Upcoming Refrigerant Changes: What They Mean for the HVAC Industry & Your Pocketbook

Photo courtesy Barron Heating AC Electrical & Plumbing

Submitted by Barron Heating AC Electrical & Plumbing

Ring ring! Class is in session — and today’s mini lesson is on air conditioners. Do you know how they work? Air conditioners take advantage of a remarkable physical law called Phase Conversion: where a liquid converts to a gas and back again to absorb heat. AC units utilize a cooling agent called refrigerant to capitalize on this process, causing the agent to evaporate and condense again and again in a closed system of coils. When warm air passes over the cold, low-pressure coils, the refrigerant inside absorbs the heat as it changes from a liquid to a gas, then rejects the absorbed heat elsewhere — typically outdoors. The gas is then put under high pressure to convert it back to a liquid, resulting in — you guessed it — cool air (howstuffworks.com).

Refrigerant is essential to cooling equipment, including central air conditioners, heat pumps, and refrigerators. But new state and federal laws relating to these refrigerants are again headed our way. The coming years will bring new regulations from entities like the EPA and DEQ to lessen their environmental impact — changes that will impact both the HVAC industry and the consumer.

With new refrigerant regulations quickly approaching, the team at Barron encourages you to plan ahead and snag a deal before these regulations impact your pocketbook. Photo courtesy Barron Heating AC Electrical & Plumbing

Refrigerants such as R-454B and R-32 are two possible solutions to help states reach greenhouse gas reduction goals. As a single-component, low GWP HFC (Global Warming Potential Hydrofluorocarbon), R-32 specifically is simple to work with and has been widely accepted by manufacturers worldwide. Invented in 2012 by Daikin, a leading multi-national HVAC manufacturer, its excellent thermodynamic properties allow equipment to be designed with a lower charge and smaller motors, piping, and heat exchangers while retaining the same power and efficiency as before. In addition to energy savings, fewer raw materials are needed for manufacturing the equipment, making it an all-around strong choice for the future of refrigeration.

With a change in cooling agent regulations comes a change in safety standards and building codes as well. To reduce global warming impacts, the bonds in these refrigerants must be looser — which increases their flammability. R-32 is in a category known as “A2L”, meaning it is flammable, but its flammability is extremely low compared to that of hydrocarbon refrigerants such as R-290 (propane) (daikin.com).

If you’re considering new cooling equipment for your home, now may be the best time to pull the trigger before prices spike. Photo courtesy Barron Heating AC Electrical & Plumbing

What does all of this mean for you? It means change. Change in how cooling equipment is designed, how it operates, and how it impacts our environment. It means a change in what and how equipment can be sold and installed. And while energy savings are expected, it means new equipment will inevitably get a price-hike — by as much as 15-20%.

So, if you’re considering new cooling equipment for your home, now may be the best time to pull the trigger before prices spike. Current models offer almost identical energy efficiency as their newer counterparts. If a heat pump is on your radar, the new Daikin Fit Enhanced through Barron Heating AC Electrical & Plumbing is one worth considering. It’s quiet, compact, and energy-saving, with better comfort, control, and efficiency than many of its competitors. Plus, it qualifies for the 25c energy efficiency tax credit where you can get up to 30% back on the purchase and installation cost of qualified home upgrades. And for a limited time, Barron is offering the Daikin Fit Enhanced for either $109 per month, or same as cash — meaning you can install now and pay no interest, and no payments for 12 months.

Designing for the most negligible environmental impact is the way of the future — from the refrigerator in our kitchen to the car we drive to how we cool our home. With new refrigerant regulations quickly approaching, our team at Barron encourages you to plan ahead and snag a deal before these regulations impact your pocketbook. With our new same-as-cash offer, you’ll pay nothing for a full year while locking in today’s prices — no matter what 2024 has in store. Knowledge is power, and it’s our goal to provide you with the best education on our industry and your home that we can — so call today! As your Pacific Northwest home and building performance experts since 1972, we stand by our mission of improving lives.   

Marie Songer Uses A Wide Array Of Media To Produce Deeply Personal Art

Songer grew up in Ann Arbor and went to school in Chicago before heading west to the Vancouver area and, ultimately, Bellingham. Photo credit: Steven Arbuckle

Marie Songer grew up in Ann Arbor, Michigan, and remembers drawing constantly, from an early age. By the time she reached high school, she’d surrounded herself with a group of artists who were also constantly creating. It was a crew steeped in the ‘do-it-yourself’ ethos of punk rock, and produced paintings, comics, zines, stencils, local music flyers, album covers, and performance art. Songer credits her creative outlets with getting her through school. “It was the only class I did well in,” she says, “and that’s probably what allowed me to graduate: my art class A’s.”

Songer developed a rather unusual working style that involves what she describes as “a ton of weed.” She would sit with her portable stereo directly in front of her, pointed right at her ears, and blast grindcore, a mercilessly fast and intense blend of punk and metal music. Whatever needed to come out would fill the page; the resulting “little sketchbook of creepy punk rock drawings” became the portfolio that got her into college.

Studying Art in Chicago

Songer attended the School of the Art Institute of Chicago, an institution that traces its roots back to 1866, and has been called the “most influential art school” in the United States.

“It’s very freeing. They had you choose a major, but you could basically take any type of classes you wanted. So I took all of the weirdest classes I could,” Songer says. “I did metal smithing and foundry, and I took a yarn making class, I took anatomy drawing twice, and each semester our class spent a day doing life drawings at a morgue.”

Songer has just moved into a studio at Bellingham’s Make.Shift Art Space and plans to open her doors during First Friday Art Walks. Photo credit: Steven Arbuckle

She also took a class that traced the history of art and design within the genre of punk rock, as well as three semesters of a class called Avant-Gardening. It focused on different types of urban foraging and gardening, and taught skills like making kombucha. The idea was to encourage students to rethink the landscape around them, and the ways they could interact with it. “I spent a lot of semesters in art school drawing corpses and making kombucha,” says Songer.

She also rethought the way she thought about herself, including her mental health. When she first reached out for help, she was handed a list of diagnoses and did her best to work with them.

“Having art projects to work on, and process mental and emotional issues, was interesting. I think that if I had been studying any other major, I might not have made it, because I wouldn’t have had the outlet,” she says. Later she found a woman she describes as “a great therapist,” who looked past her symptoms and helped Songer create a set of tools to relieve past stress, and create more happiness in the future.

One of Songer’s first showings in Whatcom County was outdoors, at Whatcom Art Guild’s show at the Gardens at Padden Creek. Photo credit: Steven Arbuckle

Moving to the West Coast

It turned out that the future would take Songer to Kwantlen Polytechnic University in Surrey, British Columbia, where she studied environmental protection technology. But when she graduated in the winter of 2019, rather than finding a whole new world opening up to her, she watched as a global pandemic shut the world down. She lost most of her work connections and couldn’t find anyone hiring environmental consultants locally and stepped away from the field. She regrouped with her partner at the time, who was living in Seattle, and the two of them decided to end their long-distance relationship by quite literally meeting in the middle and moving to Bellingham.

Since settling into the area, Songer has shown her work through the Whatcom Art Guild at Padden Creek and at Make.Shift Art Space and scheduled a show at Lettered Streets Coffeehouse. She has also recently moved into an artist’s studio at Make.Shift and plans to open her door during the Art Walks that take place the first Friday of each month. The walls are already crowded with a vibrant mixture of the varied media she uses.

Since Songer works with a seemingly never-ending list of media, her studio holds all sorts of tools and assorted supplies and surprises. Photo credit: Steven Arbuckle

Songer’s works feature watercolor, ink, charcoal, acrylic, marker, pencil, and gouache. She has sewn the tape from a Juice Newton cassette into one canvas and attached paper she learned to make herself to another. She has painted on the unfolded boxes of store-bought products and burned designs into wood.

As a result of all the experimentation, Songer has created a series of collections. “They’re phases. It’s not intentional, I think it’s just part of the fun,” she says. “I’ll obsess about a method for a few months, and then something will happen, and I’ll stop, then start something else.”

A Presence on the Web

Recently, Songer has started to make a move toward the internet. Although she’s not a techie, she sees value in a website as something like a business card, a convenient place to send people interested in following her work.

“I resisted for this long, but I finally started one,” she says. “It is kind of fun to organize your art in one space, and one of my closest friends wanted to add her work, as well, which is nice because it’s easier doing things with friends. And we both have our technological struggles.”

One aspect of the website is a newsletter, which Songer decided to use as an alternative to the typical social media path. She’s conscious of the algorithms that decide what users do and don’t see, and when it might pop up for them. The newsletter allows her to publish on her own timeline and lets the viewer decide when they want to partake.

A length of cassette tape is sewn across this canvas, reminding viewers to expect anything and everything. Photo credit: Steven Arbuckle

An Unusual Residency

When asked about the future, Songer can’t help but smile as she reveals a plan that would tie her art school background to her environmental degree.

“I really love the idea of artist residencies,” she says. “When I was in environmental protection technology classes, we took a lot of trips to places like landfills, water treatment plants, and incinerators. It’s so fascinating to see the systems that support our entire society at work. To see the schematics on the wall, all of the pipes that lead to hundreds of thousands of homes. It’s just mind boggling — and nobody ever gets to see it. If anybody wants me to do an artist’s residency at their landfill or water treatment plant, that would be awesome.”

See Chum Salmon Run at McLane Creek Nature Trail

Chum salmon return to McLane Creek where they were originally spawned 18-months to several years prior. Photo courtesy: NOAA Fisheries

Go see the wild Chum salmon run in the shallow waters of McLane Creek near the end of their long-traveled journey from the Pacific Ocean. Take the kids, the dog and make a family outing along McLane Creek Nature Trail near West Olympia. It’s just the right length for new little hikers, navigable with strollers, wheelchair accessible and pet friendly. McLane Creek is also a beautiful location to take family photos among the mature forest under leaves turning to fall colors or to practice wildlife photography.

Backdrops of boardwalks, benches and towering shade trees at McLane Creek Nature Trail are great for photography. Photo credit: Rebecca Sanchez

Every fall, salmon make their instinctive return from as far away as the Aleutian Islands in Alaska through the Pacific Ocean, down Puget Sound and up the connecting rivers and streams. In the Olympia area, one doesn’t have to travel far to see them come back.

Viewing Salmon at McLane Creek and What You May See There

You will mostly see Chum salmon swimming up McLane Creek since not only is it their home, but they are not strong jumpers and prefer the calmer waters of creeks. Chum salmon are one of five species of Pacific salmon, and they are also known by their nicknames dog salmon or calico salmon, earned from their large teeth and their spotty coloring.

Chum are about 3-5 years old when they return to McLane Creek to spawn eggs in the sandy gravel. They weigh 9 to 11 pounds when they arrive, and while their bodies have changed during the ocean journey, they change yet again the closer they get to their destination. Salmon stop eating and devote all their energy to swimming upstream. You can recognize a male by the large hump behind its head and two vertical stripes on his side. Female Chum are smaller and have a horizontal stripe down their sides.

male Chum salmon underwater
Chum salmon return to McLane Creek where they were originally spawned 18-months to several years prior. Males can be identified by the large hump behind their heads. Photo courtesy: John R. McMillen NOAA/NWFSC

“After they spawn, their body decomposes and provides nutrients that move from the saltwater to the freshwater streams, and then get soaked up through tree roots and microbial systems from the surrounding forests,” says Shayne Noble, a biologist with Washington Department of Fish and Wildlife. “Studies have shown that the forests immediately surrounding fish-bearing streams are much more abundantly healthy and have a broader variety of nutrients coming in.”

You may see females digging their tails into the sand to deposit eggs, and males may be aggressively chasing other males away. The fertilized eggs that remain will hatch fry, which will grow, head down stream and out into the ocean to continue the cycle. They too will one day return to McLane Creek.

“Salmon in the Pacific Northwest are an important keystone species because they make up the majority of the diet for many other species such as whales and seals,” Noble says. “They are a huge resource for fishermen and tribal members and are very intricately woven into our food chain, our economy and our culture.”

McLane Creek Nature Trail Salmon Viewing Platforms

McLane has three fantastic creek overlooks. Elevated wooden platforms and one bridge each provide a direct view down into the creek. Consult the Washington state Department of Natural resources McLane Creek Nature Trail map or view a map kiosk at the trailhead, where the restrooms are also located, and then take the 1.1-mile pond loop trail, beginning either to the left or right. McLane Creek runs along the furthest edge of the loop trail. Viewing Bridge trail is an out-and-back off-shoot that leads to a dead-end bridge over the creek. Two more overlooks from the pond loop trail provide wooden platforms with benches, views of the water and interpretive signage.

yellow lab sitting on the wooden boardwalk at McLane Creek
Walking trails at McLane Creek out to the salmon viewing platforms are raised wooden boardwalks, gravel and dirt. Leashed dogs allowed. Photo credit: Rebecca Sanchez

McLane Creek is an important, undisturbed habitat where the Chum salmon life cycle begins and ends. Their decaying bodies left in the stream provide those crucial nutrients, but be aware that they are also toxic to dogs.

“For me, what comes to mind is reflecting on what a journey the salmon have been on just to get back to this point that we are witnessing,” Noble says about the yearly event. “It started in freshwater as a little egg and fry, survived predators in the stream, made it all the way out to the ocean and spent several years at sea evading fishermen and natural predators, and against all the odds, tracked its way back to where it started.”

Nature Photography at McLane Creek

The natural beauty at McLane Creek draws visitors to return again and again, and the backdrop of boardwalks, benches and towering shade trees is ripe for nature and portrait photography. If you seek macro-lens subject matter, fungi, lichen, leaves and insects are plentiful. Wildlife such as turtles sunning on logs, wood ducks, red wing blackbirds and newts swimming among the lily pads also frequently show their faces. Benches along the trail are great places to take pictures of family and pets, posed for portraits or candidly enjoying nature.

two male wood ducks sitting on a branch above the water
Male wood ducks at McLane Creek Nature Trail may be sitting on low branches near the pond or in the water. Females are light brown with white rings around the eyes, and blue on the wing feathers. Photo credit: Rebecca Sanchez

Ready the backpacks, camera gear and Discover Pass — it’s needed for parking — and head to McLane Creek for an afternoon among nature’s amazing cycles. For more information about things to see and do in the Olympia area, visit the Experience Olympia & Beyond website.

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Lynden Christian’s Multi-Sport Athlete Jeremiah Wright Has Big Goals

Photo credit: Wendi Parriera

On any given day, someone traveling around Whatcom County will spot kids running around on sports fields or maybe even hear balls bouncing from inside gyms. For most of his life, Jeremiah Wright has been one of those kids. Since a young age, Wright and his buddies have been throwing, kicking, running, and shooting their way around the county.

While the act of playing sports from a young age up through high school is a common practice, in speaking with Wright, you get the feeling that for him, it was a little different. Wright, now a senior at Lynden Christian High School, is the team’s starting quarterback and linebacker, playing in high-stakes games week in and week out as he and his teammates strive to be the best in the state. While Wright is all in on football at this moment, football has not been his sole focus. When asked what his favorite sport was, he simply replies: “Whatever’s in season.”

When the football season ends, Wright will transition to basketball to play forward, where he and his lifelong teammates will attempt to achieve the rare feat of threepeating for a state title. During Wright’s sophomore and junior years, the team brought the state title back to Lynden, and they have ambitions for Lynden Christian be the last team standing at the end of the 2023-2024 season, as well.

Wright elevates on a jump shot in a game against Meridian. Photo credit: Dennis Cairns

While the goals Wright has set for himself are ambitious, it’s because of those around him that he has the confidence that he and his teammates can overcome challenging obstacles. “Just the camaraderie of being able to lean on your teammates if you’re not playing well and vice versa and always doing it with the guys I’ve been going to school with since kindergarten,” Wright says. “We just have that close relationship, and it makes it a lot more fun when you have other guys around you that all have the same goal.”

Coaches and trainers throughout Wright’s life have helped him achieve his goals, no matter the sport. He also has the encouragement and support of his three siblings and parents, who were athletes themselves. Wright’s mom, Michelle Wright, played volleyball and ran track in high school. His dad, Josh Wright, played collegiate football in Idaho and at Western Washington University.

Wright credits his parents for exposing him to sports at a young age and making it possible for him to play a variety of sports. They drove him wherever he needed, including to Seattle, where he competed. Being the oldest of four, he also appreciates the time his siblings have spent cheering for him. 

Jeremiah with his family, from left to right: Jeremiah, Lincoln, Michelle, Josh, Alli, and Annika. Photo credit: Cassie VanBoven

When his senior year of basketball concludes, Wright will turn his attention to the spring sports season and fall of 2024. He has participated in more than one of the spring sports and is undecided on what he will do in his senior season. It may be influenced by what he chooses to do after high school. He has seen the value of being a multi-sport athlete and wants to use that to continue to develop.

“From the training aspect, it definitely works a lot of different muscles and movements. Working things, you don’t necessarily get in other sports,” he says. “That’s definitely where it helps. From my background of soccer, when I was little, all that footwork that comes along with that has probably helped me now in high school.”

Wright has been competing in sports in Whatcom County since he was a kid. Photo credit: Josh Wright

While Wright has not made any decisions about college, he does hope all his hard work in sports and in the classroom translates into college opportunities. He is considering football and basketball in college, depending on the best fit for him. He’s also open to changing positions in football and has spent some time at tight end in camps, which may be a good position for him at the next level.

While Wright loves his family, friends, and community, he’s also excited to go see what else is out there. And it wouldn’t hurt his feelings to spend the winters in a warmer, dryer climate — but he will go wherever has the best opportunities for both sports and academics.

In college, Wright is interested in studying architecture or design, with the hopes of designing homes in the future. He prides himself on doing well in academics and will take that into consideration as he considers his higher education options.

In the meantime, Wright is going to enjoy his senior year with his family and lifelong friends. Wright can be seen playing under the Friday night lights through the football season, and then will play basketball in the gyms around the county when basketball season rolls out.

Featured photo by Wendi Parriera

Whatcom Local Finds Financial Freedom With Credit Builder Loan

Melissa Bradshaw (left) celebrates her new car purchase with her First Fed banker, Jennifer Barnhart. Photo courtesy First Fed

The value of a solid grasp on one’s personal finances never diminishes. And with financial institutions like First Fed — whose banking services offer a personal touch — customers are in safe hands. When Bellingham resident Melissa Bradshaw needed help organizing her finances and building credit, she turned to First Fed’s Jennifer Barnhart. The two neighbors worked together to overcome Melissa’s financial burdens and set her on a path where she could build up her credit and follow her dreams.

Digging Out of a Financial Rut

Tired of living paycheck to paycheck, Melissa knew she needed to make a change. “I had been in a financial rut, spending way too much money on avoidable fees like overdrafts,” she says. “I needed to make a change and become proactive with my money.”

Melissa’s Jeep Cherokee had died, leaving her with no other option than to procure a car loan. When Melissa was denied for a loan based on her credit score, Jennifer had a solution. As a senior relationship banker and loan officer at First Fed’s Fairhaven branch in Bellingham, she had the knowledge and tools to help put Melissa on a path to improve her credit and secure a loan.

“Jennifer helped me apply for a credit builder loan,” says Melissa.

The Credit Builder Loan

Credit Builder Loans are a small loan of $1000 or $2500 that gets invested in a certificate of deposit (CD) and paid back over the term of the CD to build credit. Instead of having immediate access to the loan amount, the funds are held in the CD until the loan is paid off. After all the payments are made, you will have the amount of the loan plus the interest of those funds earned during the repayment period.

“Her credit was improved and repaired so much in nine months,” Jennifer says. “The way it works is that we put the money from the loan into a new savings account, and she makes monthly payments towards the loan. At the end of the timeframe the money in the savings account is hers and she establishes a history of great credit.”

After achieving a boost in her credit from paying off the credit builder loan, Melissa was able to purchase a brand-new, $40,000 Subaru. “I was actually able to order it from Japan, in my name, so when it came on the barge in Bellingham, it was solely for me,” she says, pride evident in her voice. “No one else even test drove it.”

Melissa with her new Subaru, after being approved for an auto loan. Photo courtesy First Fed

Melissa’s checking account with First Fed includes online banking, which has greatly improved transparency and accessibility to her credit score, along with offering credit monitoring and suggestions on how to improve her score.

Younger adults can also use First Fed’s Credit Builder loan to establish a healthy, reliable line of credit. “If, say, a 19-year-old wants a credit card and tries to apply for one, it’s almost impossible because they have not proven their credit worthiness,” says Jennifer. “If they do find someone to give them credit, it’s often going to be a really low amount and really high interest rate. Our Credit Builder loan is a great tool to build up their credit, so they can benefit from better offers.”

First Fed wants to help their customers build their credit, whether they are just starting out or their scores could use a boost. “By building your credit, not only are you going to be in a stronger position when you apply for car and home loans, but it can also help with things like insurance rates, or possibly even for employment,” Jennifer says. “The better your credit, the better your financial opportunities are going to be.”

“Jennifer also showed me how to put my bills on autopay. Now, instead of having no money at the end of a pay period, I have money and can put it in savings,” says Melissa. To continue to build her savings, Melissa has also opened a nine-month CD (Certificate of Deposit) account.

Melissa and Jennifer celebrate First Fed’s 100th anniversary at the Fairhaven branch. Photo courtesy First Fed

Improving Quality of Life

No matter what stage of life, organized finances and good credit can improve life in a myriad of ways. Melissa is now able to travel to Spain and do things with her grandkids she’s always wanted to do. “I do know, in the past, when I had a negative account or had to borrow money to cover the bill because I wasn’t being proactive with my money, that didn’t feel very good,” she says. “My life is a lot brighter now that my finances are working for me, instead of me working against them.”

Melissa has also been able to acquire an unsecured loan to pay off debt balances and increase her credit even more. “She’s in such a better financial place and I’m so happy for her,” says Jennifer. “Melissa was really committed to improving her life. She just got back from taking her grandkids to Chelan for the weekend with money she had set aside, which she wouldn’t have been able to do a year ago.”

First Fed was voted Best Bank in the 2023 Best of the Northwest survey conducted by Bellingham Alive. A true community bank, right here in Whatcom County, whose team members are ready to help guide customers on their path to financial freedom and an improved quality of life.

First Fed is a Member FDIC and Equal Housing Lender.

Where To Get a Beer in Hoquiam and Aberdeen

Steam Donkey Brewing operates under the belief that: 'It’s your space. We just brew in it.' Photo courtesy Steam Donkey Brewing

The northwest spirit knows no season. Whether you come to Grays Harbor with sunscreen and shades or rubber boots and a slicker, you’re sure to enjoy yourself. While the last weeks of summer come and go, the ocean will continue to sing its siren song. The next time you gear up and hit the highway to the beach, remember to give yourself some extra time for a stop in historical Aberdeen and Hoquiam for a beer, a bite, and maybe even a relaxing night. Thirsty? Here is where to get a beer in Hoquiam and Aberdeen.

Where To Get a Beer in Aberdeen

Steam Donkey Brewing opened its doors in 2017, reviving Aberdeen’s brewpub culture, an opportunity over 70 years in the making. They are unique in that they are female majority-owned and can boast a selection of all female crafted brews in the making. Plus, they’ve got a great catchphrase, “It’s your space, we just brew in it.”

When Steam Donkey Brewing opened its doors in 2017 it ended a 70-year drought, reviving the brewery scene in Aberdeen. Photo courtesy Steam Donkey Brewing

“I think we would describe Steam Donkey Brewing as a hyper local, cozy brewery,” confides co-owner Stefanie Bennett. “We have a small, 40-seat taproom, and a small, fenced beer garden, that is super welcoming and really feels like a place you want to meet up with friends at. It’s cheerful, as is our staff, and our 3 BBL brewery consistently puts out great beers! There is something to be said for being locally focused. We distribute to harbor bars, restaurants and even the cinema and we keep most of our product in Grays Harbor.”

“Beer drinkers, more often than not, have a personal connection to the beer that they drink,” adds Stefanie, “Our favorite brands become our connection to ‘place’. When Steam Donkey opened, there had not been a brewery in Aberdeen in 70+ years. They opened with the hope that people would find a connection with local beer made in Grays Harbor.

Finch & Bull came about as a food solution for the brewery, as Steam Donkey did not have room for a kitchen. The food truck has a constant rotation of delicious pub food, some with a twist!

Right now, the menu has a few killer burgers, chicken wings, and rice bowls, which feature rotating protein options. “We also mix in some pub favorites, including the chicken snack basket and a grilled cheese, but truly nothing beats the OG with Cheese ground chuck burger and fries,” shares Stefanie.

Steam Donkey Brewing partners with Finch & Bull to offer added sustenance to their patrons who can find the food truck parked in front of the brewery serving up delicious eats, including a can’t miss burger and fries. Photo courtesy Steam Donkey Brewing

Another great stop in Aberdeen is Mount Olympus Brewing (MOB). Not only will you be able to enjoy a unique lineup of harbor inspired brews like Come As You Are and Rhize and Rind, but also indulge in pub favorites like nachos, soft pretzels and a variety of savory sandwiches. Even your Lil’ Mobsters, as they are so fondly called, will leave satisfied. This family friendly, all-ages brew pub has ample parking to boot.

Where to Find Beer in Hoquiam

Hoquiam Brewing Co., like Steam Donkey Brewery, arrived in the community in 2017. Its first three beers, Hoquiam IPA, Boots & Shorts Blonde and Captain 12 Milk Stout, are still enjoyed to this day. They have an extensive menu to complement your draft, offering one of a kind eats such as Roasted Beet Salad, Korean Flat Iron Steak and Taco Pizza.

New to the Brewery Community in Hoquiam is Red Cedar Pub, opened just over a year ago. They offer both wine and beer and a variety of nachos with future plans for an expanded menu in the future.

Red Cedar Pub offers beer, wine and nachos and is a great place to wind down and connect with the local music scene. Photo courtesy Red Cedar Pub

“We love dogs,” shared Red Cedar Pub owner Nancy Dudley, “and have a very large pet-friendly beer garden where we host many events and musicians.”

Red Cedar Pub is a great place to wind down from the week or you can plan ahead to catch one of their live music performances featuring the best of the best local talent.

8th Street Ale House offers a great combination of fine dining and comfortable vibe, offering 8th Street Ale, Galway Irish Red Irish Ale, Guinness and Coors Light on tap and to eat, pot roast, salmon and everything in between.

Dogs are welcome on Red Cedar Pub’s outdoor patio in Hoquiam. Photo courtesy Red Cedar Pub

Where to Stay Near Aberdeen and Hoquiam

Want to stay the weekend and try a few breweries on a self-guided brewery and pub crawl? There are plenty of places to stay near Aberdeen and Hoquiam.

Keep things classy at the A Harbor View Inn Bed and Breakfast. This beautiful 1905 estate presents the perfect balance of history and modern amenities. Every room offers a view of the water as the property overlooks the Wishkah River, Chehalis River, Grays Harbor and the city of Aberdeen and includes a full breakfast served each morning on the sun porch.

Looking for a more down to earth stay? The Shiny Motel may be the perfect fit for an affordable no fuss night in Hoquiam.

Finally, don’t forget about Aberdeen’s Best Western Plus for a familiar and welcoming experience.

With so many eclectic breweries and pubs to sample a beer and savor a bite, Aberdeen and Hoquiam are a can’t miss stop on your next beach getaway. Stop in for the day, or stay the night, either way, stay a while, it will be worth it.

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The Tale of Old Telegraph Road: Bellingham’s Link to Telecommunications and National History

The historic marker on Telegraph Road itself stands out as a relic of a time before the thoroughfare's development. Photo credit: Anna Diehl

On Bellingham’s Telegraph Road, just east of Bellis Fair Mall, a weathered wooden signpost clashes with the urban sprawl. Titled “Old Telegraph Road,” the sign describes how a telegraph line ran along the modern road’s route from 1865 to its abrupt discontinuation in 1867. This was Bellingham’s link to the story of the Collins Overland Telegraph, both an economic failure and far-reaching inspiration.

The invention of the telegraph entranced the nation with the prospect of sending long-distance messages within minutes. Samuel Morse presented the wired electrical device in 1835 and patented Morse Code, a system of communication using dots and dashes, in 1840. After the first telegraph line spanned from Washington, DC to Baltimore in 1844, demand for a transcontinental line emerged. Western Union Telegraph Company completed the first in 1861 and started the Russian-American Telegraph Company to go international.

As Bellingham’s lonely sign shows, the prospective line would have linked New York and London via the Bering Sea through Alaska and Russia. The project cost $3 million, only to shutter when the undersea transatlantic cable first succeeded. But beyond spiriting modern visitors to Bellingham’s thoroughfare away to another time, this venture would influence local communications and the 1867 Alaska Purchase.

The original 1941 marker at Cornwall Park has undergone renovations in recent years. Photo credit: Anna Diehl

Bellingham in Telegraphy History

The Collins Overland Telegraph, passing through Bellingham on the way to Alaska, ignited at the spark of undersea telegraphs failing since 1858. Perry Collins envisioned an overland line with only 40 miles of undersea cable between Russia and Alaska. Western Union’s first triumph had made the Pony Express of 1860-1861 synonymous with innovations that quickly became obsolete. They projected the American-Russian line’s profits as $9 million per year.

In Bellingham — then four towns in Washington Territory — John Fravel oversaw construction of Western Union’s line. He originally helped build an interstate line through the California State Telegraph Company. It terminated at New Westminster, B.C., which would become the intercontinental line’s starting point via Bellingham.

While Western Union’s first transcontinental telegraph followed the path of the California Gold Rush, its American-Russian line followed Whatcom Trail of Fraser River Gold Rush fame. A traditional Lummi and Nooksack travel route, this trail became a gilded hotspot for prospectors in 1858. The trail and telegraph ran northeast through present-day Cornwall Park and Hannegan Road to Everson and Sumas.

Bellingham’s modern-day sign recounts: “A single-wire pole line followed a fifty-foot clearing through heavy forests and across frozen tundra.” Ultimately, the constructed line spanned 800 miles into British Columbia, with Russian portions underway before Western Union just as quickly cut the cord.

William Seward is best known for negotiating the Alaska Purchase and was influenced by the telegraph expedition. In 1865, the first telegram to reach New Westminster described the assassination of Abraham Lincoln. Photo from Wikimedia Commons/public domain

North to the Future

In 1866, entrepreneur Cyrus Field built the undersea transatlantic cable that spelled the end of Western Union’s overland project. When it survived the winter, Western Union officially shut down the American-Russian project in July 1867.

Under Western Union, John Fravel continued to maintain Bellingham communications with British Columbia through the existing line. He led the restoration of its line to Hope and continuation to Kamloops starting in 1870. Victor Roeder paid him $39 to dismantle old lines in 1881. By 1885, the official Telegraph Road started at Roeder Home onto the telegraph’s northeast route through Meridian Street and Squalicum Creek toward Everson and Sumas.

Per the modern road’s sign: “Russian-American cooperation in building this line facilitated our purchase of Alaska in 1867.” In fact, Secretary of State William Seward learned of the telegraph project as Collins lobbied Congress for support. Smithsonian scientists reported Alaska’s mineral wealth in gold on expeditions to building sites, likely influencing Seward’s negotiation with Russian minister Eduard de Stoeckl. (The rush for Alaska’s gold and oil also eventually shifted public opinion in favor of “Seward’s icebox.”)

Samuel Morse is famously one of the inventors of Morse Code and the telegraph, which translates written messages by transmitting electrical impulses through a wire. Photo from Wikimedia Commons/public domain

New Telegraph Road Meets Old

Today, Bellingham’s Telegraph Road spans just over one mile. Since the start of Bellis Fair Mall in 1988, the area bears no trace of its pioneering past but the sign by the State Parks Commission. At Cornwall Park, a 1941 plaque by the Chief Whatcom Chapter of the Daughters of the American Revolution states, “Here passed the old Telegraph Road.”

Other “Telegraph Roads” along the same line tell its history throughout British Columbia. At the end of the line, the unincorporated community Telegraph Creek takes its name from the historic venture. One of Bellingham’s best-known attractions, SPARK Museum of Electrical Invention, today showcases ephemera from the age of telegraphy.

Bellingham’s economic ties to Alaska would continue with the heyday of Pacific American Fisheries, which operated canneries there and in Fairhaven from 1899 to 1965. Since 1989, Bellingham Cruise Terminal has operated the southernmost ferries in the Alaska Marine Highway System. But only historic markers that have become artifacts unto themselves convey the curiosity of these regions’ earliest telecommunications. When the dream of instant communication was born, a new world of innovation opened locally and worldwide.

Generations: A Unique Preschool That Brings Together Kids And Elders

The smiles are obvious, but scientific studies have also shown that both younger and older people benefit from interacting. Photo courtesy Summit Place

There aren’t many preschools like Bellingham’s Generations Early Learning & Family Center. Located in the basement of a retirement community, the young students take an active role in the lives of the seniors who live upstairs, improving the health and well-being of the residents at Mt. Baker Care Center and Summit Place Assisted Living by keeping them active and helping drive away loneliness and memory problems.

A Different Kind of Learning Environment

When Generations opened in 1985, the national press described it as the first intergenerational program of its kind in the nation. It was the brainchild of Jim Hall, who had been raised in a family that operated nursing homes, and learned first-hand the great value that retirees and children could offer each other. Generations’ current Executive Director, Heidi Bugbee, learned very similar lessons from a different point of view.

Bellingham can claim a part of intergenerational history, as the St. Francis program made national news for blazing a new trail. Photo courtesy Summit Place

Bugbee was involved in providing care for her elderly parents, and also had a deep interest in the lives of youngsters. She moved to Whatcom County to study child development at Western Washington University, then never left. She has spent the last 18 years working with the St. Francis Foundation’s Early Learning Center and was there when St. Francis of Bellingham’s skilled nursing facility was bought out by a larger corporation that decided to use the space for a different purpose.

A New Home at Summit Place

Because there were roughly 60 families with children in the school, Bugbee pounded the pavement and knocked on doors until she met nursing homeowners Andy and Jim Clay. They loved the idea of bringing children in, and offered space in the basement of the building that houses Mt. Baker Care Center and Summit Place. As soon as the school moved in, everybody began the process of weaving their communities together — students, seniors, family members and staff members all developed new kinds of beneficial relationships, thanks to the unique partnership.

A young student shows off a poster that’s destined to brighten the hallways of Summit Assisted Living. Photo courtesy Summit Place

Fortunately, Generations had found a strong and supportive home just before adversity struck. “We were building the program here, going strong, and then COVID hit. Kids still came into the daycare, and residents still lived upstairs, but we were all in our COVID bubbles and couldn’t mix together like we normally would,” says Bugbee. The world had a new set of challenges to face, and schools and residential facilities found they had a lot of work to do to keep their students and residents safe.

Another New Beginning

After a few starts and stops, Bugbee is happy to say that Generations is now back to operating at full steam these days. They have hosted a series of visitors and are planning a full slate of activities that will keep engagement high for everyone involved. But the really important thing is that the youth and their elders are spending time with each other once again. “You can see the joy for the kids, and the residents. Now that the babies can come back upstairs for visits, they’ve been really popular. And we have the cutest group in Whatcom County,” she says.

COVID meant pausing programs, but Generations is now back on track with even more ambitious plans for the future. Photo courtesy Summit Place

There are currently about 90 kids enrolled in the program, ranging in age from 12 months to six years, and Bugbee says that the majority of families become involved because they value the enrichment that comes with the intergenerational interplay. Bugbee also comes across families that are nervous about the unconventional nature of childcare in a nursing home, but the benefits quickly make themselves obvious. “It can be hard to put into words, but once they see it in action, they really get it,” she says.

Their popularity means they do have a waiting list, but they are open to new inquiries. Parents can expect a questionnaire that helps the school ensure a diverse cross-section of students and families. They accept Working Connections Child Care and DSHS vouchers, as well as offering their own tuition assistance.

Many families are eager to take part in intergenerational learning. Photo courtesy Summit Place

They are also looking to expand, by including a program that will provide care for babies younger than 12 months. After some remodeling, receiving new licenses and a round of fundraising, there should be room for eight more students by June of 2024.

In the meantime, it’s all about keeping the kids learning, and enriching the lives of the senior residents. This summer they have blended education, entertainment, and therapy during visits from a horse and a parrot, as well hosting a pet parade. They’ve also seen performances by an opera singer and a hula dancer and are gearing up for an ice cream social, followed later by a carnival. “Music, animals, food — what more could you want?” says Bugbee. “It doesn’t matter if you’re 4, 40 or 94, it means something to you.”

Sponsored

Fall for the Fun Autumn Happenings at Home Farm U-Pick & Events

The farm's antique tractors are popular with children. In addition to being used for harvesting, they help provide fall tractor train rides on Saturdays and Sundays from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. Photo courtesy Home Farm

With days growing shorter and a cool chill in the evenings, there’s no denying that autumn is once again upon Whatcom County.

And out at Home Farm U-Pick & Events, autumn is a wonderful time to visit the family-owned-and-oriented farm, located just two miles from Birch Bay. From a pumpkin patch and corn maze to a fall farm store stocked with warm swag and delicious goodies, Home Farm’s slate of fall festivities offer something for everyone.

The U-pick pumpkin patch, which opens for the season on September 29, will feature heirloom and specialty pumpkins in a variety of sizes, shapes, and colors, plus an array of squashes and gourds ready for decorating or eating.

The farm’s self-serve farm stand, selling all manner of fresh fall produce and other tasty treats, will operate until the first week of November, open 9 a.m. to 7 p.m. daily. Photo courtesy Home Farm

“We’re upping our pumpkin patch game,” says Home Farm co-owner Bridgette DiMonda, who has run the farm with her husband Dan Burdick since 2018.

The couple and their daughter, Khloe, moved to Whatcom County from Monroe in 2017, seeking both a change of pace from Dan’s work in Bellevue and a place to hobby farm.

“My husband had a dream of having a farm,” DiMonda says. “We just kind of went for it.”

From their first summer selling berries and vegetables at their farm stand in 2018, the farm has morphed from a hobby into a true community agricultural operation. In addition to vegetables, berries, and sweet corn, Home Farm also raises hogs year-round. From 10-pound porkers to those weighing in at over 300 pounds, Home Farm currently has about 25 hogs available for purchase.

While the farm is not certified organic, it abides by strict organic growing methods — no sprays or Round-Up-ready seeds.

The 25-acre farm has a spacious pumpkin patch with numerous pumpkins, gourds and squash of all shapes and sizes. Photo courtesy Home Farm

Explore the Fall Farm

Visiting the farm for a pumpkin is a nice change of pace from just buying one at the grocery store, DiMonda says.

“We love having a place where kids, especially, can come and see how things grow,” she says. “A lot of people these days are just disconnected from where food comes from, and how it grows.”

It’s also a great place in general for children, with few rules and restrictions.

“The farm’s really big and open,” DiMonda says. “Kids can just run free and have fun — that’s the whole point of being out on the farm.”

The U-pick pumpkin patch will operate each Wednesday through Sunday through October 29, with hours running from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Wednesdays through Thursdays and until 6 p.m. on Fridays through Sundays. No reservations are needed, and there’s no fee to visit aside from the price of the pumpkin(s) you purchase.

Still want some locally grown sweet corn? Home Farm has it for sale! Photo courtesy Home Farm

In addition, weekend trips to Home Farm will feature a corn maze, hot cider and popcorn, and tractor train rides from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. (weather-permitting). An antique tractor — one of several the farm has on display and uses for planting and harvesting — pulls the train. There will also be weekend food trucks, and face painting by Art & Happiness from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. on September 30, October 14, 21, and 28.

New this year is the farm store, located in an event building near the farm’s U-pick area. Several local small businesses and handmade vendors will sell their wares throughout the month of October, along with Home Farm’s fall-oriented swag and products. Those will include hot ciders and cocoas, as well as shirts and sweatshirts sized for both children and adults.  

Autumn is in the air, and you’ll find plenty of fall fun out at Birch Bay’s Home Farm U-Pick & Events. Photo courtesy Home Farm

If you’re planning to visit, Home Farm is easy to find: Just about 20 minutes from Bellingham, take Exit 270 off Interstate 5 and head west on Birch Bay Lynden Road. After a brief left turn onto Kickerville Road, you’ll come to the farm on your left.

When it comes to autumn, Home Farm has what you and your family need for festiveness and fun.

Sponsored

Young Professionals Recognized With the 2023 Top 7 Under 40

Submitted by the Bellingham Regional Chamber of Commerce

Tomorrow’s leaders are here today working in positions behind the scenes and in those of prominence. The Bellingham Regional Chamber of Commerce in partnership with Whatcom Young Professionals, a chamber program, recently announced this year’s Top 7 Under 40. This is our community’s recognition of top young professionals in our region.

This year over 70 nominations from coworkers, colleagues, and supervisors were submitted. The Top 7 Under 40 process values attributes such as character, community, leadership, professional accomplishments, and personal vision. To be qualified you must be 40 or younger on January 1, 2024.

The program culminates in a celebratory event on Thursday, October 19th at the Hotel Leo, where the seven will be celebrated by colleagues, friends, and family. At the event, a culminating award is announced which is chosen from one the seven. This award is the Young Professional of the Year, which predates the Top 7 Under 40 event.

Guy Occhiogrosso, President/CEO of the Bellingham Regional Chamber of Commerce said, “This is such a great program to be able to produce – one where we can showcase some of the amazing talent and humans in our community. We need to support those young professionals and employees as they are not simply our future, they are our now.”

This year’s event is again sponsored by Barron Heating AC Electrical & Plumbing. Brad Barron, CEO and recent Top 7 Under 40 alum, agrees with the importance of showing younger professionals, “When we build up our young professionals, we strengthen our local economy and our future.”

The 2023 Top 7 Under 40 Whatcom Young Professionals:

Leo Cohen
Kelsey Chance
Rhys-Thorvald Hansen 
Michael Harpool
Ashley Neville
Dr. Will Nichols
Schantell Porter 

About Bellingham Regional Chamber of Commerce

The Bellingham Regional Chamber of Commerce has contributed to the success of the local business community for over 110 years. As a not-for-profit membership organization, the chamber advocates for its members by convening leaders and influencers, serving as a catalyst for business growth and advocating for policies that bring about positive change. Visit bellingham.com to learn more.

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