, walk, move and stand in comfort.
Superfeet FitStation is designed by Superfeet and Hewlett-Packard. It makes a 3D scan of your foot and records pressure distribution during the gait cycle. Photo courtesy: Fairhaven Runners & Walkers.
One way they do this is through their partnership with Superfeet. At the Superfeet FitStation, you can 3D print orthotics for your feet. Designed by Superfeet and Hewlett-Packard, this machine will create a 3D scan of your foot and record pressure distribution during the gait cycle. “Seventy-five percent of the population has foot aches or pains and that’s just the tip of the iceberg of how we can help,” Roguski says.
Superfeet FitStation technology works in combination with the skills of a team who love the sport. Together they will keep you from breaking a sweat when it comes to deciding what’s right for you.
And Fairhaven Runners & Walkers helps with more than shoe selection – they’re ready to help you traverse the Pacific Northwest and beyond. They offer apparel, maps, medical items, massage products and fuel (also known as snacks) for any escapade.
Craig Bartlett has been a long-time store manager at Fairhaven Runners & Walkers. He provides a wealth of knowledge about the sport and products. Photo courtesy: Fairhaven Runners & Walkers.
No matter what kind of mover you are – a world-class runner or a walking group newcomer – if you have feet, Fairhaven Runners & Walkers has you covered.
Connect with Fairhaven Runners & Walkers, learn about local running clubs and upcoming races, and discover great product at fairhavenrunners.com.
Shultzie and one year-old Sloan. Photo courtesy: Shultzie Willows.
At 35, Shultzie Willows has already had three careers, spanning the gamut from children’s television, to retail, to promoting the humanitarian work of Lydia Place. It may seem a diverse career path, but there is a common thread – community engagement and advocacy.
Born in Maine, Shultzie spent her childhood moving around the country following her mother’s job with Georgia Pacific. The family made their final move to Bellingham when Shultzie was 12 years old.
Shultzie poses in her store The Paperdoll. Photo courtesy: Shultzie Willows.
It was in Bellingham that her community-focused career path began with her first high school job with Whatcom County Health and Human Services. Unlike more traditional adolescent employment in restaurants and movie theaters, Shultzie’s work had impact; she was the youth development coordinator in the substance abuse department. She loved helping others from the start. “My parents instilled in me a sense of service and helping others,” she says. “It was important that things I gave time to, and my work, had purpose.”
Shultzie attended Evergreen State College where a random course in PR exposed her to the vast world of telecommunications and broadcasting. She went on to work for PBS and a children’s production company in New York – assisting with development and production of beloved programs like Reading Rainbow. After five years in the field and a Masters Degree in Communications, she returned to Bellingham and opened The Paperdoll, a boutique that promoted up and coming designers, paper goods, clothing and unique accessories. She loved her store, and regularly used her platform to give back to the community, but something was missing. “It was that community piece that was part of all the things I’d done before – community enrichment and giving back,” she says.
Lydia Place turned 28 last year. Photo courtesy: Shultzie Willows.
Always a fan of wearing multiple hats, she accepted a position with yoga apparel company lululemon while still balancing her work with Paperdoll. “I loved yoga and yoga clothes as much as I loved art and design, and this seemed to check those boxes.” While at lululemon, she began to oversee their community engagement program, focusing on events and classes to increase accessibility to yoga and support local yoga teachers. “Through yoga, there were a lot of ways we could give back to the community,” she says. “They [lululmeon] were incredibly supportive and allowed me and the store to promote and champion yoga as a means to create connection and partnership.”
Shultzie has a pattern of finding work based on her personal values and passions. This is what led her to Lydia Place. “I wanted community engagement to be my work and not just my volunteer effort,” she says. “While on the hunt for something that afforded me this type of opportunity, my mom sent me a job listing at Lydia Place and I applied. I didn’t think I had a chance but I was very passionate about wanting to give back.”
Shultzie participated in the Human Race in 2013 with the crew from Lydia Place, her daughter Sloan, partner Spencer and their dog Soupy Sails. Photo courtesy: Shultzie Willows.
Lydia Place sensed this passion and brought Shultzie on board as a development assistant supporting their annual auction. With her extensive experience building community engagement and hosting events, it was a natural fit. From there, she took on social media management, events management and fundraising, and eventually became the organization’s community engagement director.
She now oversees a team that engages the community in disrupting the cycle of poverty and homelessness here in Whatcom County – for this generation and the next. “Together as a community we can really move the dial and make some permanent and lasting change for local families and individuals,” Shultzie says. “There is a large need in our community – whether someone is right on the cusp or have experienced the hopelessness and despair being without a home creates. Having children in unsafe places – cars or tents – it’s just not ok – and we MUST act and correct course.”
Shultzie and one year-old Sloan. Photo courtesy: Shultzie Willows.
Shultzie recalls a young mother who stayed in transitional housing toward the beginning of her time with the agency. “Her baby was the same age as my daughter,” Shultzie says. “I wondered, what’s the difference between this person and me? Circumstance? Luck? Resources? I don’t know how you can ignore that we are much more similar than we are different.”
For Shultzie, Lydia Place’s success can be seen in the lives of those it positively impacts. Everyday examples like families that transitioned from cars and tents to stable homes of their own; parents building healthy relationships with their children; mothers and fathers graduating from college and technical programs, securing employment and ultimately seeing families at a stage and place where they are asking, “How can I pay it forward?” These are the pieces that make this work so impactful for Shultzie, and fill the space that was once missing.
2018 will be a landmark year for Lydia Place. The organization is working with private landlords, the city and community to house all waitlisted families by the end of the year. “We’ve drawn a line in the sand,” Shultzie says. “We’re excited and optimistic. We want to come to a functional zero around family homelessness by the end of the year. I’m so inspired every day.”
Handbags for Housing 2014 marked a big year of growth for the event and organization. Photo credit: Dawn Matthes.
This year is also about stabilization following a period of intense growth. “We want to ensure programs will continue into the future,” Shultzie says. “Our goal is to have all families housed, to look at the way the community defines homelessness and move on to addressing those who are on the fringe.”
Shultzie’s passion extends beyond her work into many other spheres. She is on ReUse Works’ board of directors and has curated art for the Honey Salon art gallery for the past five years. She is also collaborating with a local group of artists, educators and dreamers to conceive a permanent interactive play center for children and adults, focusing on science, sensory play and art. “I love art and creative spaces,” Shultzie says. “It’s wonderful to immerse oneself in beauty and creativity. It’s important and necessary.”
As vice president of the board of directors for the Downtown Bellingham Project, Shultzie says, “I’m crazy excited and passionate about downtown Bellingham. It’s the heart and core of our city and a vibrant demonstration of many aspects of our community working in tandem. We have tons of energy and enthusiasm in the areas of economic development and residential density right now. It’s an exciting time for Bellingham as a whole.”
In 2017 Handbags for Housing grew from 200 attendees to over 500, and from $8,000 in revenue to over $70,000. Photo credit: Dawn Matthes.
Shultzie enjoys spending time with her family and treasures weekends with her young daughter, Sloan, who will be entering kindergarten this fall. As a working mother who regularly volunteers her time and resources, she is remarkably energetic. “I definitely feel better when I have a lot of irons in the fire,” she says. “I like being active and productive, and feeling like my life has a higher purpose and meaning. All this stuff I do feeds that desire. I’m really committed to this idea of being in the seat of wonder and being open to seeing where ideas and partnerships can take us … I ask myself what kind of legacy I’m leaving for the world, for Sloan and what I’m doing to make it a better place. It’s a good question to keep asking.”
Shultzie draws inspiration from Lydia Place Executive Director Emily O’Connor and her co-workers, the women and men who are working hard on the front lines combating homelessness. She is honored to share their stories with the community. “This is one of the most fulfilling careers I have ever had,” Shultzie says. “It’s about advocating for those who don’t have a voice. There is a lot of inequity in this world and if there is something I can do personally to leverage my skillset for others, I’m going to do that.”
Hearts for Housing 2018 was Love Boat themed and raised over $280,000. Photo credit: Dawn Matthes.
Photo courtesy: Shultzie Willows.
Cider Press 2015 MC and friend Shannon Day and Lydia Place Human Resources and Operations Manager Haley White. Photo credit: Dawn Matthes.
Marty Watson is the co-owner of The Shakedown and The Racket Bar and Pinball Lounge. Photo courtesy: Marty Watson.
Belfast, March 1987: 13-year-old Marty Watson is headed to the Ulster Hall to see The Mission perform – his first rock concert. To understand the Northern Irishman’s journey, it’s best to start at the beginning – with that 13-year-old goth teen becoming smitten with music and everything about it. And that started at Ulster Hall with The Mission.
The inside of The Racket Bar and Pinball Lounge after many renovations. Photo credit: Marty Watson.
Marty recalls the night as if it were yesterday, seemingly reliving it as he divulges the details. After taking the train from the coastal town of Bangor, where he grew up, to Belfast, he arrived at the iconic Ulster Hall – the same Ulster Hall where Van Morrison, AC/DC and Led Zeppelin played many times. In fact, Ulster Hall is the first venue where Zeppelin played their massive hit “Stairway to Heaven.”
That night, The Mission, one of Marty’s favorite bands, would take the stage – a relatively rare occurrence, as not many touring English bands would “cross the water” to perform in Belfast at that time. Marty recalls watching the opening band finish, the lights go down and people starting to scream. Ominous electronic orchestral music began to play. The lights enamored him; green spotlights beamed from every direction and clouds of fog obscured the stage. The orchestral music faded into the winding opening guitar intro of the band’s first song “Beyond the Pale,” from their album “Children”. At the moment the drums kicked in, bright white lights engulfed the stage, silhouetting the band.
Marty, now co-owner of The Shakedown and The Racket Bar and Pinball Lounge, takes a sip of his sugar-laden tea, on a rainy afternoon. “It was my first show, but still maybe the most iconic show I’ve ever seen,” he says.
This is quite the statement from someone who has been going to shows for over 30 years and co-owns a music venue where hundreds of acts play throughout the year. But it makes sense; there’s nothing quite like that first concert.
Marty spent the rest of his youth in the same fashion – going to punk and goth concerts, and buying a lot of records along the way. Early on, bands such as The Cult, New Model Army, New Order, Echo and The Bunnymen, and The Damned were his favorites. Later, bands like Leatherface, The Afghan Whigs, Fugazi, Jawbreaker and Lungfish were prominent in his prized record collection.
Marty Watson is the co-owner of The Shakedown and The Racket Bar and Pinball Lounge. Photo courtesy: Marty Watson.
Marty went on to attend college at the University of Northumbria at Newcastle in Northeastern England. He graduated in 1995 with a degree in Environmental Management and began the journey that would lead him out of the United Kingdom and, ultimately, to Bellingham.
Due to a lack of environmental jobs in Northern Ireland and the United Kingdom, Marty began to look for work abroad. “I picked places that seemed the most glamorous to my young, urban Northern Irish eyes,” he says. “I remember thinking to myself I wanted some ‘sexy experience,’ to put on my resume. I imagined it would look great if I had shark-tagging in the Bahamas or something like that listed on a resume.”
Many of these locations were in the Caribbean. After writing letters to 25 different organizations, Marty received 20 responses back, with 17 saying they didn’t have funding for him – but the St. Croix Environmental Association in the U.S Virgin Islands, did. He moved to St. Croix in June of 1997.
Here, Marty was tasked with writing a waste management plan for the island, following up on reports of pollution and other environmental issues, as well as outreach to schools and youth groups – including taking children snorkeling. He says he was a bit nervous about the job at first – particularly having to supervise children. But he found his rhythm.
On St. Croix, he met his wife, Heather, a jeweler from Kansas City, Missouri. The couple decided to move to San Diego, California where Marty got involved in the punk and hardcore music scene again. He frequented a club called The Casbah and began to develop his interest in music photography. “The Casbah is an iconic venue in San Diego,” he says. “I loved it. Sometimes I would see acts who would later go on to be huge. I saw The White Stripes there. It’s only a 200-person venue and I wasn’t even there to see them; I was there to see their support band, The Bellrays.”
Marty wanted to approach music photography from a different angle, not just the crowd’s perspective, so he would often get on stage and take photos from angles that tried to capture the energy of the musicians’ performance. Some of his photos can be seen at The Shakedown today.
While living in Southern California, Marty worked as an environmental consultant, writing and editing large impact assessment reports for firms based in San Diego and Los Angeles. The L.A. firm allowed him to telecommute, which became advantageous when the 2008 financial crisis hit. By that time, Marty had grown tired of larger cities and the constant heat and sun. They took the opportunity to head north to a smaller city and a climate with more distinct seasons. In hindsight, a climate that resembled the one he grew up in.
Guinness—the way it should be—done properly using the three-part pour. Photo credit: Marty Watson.
In February 2009, Marty spent a weekend relocating to Bellingham. On Monday morning, he drove to the Starbucks in Barkley Village, logged into his computer and went back to work. They had no idea he was in Bellingham. They eventually figured it out, but it took them awhile.
Marty quickly sought out Brent Cole, editor of Bellingham’s monthly music publication What’s Up! Magazine. He began contributing his photography and connecting with the music community, including fellow photographer, Hollie Huthman. In early 2010, Hollie told him about her idea for a music venue – The Shakedown.
After reviewing Hollie’s business plan, Marty decided to invest in the business. But it seemed if only one person ran The Shakedown, it could get overwhelming – and, conveniently, he was looking for his next thing. “I had some savings after working corporate, so I was willing to roll the dice,” he says. “I didn’t want to regret it forever if I never tried, so I went with it.”
Before they signed the lease, Hollie and Marty felt that the city’s restrictive noise ordinance remained a roadblock to a successful music venue. Fortunately, members of the Bellingham music community were already lobbying to change it. In late 2010, it was updated with regulations much more amenable to live music venues within defined downtown and Fairhaven Entertainment Districts.
Hollie and Marty signed The Shakedown’s lease in January 2011, and opened three months later – on St. Patrick’s Day. “We started on a shoestring and improved the venue as time has gone on,” Marty says. “At an early point, we decided to put all of our energy and money into improving the bar and the venue.”
In the years since its inception, they have slowly upgraded their interior and sound system. Recently they even put in a merchandise booth for visiting bands.
In 2015, in an adjacent space, they opened The Racket Bar and Pinball Lounge. This allowed them to serve a much broader clientele and, as Marty emphasizes, to pour a “proper” Guinness. There was never enough time to complete the classic three-part pour at The Shakedown. “It’s one of my greatest pleasures to see a Guinness poured right and it’s a bit horrifying to see it done wrong,” Marty says. “I remember when my Dad first showed me what a proper pint looked like; if you can draw a face on top of the beer head and it has almost the consistency of shaving cream, then it has been done right.”
When Marty’s parents first visited The Racket, he was very nervous to give his Dad that first Guinness. Fortunately, it got the seal of approval. That moment was incredibly important and memorable for Marty.
The rain still falling, the chat now over, Marty takes the final sip of his tea. “Everything has worked out well,” he says. “The Shakedown, The Racket and, yes, being able to pour a proper Guinness.”
Hand painted signs are one-of-a-kind and becoming rarer in today's world of technology. Photo courtesy: Signs Plus.
Shaking hands with Larry Oliverson is like shaking hands with a wooden paint brush: sturdy, gentle and unassumingly capable of creating artwork that exceeds expectation. Oliverson stands in the doorway of Signs Plus, his old stomping grounds, with an unlidded box containing the history of his work as a hand-painted sign artist.
Larry Oliverson has painted signs on every kind of surface imaginable. Photo courtesy: Signs Plus.
Each artist, designer and creator at Signs Plus that spots Oliverson breaks into a smile and greets him from across the room. Oliverson returns the recognition with his own vibrantly booming voice, filled with more colorful tones than any painting.
“One of my quotes throughout the years is, ‘I didn’t want to be a starving artist. A sign painter is an artist that eats!’” Oliverson, now retired, says with a laugh as he places pictures of his painted signs on the table.
Hand-painted signs are a rarity in today’s technological world. Today’s signage needs to be fast and easy to replicate. This is convenient, but hand-painted signs are one-of-a-kind. They take special skills to create and a plethora of knowledge to craft well. “Proper lettering takes tedious hand-eye coordination to be able to have that many alphabets – or fonts, as they call them – in your head and do them right,” Oliverson says.
Try and picture a font you’ve used on the computer: Helvetica, Times New Roman, Comic Sans, Chiller. Now draw out the alphabet in that font from A to Z. Oh, don’t forget to be on a ladder two stories high while writing it out on uneven bricks with a deadline. Not only does creating hand-painted signs require remembering fonts, it requires the mind of a problem solver because you’re never just painting on paper. Oliverson has painted on sides of barns, buildings, windows, steel, wood and windows.
Larry Oliverson has hand painted signs all across Seattle and Whatcom County as well as in other states. Photo courtesy: Signs Plus.
“On glass windows when you do the highlights on, say, the buns and lettuce, you have to do those first; it’s completely backwards,” Oliverson says. “You do reverse work. You really have to have this in your head.”
Through years of practice, Oliverson has elevated signage and pictorial work to a new level. But he started out like any other artist, painting backgrounds and cleaning out the brushes.
At Meadowdale Highschool in Lynnwood, he was often called upon when painting skills were needed for school plays. He was the art editor for the yearbook and went to work at a sign shop as a shop boy. From there, his artistic genius grew. In college, he and his dormmates painted a three-story tall image of a Wildcat, their university’s mascot, for a campus competition. They won.
In his early 20s, he and a partner created the Sundance Sign Company in Seattle. The year was 1971 and the sign world was changing – embracing artistic looks and vintage styles. Oliverson taught himself lettering and gold leaf. He learned how to give the customer what they want. Artisans commonly acquired the craft through an apprenticeship, but Oliverson took a different route.
How do you create a sign on the side of a barn with four windows and make it look good? You hand paint it! Vinyl and digital printing doesn’t work for every sign. Photo courtesy: Signs Plus.
“‘This guy never went to an apprentice class?’ That raised some eyebrows,” Oliverson says. “I was competing with the big guys now, so they ratted me out to the union. I joined the union and the guy says, ‘We’re going to make you a Journeyman on the body of your work.’” Oliverson was handed his Journeyman’s card in 1976.
Since then, he’s painted one sign after another across the country. His advice for creating signs is to find inspiration everywhere. “Go to a grocery store, go through the can aisles and look at what caught your eye as far as design and colors. I might not like the canned beans, but I sure liked the label,” Oliverson says with a laugh.
“I had an advantage over some of my peers because I could imagine this finished product right from the beginning,” he says. “It makes it so much easier if you can visualize it.”
Unless artwork is in a museum, it’s hard to know how long it will last. For hand-painted signs, the longevity is in the viewer’s memory. They aren’t meant to last forever.
“One thing in the sign biz, you don’t get attached to this stuff more than briefly,” Oliverson explains. “You appreciate it at the time, take a picture and learn from it, but you move on. Signs change all the time. Your work leaves all the time. You can’t get attached to it. Businesses change and names change.”
Hand painted signs are one-of-a-kind and becoming rarer in today’s world of technology. Photo courtesy: Signs Plus.
A hand-painted sign that has been weathered, forgotten or showcases a defunct business is known as a ghost sign. Ghost signs can be found all across the world with several living right in downtown Bellingham.
Even if all it took was a new coat of paint to revamp a hand-painted sign, the craft has been set aside. Vinyl and digital graphics have taken the lead because of their limitless possibilities. Concepts that would have cost a fortune to hand-paint can be printed out and put together in a few hours. Technology brought changes to the world of signs, along with complications.
“You went from hand-painted – a quality product and look,” says Signs Plus President Jim Sutterfield. “Vinyl started happening in the computer age and you had inexperienced people infiltrating the business.”
But some companies grew more organically. “Signs Plus is one of the four leading sign companies in the state of Washington and a lot of it came from Larry,” says Sutterfield. “Larry had the training on how to properly use the right letter style on the sign. There are a lot of things these young guys with computers don’t know.”
Oliverson shrugs and adds, “I didn’t even have to think about it anymore.”
Sutterfield finishes, “Making signs was like second nature to Larry!”
Oliverson is living the retired life and the paint brush returns to his palm every once in a while. As he reflects on his life’s work – displayed through the photographs which now cover the table – he says his career’s best work was through Jim Sutterfield and Signs Plus. After all, a sign painter doesn’t paint signs until there’s a job to do.
“I retired out to the country as a wizened old sign-fart and it don’t bother me,” Oliverson says. “I have the best job in the world. That’s how I look at it.”
Morel mushrooms have a distinct look and flavor. Photo courtesy: Cascadia Mushrooms.
What in the world is a Shroompaloompa? “That’s what we call ourselves here,” Cascadia Mushrooms owner Alex Winstead says with a laugh. “The mushrooms never sleep; we’re constantly trying to keep up with their schedule.”
After a tour of the farm, it’s easy to see why that’s such a demanding job. Row after row of mushrooms at various growth stages line the walls of expansive grow houses. These two huge, cylindrical buildings are the first things you notice when you arrive.
The mushroom grow houses simulate growing season weather. Photo courtesy: Cascadia Mushrooms.
They’re designed to simulate spring and fall weather. One is warm and damp, with invitingly muggy air. The other is cool and crisp like a mid-October walk. At the beginning of each row are small, budding mushrooms. Near the opposite end are the full-bodied delicacies you can pick up at the Community Food Co-op or Bellingham Farmers Market. “We’ll have five different batches of mushrooms growing all at the same time and each type grows at a different speed than the other,” Alex explains. “To an extent, it’s like being an attentive parent.”
Alex won’t just be a mushroom dad for long; he and his wife are expecting their first child this May. “We’re just really gearing up for the baby,” he says. “I’m trying my best to make sure everything is taken care of before my wife is due.”
Cascadia Mushrooms uses specialty sawdust to start the mushrooms. Photo courtesy: Cascadia Mushrooms.
That’s no small feat. On top of being an expectant parent and keeping up with the mushrooms’ intricate growing process, it’s also morel season. In the mushroom world, this means packing up and driving across the state. Morel mushrooms require a very specific growing environment, which just isn’t found in Western Washington. And the mushrooms don’t seem to care how far harvesters drive because sometimes they just won’t grow. “It’s kind of like a fishing trip,” Alex says. “You pack up, drive and spend all this energy on catching that one type of fish, and you still come home without anything.”
This year harvesters will travel to the Okanogan area, where wildfires eradicated other species and made room for morels to pop up. “They have a very temperamental growing environment,” Alex says, “and you just have to hope you get lucky.”
After the initial stages of growing, holes are cut to allow the fungus to pop up. Photo courtesy: Cascadia Mushrooms.
Why spend all this energy on a fungus? Because they’re delicious. Morels are one of the most highly sought-after mushrooms and are beloved by farmers, chefs and food enthusiasts alike. People who say they don’t like mushrooms usually make an exception for this variety because of its unique nutty flavor and meaty texture.
While the upcoming morel hunt may be keeping Alex up at night, their best seller, the shitake, is having one if its best years ever. “We have had the biggest shitake season in our history,” Alex says proudly. “We’ve actually had so many we’ve been able to put them on sale twice at both Bellingham co-ops!”
Shitake mushrooms are by far their most popular product. Between deliveries to seven natural grocers, two weekly farmers markets and over 20 restaurants, they sell out every week. In fact, the farm sells out almost everything every week. Besides morel and shitake mushrooms, Cascadia Mushrooms also offers lions mane, oyster, pioppino and reishi mushrooms, along with mushroom compost, at-home grow kits, specialty mushroom supplies and workshops.
Morel mushrooms have a distinct look and flavor. Photo courtesy: Cascadia Mushrooms.
What was once a humble fungus, the mushroom has grown into something more thanks to Cascadia Mushrooms. Alex and his team of Shroompaloompas have managed to turn this simple food into an especially exciting and delicious experience for their customers. These mushrooms are a delightful and nutritious addition to any diet. Luckily for Whatcom County residents, we have some of the best. And for those mushroom skeptics? It might be time to give them another chance.
To find out where Cascadia Mushrooms are sold or served, check their website or visit the downtown or Cordata Community Food Co-Ops.
When engaging in outdoor recreation, participants should take care to respect Whatcom wildlife. Photo credit: Justin Pedigo | FC Photography.
This week has been a doozy and I, for one, am so glad the weekend is here. I’m ready to get out and have some fun! Fortunately there is a lot of fun to be had. Here are a few ideas of what to do in and around Bellingham April 20—22. And don’t forget to check out our full events calendar for all the fun happenings in Whatcom County.
WhatcomTalk aims to be your source for positive information and events happening in Bellingham, Ferndale, Lynden and throughout Whatcom County. If you have a suggestion for a post, send us a note at submit@whatcomtalk.com. For more events and to learn what’s happening in Bellingham and the surrounding area, visit our events calendar. To submit an event of your own, visit our events calendar and click on the green “Post Your Event” button.
Walk across the rainbow bridge and enter into the Center for Mindful Use where yoga, meditation, hoop dancing and many other events take place. Photo credit: Mike Hiestand.
It seems like something out of a fairytale. As you walk west down Cornwall Avenue toward the Center for Mindful Use, you can make out the delicately painted rainbow bridge from blocks away. Will there be a leprechaun at the end? Not quite, but what lies beyond is just as spectacular. It’s the entrance to the Forum de Freedom where the Center for Mindful Use stages a plethora of activities focused on community, humanism, relationships and authentic connections.
Joy Love, hoop dance instructor at the Center for Mindful Use, helped paint the rainbow bridge and created the tree portal mirror that graces CMU’s door. Photo courtesy: Joy Love.
Established as a place to bring people together for thoughtful conversation, mediation, yoga, hoop dancing and drum circles; the Center for Mindful Use’s Forum de Freedom is appropriately connected to the normal world by a rainbow bridge.
The rainbow bridge has a varied history with two particularly compelling stories. The first reference to the rainbow bridge appears in a story which some speculate could have Native American origins, says Mike Hiestand, co-founder and director of the Center for Mindful use.
The tale tells of when the rainbow people came back to Earth via a Rainbow Bridge. In the story, the rainbow bridge symbolizes connecting the new world with the old. According to Hiestand, this correlates to CMU’s mission to provide educational information on cannabis to a diverse audience. Hiestand says CMU aims to connect the “just say no” train of thought with “just say know.” They want cannabis to be understood, instead of shut out of the conversation, as it has been in the past.
The Center for Mindful Use is located at 100 Maple Street, Suite B, in Bellingham. Photo credit: Mike Hiestand.
The second and perhaps more well-known reference to the rainbow bridge appears in a poem believed to be written in the 1980s/1990s by an unknown author. This work of prose discusses the place pets journey to upon finishing their time on Earth. It features phrases of happiness, acceptance and comfort such as, “When an animal dies that has been especially close to someone here, that pet goes to Rainbow Bridge,” and, “There are meadows and hills for all of our special friends so they can run and play together.”
The rainbow bridge is the connective tissue welcoming the outside world into the Forum de Freedom, where a journey to the authentic self awaits. If you’re interested in finding out more about the Center for Mindful Use and their donation-based free events, visit them at 100 Maple Street, Suite B in Bellingham or on their website.
Kevin Wiebe is a Ferndale native. Although he graduated from Ferndale High School, he admits he wasn't a model student. His teachers and administrators...