Reaping What Bellingham Sowed: The Green, Growing History of Local Market Gardens and Truck Farms

Photo courtesy Jason Weston/Joe's Gardens

In Bellingham, as in most of America, today’s customers buy produce mainly from chain grocery stores. Locals also visit farms such as Joe’s Gardens for produce, seeds, and starts. However, few know its origins among many market gardens that once supplied most of Whatcom County’s supermarkets.

Born in San Francisco in 1906, Joe Bertero learned farming while growing up in Genoa, Italy. He started Joe’s Gardens in 1933 after buying the five-acre farm from the Robertson family and running his uncle Louis Bertero’s 15-acre Iowa Street farm. Both farms started at the turn of the century. Bertero sold the farm to Carl and Karol Weston in 1984; their sons Jason and Nathan run Joe’s Gardens today.

Jason Weston (pictured) made headlines restoring Joes Gardens’ antique Planet Junior tractor, still in use to this day. Photo credit: Dondi Tondro-Smith

Brothers David and Harry Smith started 40-acre Smith Gardens in 1901 after arriving from Scotland in 1897. It sold produce to local farmers markets, becoming greenhouses once other market gardens became “truck farms” shipping to Seattle in the 1950s.

“Back then, the impact they had…they produced the food for the county,” says Carl Weston. “There was totally different farming back then than it is now. Everything was done by hand [and] weeded by hand. Everything was growing so close that they were able to produce a lot of food off a small piece of ground — like our five acres of ground. I bet you, in the heyday, we would produce more than these farms out in the county that have 30 acres of ground.”

The market gardens’ all-but-forgotten histories are fertile soil for discoveries of regional heritage.

Heyday for Making Hay

Bellingham’s early twentieth-century market gardeners emigrated from countries such as Italy, Germany, and Scotland. Weston recalls Richard Bellman on Kentucky Street, Lawrence and Frank Tiscornia on Lindbergh Avenue, and Tony Victor out in the county, among others.

“Back in those days, there were a lot of older Italians working the farms,” Weston says. “As a young kid, you would be out in the field, weeding or something, and they would tell us stories about the old country or where they come from…Germany and Italy and that.”

Many facilities at Joe’s Gardens date back decades, whereas other gardens were replaced with auto dealerships and other developments. Photo courtesy Jason Weston/Joe’s Gardens

Joe Bertero sold his Iowa Street gardens, now the site of an auto dealership, due to the creek flooding. While operational, they were home to sharefarmers paid at the end of the season.

“They had a crew that lived there; a bunch of bachelors,” says Weston. “And I know they used to make five or six hundred gallons of wine a year, just through the crew.”

By the 1950s, Bertero had a truck delivery route to Seattle. He started local and cross-county deliveries from south Bellingham, as his gardens originally had no roads.

“They used to deliver by horse and wagon,” Weston says of Bellingham’s local route. “Back in those days, we didn’t have the trucks coming out of California delivering produce. It was mainly all local, and it was all in-season.”

Changing With the Seasons

Bellingham’s market gardens adapted and declined with the agriculture landscape mid-century. Some gardeners sold their land, as in Tiscornia gardens becoming Bellingham Technical College (known as Bellingham Vocational Technical Institute in 1957).

Joe’s Gardens’ garlic, sold as braids and bulbs, can be traced back to seeds that Joe Bertero brought back from Genoa. Photo courtesy Jason Weston/Joe’s Gardens

The advent of supermarkets changed the game.

“In the mid-to-late ’50s, that’s when the big supermarkets started coming into Bellingham, which drove all those small grocery stores out of business,” says Weston. “And in those days, the big grocery stores ran like public markets, where you had an individual who was the manager of the produce department. We were able to work with them, and we’d negotiate prices with them; it didn’t have to go through a corporate office.”

Weston recalls negotiating lower prices for surplus items. Stores had smaller selections at higher quantities, causing less plastic waste than today.

“You went to a grocery store in the fifties, you had maybe 20 different items,” Weston says. “You had your beets, your carrots, your radishes, your onions, your lettuces, and anything that was in season. But you go in the produce stand now, and there’s probably 500 items…we lost space in the stores from that.”

In its heyday, crews at Joe’s Gardens maximized the use of its five acres by planting into mid-December. They would store winter crops to deliver to stores year-round. Photo courtesy Jason Weston/Joe’s Gardens

As supermarkets followed corporate decisions into the 1970s, Joe’s Gardens shifted from wholesale to retail. Bertero maintained a “house” for trucks delivering produce and canned goods to and from Seattle into the 1960s.

“All the other farms are gone,” says Weston. “I would say 90% of the people that owned the original farms, they lived into their late nineties. And so nobody wanted to take them over.”

Gardens Today

Joe Bertero lived to be 96, and the Westons named Joe’s Gardens in his honor.

Joe Bertero arrived in Bellingham at 17 to avoid going into the Italian army. During World War II, he skipped the American draft by producing enough vegetables that the board opted to leave Joe’s Gardens open. Photo credit: Anna Diehl

“I just wish there was a way that I could describe how we produced so much produce off a small piece of land,” Weston says. “And that’s lost. I think I’m about the last person around who was around in those days. We were really a farm back then.”

Joe’s Gardens continues to sell seasonal produce, including garlic braids descended from Joe Bertero’s original Genoa seeds. With seeds and starts going back generations, gardeners can cultivate new memories.

New High Tech Learning Highlights Evergreen Goodwill Partnership With Comcast in Bellingham

The September 29th ceremony to unveil new tech enhancements for Evergreen Goodwill's Job Training and Education Center in Bellingham included multiple Comcast and Goodwill representatives, and Bellingham Major Seth Fleetwood (far right). Photo courtesy Evergreen Goodwill

The end of September brought exciting new technological enhancements to Evergreen Goodwill’s Bellingham job training and education center (JTE), thanks to a six-figure investment from Comcast.

In a September 29 ceremony attended by Bellingham mayor Seth Fleetwood and Washington State Senator Simon Sefzik, the two partners officially unveiled enhancements to the Lift Zone & Community Space at the Bellingham location.

Matthew Peel, Evergreen Goodwill’s Digital Equity Manager, shared stories of success from the Bellingham JTE center. Photo courtesy Evergreen Goodwill

The new technology includes upgraded audio-visual equipment — cameras, microphones, and speakers — designed to optimize the video conference experience of the center’s two classrooms, which can now be combined to form one large classroom.

“State-of-the-art audio and visual technology will allow Evergreen Goodwill to seamlessly host hybrid and virtual events and classes,” said Daryl Campbell, the nonprofit’s president and chief executive officer, at the ceremony.

The Bellingham JTE center has been around for 25 years, serving more than 10,000 students to date, with everything from English and citizenship classes to computer literacy, GED completion, job training, and college navigation.

The Tech

Matthew Peel, a former Evergreen Goodwill instructor who’s now the company’s digital equity manager, said the new wall-mounted cameras can be manually controlled by instructors from their desks. In addition, ceiling-mounted microphones will provide full audio coverage of the entire classroom, allowing virtual students to hear other students asking questions to an instructor.

New ceiling-mounted microphones will enable virtual learning students to hear the entire classroom, including in-person students who may be asking the same questions they have at home. Photo credit: Matt Benoit

“It’s going to provide a much smoother interaction for our students and staff online,” Peel said.

In addition, new wall panels will display video information and complement the existing smartboards in each classroom. Comcast also installed its Lift Zone Wi-Fi, which provides enhanced high-speed wireless internet for the JTE center. The internet provider has launched more than 90 Lift Zones in Washington State since November 2020 to assist families with either limited or no internet access at home.

This infrastructure supplements additional support Evergreen Goodwill has already received, including the use of 118 Chromebook laptops for JTE students. The computers are shared as needed among the five Evergreen Goodwill JTE centers in King, Kitsap, Skagit, Snohomish, and Whatcom Counties.

Evergreen Goodwill’s Digital Equity Bus (DEB) is another new way that Goodwill is bringing its Job Training and Education tools directly to students across greater Whatcom County. Photo credit: Matt Benoit

Even older technology is still finding use: Twenty iPads that formerly helped students learn English through Rosetta Stone language software are now being used for voter registration drives.

Eileen Aparis, Evergreen Goodwill’s vice president of mission, said continuing digital enhancements are critical to meet the needs of the community Goodwill serves.

“We have these four walls, but we’ve gone beyond the four walls, because we know that our students can’t always come to us,” she said.

Evergreen Goodwill president and CEO, Daryl Campbell, speaks to a packed room of community members during the September 29 ceremony at Bellingham Goodwill. Photo credit: Matt Benoit

Another of those enhancements is the recently launched Digital Equity Bus (DEB), which provides a mobile classroom in greater Whatcom County.

Having conducted trial sessions in both Everson’s Nooksack Valley School District and Kendall’s East Whatcom Regional Resource Center, the bus is outfitted with six Chromebook laptops, comfortable seating for up to a dozen students, reliable internet and one of the same smartboards used in the Bellingham JTE classrooms. A significant number of the students who utilized DEB in its trial run were Ukrainian refugees.

The Impact

During the September 29 ceremony, Peel told two stories.

In the first, six members of a Guatemalan family used online learning services to take citizenship and ESL classes. While three of the family members continue to learn English, the other three recently passed their citizenship tests in Seattle with flying colors.

Evergreen Goodwill’s Digital Equity Bus (DEB) is another new way that Goodwill is bringing its Job Training and Education tools directly to students across greater Whatcom County. Photo credit: Matt Benoit

The second story brought a former student to the room’s attention. A woman, who one day approached Peel carrying a large duffle bag with all her personal belongings inside, was living at downtown Bellingham’s Base Camp homeless shelter.

The woman almost walked away, but Peel spoke with her and helped her register for a high school completion course. Staff at the JTE center also helped her begin living at the women’s Agape Home, as well as provide the resume building that helped her obtain a retail job at Bellingham Goodwill.

Today, the woman has her high school diploma, lives in an apartment, and is working a non-Goodwill job while pursuing a local higher education program for nursing.

These stories showcase why digital skills and equity are at the core of Evergreen Goodwill’s mission: because jobs change lives. As a former instructor, Peel said seeing the success of the program is profoundly gratifying.

“To see the immense impact, we can have on someone’s life is amazing,” he said. “We develop a personal relationship with our students. It’s so great when they do come back and they say, ‘I got my GED, I got this new job, I got a promotion.’ It’s what drives us.”

And in a world that can often seeing overwhelmingly negative, Peel said that being part of this mission — driven in part by increasing amounts of incredible technology — gives him hope about the larger goal of reducing societal inequality.

“We’re only a small group of people, but if we can just change one life at a time, incrementally, that gives me optimism,” he said. “Knowing that we can help someone in a meaningful way, whether it’s a small way or a big way, that’s just powerful.”

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What Rising Interest Rates Mean for the Housing Market

Photo courtesy First Fed

The housing market has been a hot topic for the past few years, especially since the pandemic era’s historically low interest rates caused a chaotic frenzy. As the market continues to evolve, it’s best to stay informed with the most current and accurate data available. Trying to stay up to date can seem like a daunting task. Working with mortgage experts from trustworthy, local community banks like First Fed can smooth out the process and ensure the best possible outcome. Mortgage Loan Officer Tiffany Bergsma-Evans sat down with WhatcomTalk to check in with the latest housing market trends and what rising interest rates mean to homebuyers.

Tiffany Bergsma-Evans, First Fed Mortgage Loan Officer. Photo courtesy First Fed

“Housing market trends are just the overall view of the housing market at a national, regional, and local level,” says Bergsma-Evans. “No two markets are the same. One of the challenges I see is the focus on presenting national or even regional numbers through social media, or general media, when most people want to know what’s happening in their local market.”

In Whatcom county, the housing market held strong through the pandemic years with high demand and low inventory. “We saw a lot of retirees moving into the area and people relocating due to our amenities,” says Bergsma-Evans. “Where else can you go from the mountains to the ocean in an hour? Or a day trip to Canada?”

The COVID-19 pandemic reshaped priorities and shifted focus on lifestyle choices. “We have a quality of life that is in demand. That demand accelerated greatly during Covid, coupled with people working remotely,” says Bergsma-Evans. “They started looking for areas that were less expensive than the major metro areas. We saw an exodus from higher price markets to more affordable ones.”

The housing market is cyclical and subject to change through many different factors. “Mortgage lending and real estate go hand in hand,” says Bergsma-Evans. “Obviously when there are more homes on the market being sold, there are more loans being written. A recent statistic reported that we are at an all-time high for the number of cash buyers in the overall market. So it’s even more important to get pre-qualification in order to compete effectively.”

As interest rates rise, the housing market has begun to shift from a supercharged sellers’ market. “Homes are less expensive than they were in the spring. And we are still seeing pricing coming down. There are more homes on the market, fewer bidding wars, and homes are starting to sell at their listing price or slightly under. This means buyers are having some success in negotiating home prices down,” says Bergsma-Evans. “Buyers are also having success with contingent offers, like selling their existing home first to free up funds for the purchase.

Tiffany Bergsma-Evans with her dog Kingston. Photo courtesy First Fed

In light of higher interest rates, some buyers are pulling back from the market and homeowners aren’t listing their properties. Nevertheless, every cloud has a silver lining. “I’ve had people who have been looking for months finally get their offers accepted,” says Bergsma-Evans. “It’s a better market for first-time home buyers because there is less competition.”

When assessing the direction of the housing market and interest rates, and deciding whether or not to sell or buy, it is essential to keep everything in perspective. “Date the rate, marry the house,” says Bergsma-Evans. “It’s important to move quickly when you find the home that fits your lifestyle and budget. When rates fall, you can refinance and free up funds for other investments.”

The slower market also affords homebuyers the opportunity to avoid waving contingencies like home inspection and gives them the chance to request repairs. “Buyers have more negotiating power and more options than just a few months ago,” says Bergsma-Evans. “I have watched enough real estate cycles, being in the industry since 1990, to see the peaks and valleys. COVID really did throw a huge curveball with unprecedented low rates and high demand, which created the perfect storm. Now it’s starting to return to a more balanced market.”

Tiffany Bergsma-Evans at the First Fed Fairhaven branch. Photo courtesy First Fed

First Fed embodies the qualities and values needed to navigate the ins and outs of current mortgage lending. “First Fed is poised for growth in our market area. We offer competitive loan products at competitive rates,” says Bergsma-Evans. “I consider myself a relationship-oriented lender, not a transaction-based lender. I’m looking to establish a relationship with the borrowers I work with, beyond just doing their loan. I want to be their loan officer for life.”

As housing continues to evolve, it’s crucial to work with a trusted mortgage lender who has first-hand knowledge of the local market. To connect with Tiffany Bergsma-Evans or another First Fed mortgage lender, visit: https://www.ourfirstfed.com/personal/home-loans/meet-the-team.

First Fed is a member FDIC and equal housing lender.

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Downtown Bellingham Partnership Announces 2022 Holiday Wine Walk Details

Submitted by Downtown Bellingham Partnership

The Downtown Bellingham Partnership will host the annual Holiday Wine Walk event Friday, November 11 from 5:00 – 8:30 PM. Tickets will be released for sale the week of October 10 for this popular downtown celebration. The Holiday Wine Walk draws upwards of 600 people to taste wine and welcome in the holiday shopping season at 15 stores and boutiques in the downtown core. 

“We’re excited to bring back Holiday Wine Walk,” Lindsey Payne Johnstone, program director for the Downtown Bellingham Partnership, said. “This event is such a fun way to check out unique gift ideas and get some of that shopping done early, while enjoying delicious wine with friends.” 

Photo courtesy Downtown Bellingham Partnership

Just like past Wine Walks, attendees will taste a variety of wines from local and regional wineries on a self-guided sipping tour of downtown’s anchors stores and new businesses.   

Tickets start at $40 for general entry which includes 10 tasting tickets, a commemorative tasting cup, an event guide, and a Greenhouse Home + Life tote bag. In addition to the general tickets, limited $60 VIP tickets include early check-in, an exclusive reception at Locus with a complimentary glass of wine and charcuterie pairing, and three additional tasting tickets.  Guests must be 21+ and are encouraged to purchase tickets on DPB’s website in advance as only 550 total tickets are available. Proceeds from ticket sales support the Downtown Bellingham Partnership, a non-profit championing the health and vitality of downtown Bellingham through the promotion of commerce, culture, and celebration.  

Greenhouse Home + Life is 2022’s Holiday Wine Walk title sponsor. Since 1972, Greenhouse has been a shopping destination on the corner of Holly and Cornwall. More recently, people may know them from HGTV’s Unsellable Houses where Greenhouse provides furniture and décor to stage homes for sale. Members of the public are encouraged to follow Greenhouse’s Facebook and Instagram profiles for a chance to win free Wine Walk tickets. Details of the giveaway will be announced soon.

The 2022 Holiday Wine Walk participating businesses are:  

  • Backcountry Essentials            
  • Black Noise Records 
  • Brazen Shop + Studio 
  • Circa Shop + Gallery 
  • Greenhouse 
  • Ideal 
  • Mo’s Parlor 
  • MW Soapworks 
  • Northwest Yarns 
  • NEKO Cat Café 
  • Sojourn 
  • Third Planet 
  • Wandering Oaks Fine Arts Gallery & Glass Studio 
  • Welcome Road Winery 
  • WinkWink 

Wineries and merchant pairings will be announced closer to the event date. For more information on downtown events, visit the Downtown Bellingham Partnership’s Facebook Page http://www.facebook.com/DowntownBellinghamPartnership/events.  

Featured photo courtesy Downtown Bellingham Partnership  

WCLS Hosts ‘Think Black’ Author Clyde Ford for Its 2022 Read & Share Program

The Whatcom County Library System collaborates each year with a local author for its Read & Share program, a collection of author events and activities aimed at sparking conversation and meaningful connection through the writer’s work and the community. This year, Bellingham author Clyde W. Ford joins WCLS’s Read & Share program with his award-winning memoir, Think Black. WCLS Executive Director Christine Perkins and author Clyde Ford sat down with WhatcomTalk to discuss the upcoming program’s events and community conversations centered around Think Black.

WCLS launched the program as an opportunity for local readers to connect over great books and ideas.

“We’ve specifically gravitated toward memoirs of Northwest authors that share their personal history with us as a way of starting conversations about being human in Whatcom County,” says Perkins. “Clyde Ford is not only an accomplished writer but very gifted in sharing his skills of writing with others and teaching people through writing workshops.”

Think Black

This year’s selection, Think Black, follows Clyde Ford’s father, John Stanley Ford, in his career as the first African American software engineer at IBM. Think Black illustrates how racism had an impact on both the relationship between Clyde and his father and John Ford’s perspective on his own life in the midst of a technological boom.

Photo credit: David Middleton

“Technology is ubiquitous, and the pace of change has been incredible in the way it affects all our lives,” Perkins says. “It’s fascinating that Clyde Ford’s father was there at IBM right in the early days of a huge technological revolution. Just within one person’s lifetime, this incredible transformation has happened, and it hasn’t all been smooth or without its challenges. We learn through Clyde about the issues affecting or related to race, and how technology plays out for people of color. With 2020, and the heightened understanding and awareness of some of the racial issues in our country, it just makes it something so worth exploring.”

Writing Workshops for Adults and Teens

Ford’s author events will feature writing workshops, including separate program dates for adults and teens. “He has multiple presentations he will be doing online for Whatcom County Library System as part of this program, but the writing workshops are the ones we’re the most excited about,” says Perkins. An online program targeted at adults takes place on Saturday, October 8, and a workshop for teens on November 10.

Clyde has written Think Black and his newer book, Of Blood and Sweat: Black Lives and the Making of White Power and Wealth, but he’s also published other works, including a murder mystery series set in Bellingham. “He can help writers of all shapes and sizes start learning how to engage people with their writing,” Perkins says.

Clyde Ford’s newest work, “Of Blood and Sweat,” is a vivid portrayal of how African American labor generated white wealth and continues to fuel the white one percent to this day.

The value of Ford’s guidance as an award-winning author and multi-hyphenate is priceless. “I’m not sure I ever decided I was going to be a writer when I was in practice as a chiropractic psychotherapist,” says Ford. “I had a very famous writer who was a patient, and he used to tell me I had a book inside me. He said it every time I saw him, asking, ‘You know you have a book inside of you, right?’ Eventually, I decided to write the book. That was 30 years ago or more, and once you get the bug for writing, it’s not something you’re called to do, it’s something you feel compelled to do.”

Memoir Began as a Hollywood Screenplay

Ford began his father’s story as a screenplay for Hollywood, but circumstances ultimately led him down a different path, which culminated in writing Think Black.

“There was a downturn in publishing from 2009 to 2010” says Ford. “New York wasn’t buying a lot of content, so I turned my attention to Hollywood and doing some screenplays.” Ford wrote a screenplay about his dad, and when his agent noted that Hollywood looks to have intellectual property behind screenplays, Ford decided to write the book. “I was very lucky to get in touch with a luminary editor at Harper Collins who’s no longer there, Tracy Sherrod. Tracy was, at the time, the highest-placed African American editor in the publishing business and she understood what I was trying to do with the book and liked it. We had a great collaboration.”

Ford’s work has influenced multiple generations who connect deeply to his messages and beautifully written prose.

“I think the way to understand that connection is to understand that story has always been a way of healing, in terms of mythology,” says Ford. “One of my earliest books is on the role of mythology and personal and social healing so, for me, storytelling is always a great way — whether the stories are true or the stories are made up — to heal personally and socially.

“For people who have found those books insightful in a way that helps them come to terms with circumstances of their lives or circumstances of the world they find themselves in,” Ford says, I’m grateful that my books might help them in that way.”

This year’s Read & Share program promises to inspire both readers and writers throughout Whatcom, connecting them to a meaningful and significant body of work while providing the unique opportunity to learn from a beloved local author.

VisitRead & Share for more content and register for Ford’s author events taking place over the next month.



Per WCLS’s Read & Share page:

Author Events — ONLINE
Registration is required; space is limited. 

Saturday, Oct. 8. 1:00 PM-2:00 PM
Adult Writing Workshop with Clyde Ford
Clyde Ford is the author of 14 works of fiction and nonfiction. In this workshop, the author shares tips to inspire your writing practice and to craft stories that will engage people. 

Thursday, October 20, 7:00 PM–8:00 PM
Think Black Book Talk with Clyde Ford
The Bellingham-based author vividly describes the journey of researching and writing his award-winning memoir. In her review of Think Black, librarian and noted book critic Nancy Pearl said, “Using the experiences of both his father and himself, (Ford) frames the story of race in America over the last 70 years.” Audience questions are welcome. 

Thursday, October 27, 7:00 PM–8:00 PM
Magical Mystery Tour with Clyde Ford
The author shares how he became a writer. This inspiring session is ideal for anyone fascinated by the creative process.

Saturday, Nov. 5, 1:00 PM-2:00 PM
Of Blood and Sweat Book Talk
Ford’s latest book, Of Blood and Sweat: Black Lives and the Making of White Power and Wealth, was published to acclaim in April 2022. In her review of the book, WCLS Collections Librarian Mary Kinser wrote: “Ford meshes his storytelling talents with his skills as a historian, tracing the ways in which Black labor built the very structures and systems on which our nation rests.”

Thursday, Nov. 10, 4:00 PM-5:00 PM
Clyde Ford Creative Writing Program with Teens (Grades 6-12)
Teen writers, join us for a special hour with author Clyde Ford. He will share insights about writing and publishing and will answer your questions about becoming a published author. “I am interested in helping people find their voice in the written word. Finding themselves in finding their voice,” Ford says.

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Black Cats, Bewitched Castles: The Haunted History and Hoaxes of Fairhaven’s James Wardner

Wardner’s Castle has undergone many changes over a century. In 2022, the antlered statue (pictured) was added to its yard. Photo credit: Anna Diehl

Since its township beginnings, Fairhaven has been defined by many colorful characters whose biographies blend fact and fiction. Founder “Dirty Dan” Harris’ birthplace and date are notoriously uncertain, and his exploits are among many others’ that have earned Fairhaven its early “wild west” reputation. But one standout eccentric cemented local and national legends in only a few years: investor and self-proclaimed cat rancher James Wardner.

Born in 1846 in Milwaukee, Wardner invested in mines across the country, starting 1871. He rapidly gained and lost fortunes throughout booms and busts, even naming two boomtowns after himself in Idaho and British Columbia.

In 1889, Wardner arrived in Fairhaven at promoter Nelson Bennett’s urging. He started Fairhaven Water Works Company, Samish Lake Logging and Milling Company, Fairhaven Electric Light Company, and Cascade Club. Wardner opened Blue Canyon Mine in 1890, selling it in 1891 with J.J. Donovan and Julius Bloedel managing. He left for South Africa in 1893, briefly returning between other investment schemes.

Wardner developed a reputation for whimsy. His 1900 autobiography describes his first venture as selling a rabbit’s young when he was just eight years old. Contemporary readers speculated that he inspired Mark Twain’s Mulberry Sellers. Today, Fairhaven remembers Wardner for a feline-themed hoax that made national headlines and a house of local legend.

Herding Cats on Eliza Island

James Wardner’s cat tale started in 1890 when Fairhaven Herald reporter E.G. Earle approached him in search of a story. With characteristic good humor, Wardner said he planned to raise thousands of black cats for their pelts through his latest venture: Consolidated Black Cat Co., Ltd. He claimed to own an Eliza Island ranch run by Sam Weller — a fictional character in Charles Dickinson’s The Pickwick Papers.

As this 1951 Seattle Times article attests, Wardner started the black cat story as a good-natured joke and returned the money of investors that believed it.

The story made the Fairhaven Herald’s front page news. Due to Wardner’s national notoriety, editors reprinted it from San Francisco to the New York Tribune, which ran the headline “Black Cats for Profit.” Successive stories claimed that investors sent money, which was eventually returned to them — literally putting stock into the tale.

Journalists embellished the story with details of cats living on local fish, wandering the island freely, and lending their pelts to capes, muffs, and plaster. Wardner kept playing with his cat yarn as it unraveled nationwide, reprinting news stories in his autobiography with tongue-in-cheek acknowledgement.

He wrote of the cat ranch and its reputation: “the product did not equal my anticipation.” Indeed, without disclaimers on its veracity, the hoax blurred the lines between satire and sincerity in the public’s beliefs.

The Black Cat is rumored to get its name from James Wardner’s famous hoax. It occupies Sycamore Square – formerly Mason Block, where Wardner may have spun the story from his original office. Photo credit: Anna Diehl

The black cat story took on a life of its own (or perhaps nine) in Fairhaven’s community. It inspired residents’ adoption of real strays rumored to descend from the ranch cats. Informal volunteer group “Fairhaven Kitty Committee” built homes for strays through the last few decades of the twentieth century. Mason Block, which hosted Wardner’s office and Cascade Club, is now Sycamore Square and home to restaurant The Black Cat (Le Chat Noir).

Haunting Castles

In 1890, the same year James Wardner created his cat story, he built a mansion whose local legacy would outlive him. “Wardner Castle,” so nicknamed for its opulence, still stands tall on the corner of 15th Street and Knox Avenue.

Wardner’s Castle has undergone many changes over a century. In 2022, the antlered statue (pictured) was added to its yard. Photo credit: Anna Diehl

Spokane architect Kirtland K. Cutter designed the Queen Anne-style house alongside local architects Longstaff and Black. Its three stories contain 23 rooms. Original features include fireplaces with carved wood mantelpieces, stained glass windows, and a porte-cochere that overlooks Bellingham Bay and the Puget Sound.

Wardner’s family lived in the house for just one year. Puget Sound Mills & Timber president John Earles lived there with his family until the 1930s. Wardner’s Castle became restaurant Hilltop House from 1947 to 1955, then a private residence, and Wardner’s Castle Museum from 1983 to 1986. The last tenant was Castle Gate House Bed and Breakfast, active from the 1980s through 2000s.

The house was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 1988. Today, it is privately owned.

Laurie Ann Gospodinovich created the murals at Wardner’s Castle and La Creperie (now The Black Cat). The resident Harriman family had commissioned her work to match the dark “castle” aesthetic, as Gospodinovich had a penchant for symbolism and planned to study art in France. Photo credit: Anna Diehl

WhatcomTalk has previously noted Wardner’s Castle’s reputation as a haunted place. Most local legends revolve around “Spirits of Wardner’s Castle,” a 1984 mural painted inside by local artist Laurie Ann Gospodinovich. The mural depicted Wardner, the castle, Fairhaven landmarks, and black cats alongside a ship bound for Eliza Island. Gospodinovich died at 24, only a few months after finishing the painting, and had painted another mural for La Creperie in 1983. Both murals have disappeared: Castle owners repainted, and a 1987 arson destroyed La Creperie — now The Black Cat.

Through the house’s local intrigue, Wardner’s spirit of mythmaking lives on.

Where Are They Now?

James Wardner died in 1905, bearing a simple headstone in Milwaukee. However, he ended his autobiography requesting that his epitaph read: “Oh, where, and oh, where has Jim Wardner gone? Oh, where, and oh, where is he? With his tales of gold and his anecdotes old, And his new discover-ee?”

James Wardner wrote his autobiography with references to publications that had picked up his black cat story. Most readers understood the satire, and many publications added to it, but Wardner’s fame led several to present the story as fact.

Wardner Castle awaits new uses. After a century of renovations, it has been painted turquoise green, then purple, and finally blue.

No remains of Wardner’s black cat ranch on Eliza Island have ever materialized. But these local familiars continue to cross paths with Fairhaven, running wild in the realm of imagination that Wardner set free.

New Booster Shots Available To Help Tackle Latest Omicron Variants

Give your body extra support against the latest COVID-19 strains with a bivalent booster shot.

The boosters are called ‘bivalent’ because they help target the most recent Omicron variants circulating right now, BA.4 and BA.5, plus the original virus strain from 2020. The new boosters are available to anyone age 5 and older, as long as the person has already had their primary COVID vaccines.

While the older vaccines did a great job at preventing severe illness and death — especially in those who also obtained boosters — their protection waned over time as the virus evolved.

When Omicron arrived last winter, the strain was better able to get past our immune defenses. This was a game-changer that caused many vaccinated people to catch COVID, even though they suffered less severe illness than those who were never vaccinated. Since the bivalent booster targets Omicron, it’s as important as ever to update your COVID-19 vaccination record for better protection. 

Photo courtesy Whatcom County Health Department

Doctor Greg Thompson, a health officer with the Whatcom County Health Department, says that while a sense of COVID-19 fatigue is understandable after two years of masks, mandates and case waves, the virus is still with us: in August alone, 15,000 Americans died from the disease. 

“Many of these deaths could have been prevented through vaccines and boosters,” Thompson says. “In June, older unvaccinated Americans died at a four-times-higher rate than those who had just their primary COVID vaccines, and a whopping 14-times-higher rate than those who had received two boosters.”

Vaccines reduce the risk of severe illness and death, and subsequently reduce stress on the healthcare system, he adds. And just like flu shots are updated annually to protect against new circulating flu strains, COVID boosters have been updated ahead of another possible surge.

“COVID cases have spiked the last two winters, and may do the same this year,” says Thompson. “This winter may also be a relatively bad influenza season based on what we have seen in the southern hemisphere during their winter (our summer).”

Fortunately, people can get both their COVID booster and annual flu shot at the same time to be protected from both infections.

Who Needs It Most?

A booster is especially important if you’re at high-risk of severe disease or you spend time with anyone who is, Thompson says.

This includes people who are elderly, overweight, or have weakened immune systems. Those with underlying medical conditions like cancer, diabetes, heart, lung, or blood disorders, as well as those who are pregnant, are at higher risk of severe disease and should get a booster.

Ultimately, booster shots are for anyone 12 and older, just like the original coronavirus vaccines.

What are the Side Effects?

Similar to the original vaccines, Thompson says. However, in many people — especially those who haven’t had either an infection or booster in the last few months — side effects have typically been milder. 

When Should I Get It?

You should wait at least two months since your last vaccine dose, and be fully recovered from any recent COVID infection before getting your booster. Waiting three full months after having the virus is an option endorsed by the CDC and may both increase immunity and reduce side effects in people who aren’t at high-risk of being quickly reinfected.

Where Can I Get It?

Local pharmacies and doctor’s offices that offered the original booster should carry the new variant-specific shots. WCHD pop-up vaccine clinics in Lynden and at the East Whatcom Regional Resource Center in Kendall will also offer the new boosters.

Talk to your healthcare provider about getting a booster or come to one of WCHD’s adult vaccine pop-up clinics; no insurance is required at the latter. You can make an appointment on their website, https://www.whatcomcounty.us/3530/COVID-19-Vaccines#popup, or just show up without an appointment.

Is It Really Going to Help, Though?

Boosters keep the immune system ready to fight future infections, Thompson says. Evidence so far indicates the bivalent boosters provide a stronger antibody response against Omicron than the original vaccine, and also help prevent virus growth in lung tissue.

Thompson says the vaccines to-date have shown vaccination after infection produces a stronger, hybrid immunity that is better than immunity from just infection or vaccination alone.

“I expect the protective effect from these new vaccines will be similar to what we’ve seen before —long-lasting protection against severe disease and death, but relatively shorter-lasting protection against milder infections,” he says. “With COVID-19, we’ve seen that the strongest protection against mild infection is for the first 3-6 months after a vaccine or booster — when antibody levels are at their highest.

Protection against severe disease and death is related to robust immune memory cells, which last much longer than antibodies. This is why we’re seeing that even people who had vaccines and boosters many months ago are still experiencing less severe disease and death than the unvaccinated were this summer.”

With all this in mind, consider better-arming your immune system with an updated booster. And remember to keep using the tools and habits we’ve all learned so well in the last two years: test and stay home when feeling sick and wear a high-quality mask when and where it’s most helpful.

And finally, regardless of how you perceive COVID-19’s continuing risk, remember to be kind.

“It has been a challenging few years,” Thompson says. “We need each other more than ever.”

Sponsored

Clean and Green at The Chrysalis Inn & Spa

Photo courtesy The Chrysalis Inn & Spa

In an ever-changing world, sustainability initiatives take center stage and help new generations to grow and heal toward a more balanced future. With initiatives like the Clean Building Performance Standard enacted recently in Washington state, many businesses are in the process of building an outline of what their efficiency and sustainability goals should look like over the next five to 10 years. The Chrysalis Inn & Spa is ahead of the curve. Chief Engineer Pliny Keep recently sat down with WhatcomTalk to highlight the sustainability practices and value of environmental consciousness at the Chrysalis Inn & Spa.  

“The owner, Mike Keenan, has had a commitment to sustainability since he built the Chrysalis in 2001,” says Keep. “It had some features built in, like landscaping and efficient window glazing, and we had our first Sustainable Connections energy audit in 2010, and then another one last year.” Those audits have guided the Chrysalis’s implementation of sustainability initiatives in the three main categories of energy, water, and waste.

Keenan’s at the Pier sources 70% of their food from local and organic vendors. Photo courtesy Keenan’s at the Pier

In addition to their built-in initiatives, the Chrysalis is also associated with the Hilton Curio Collection, which has its own environmental program called LightStay. “This refers to what we call ‘light stays’ in hospitality that ‘leave no trace behind’,” Keep says. “Even then, we basically do more and go beyond what that program requires.”

At the Chrysalis Inn & Spa, a wide range of creative environmental practices and consistent sustainability goals are being met.

“We compost all of our food waste and use water from our roof to supply the koi ponds in the winter when it’s raining. Our room bathrooms feature low-flow fixtures and all refillable shampoo and soap containers, and 70% of the food at Keenan’s is locally sourced and/or organic,” says Keep. They also recently installed two electric vehicle charging stations, with the help of PSE. These are just a few examples of the solutions the Chrysalis has developed over the years.

The Chrysalis Inn’s room bathrooms feature low-flow fixtures and all refillable shampoo and soap containers. Photo courtesy The Chrysalis Inn & Spa

However, initiating environmental objectives is not without its challenges, especially with a business supporting both lodging and a restaurant.

“Currently, the big issue for many buildings in Bellingham, and many business owners, is the Washington State Clean Building Standard, which has just gone into effect,” Keep says. “That gives us anywhere from five to 10 years to reach the EPA Energy Star benchmark for building efficiency. Those benchmarks are challenging and are basically the same as current building standards, so with a 20-year-old building you have to retrofit a lot of things to achieve the current energy standards.”

The Chrysalis Inn & Spa has koi ponds filled by rainwater collected from a downspout on the roof. Photo courtesy The Chrysalis Inn & Spa

With Keenan’s at the Pier and the inn together, varying levels of criteria must be met at the same time.

“There are different standards for lodging than a restaurant,” says Keep. “Restaurants have a very high energy footprint compared to lodging, per square foot. You can use a lot more energy as a restaurant per the EPA because it saves other people from consuming energy. Thousands of people come here to eat, which means they aren’t cooking at home, and they are saving energy.”

Still, the Chrysalis Inn & Spa keeps meeting their goals year after year, and the approach they take to green initiatives is highly effective.

“With a sustainability program in a business, it’s about engaging with guests and customers, and also our staff,” Keep says. “We’ve done a couple of cleanups where we get together for fun as a staff. There’s a little park of woods right next to us that wasn’t maintained and there was garbage, old trees, and couches tossed down there. We cleaned that all up and made it more accessible. We maintain it as a volunteer opportunity that engages us and is nice for the rest of the community. We’re going to do a beach cleanup later this year or next year, as well.”

In the end, acclimating to green practices is simply the smartest choice. “If you build a structure green, it may cost, on average, 10% more to build it, but it will save you something like 80% more over the lifespan of the building,” says Keep. “If you’re a long-term investor, it’s a no-brainer. Electric cars are quieter and cheaper, and a more insulated home takes far less to heat. Essentially, if you do it right the first time, you won’t have to fix it.”

Sponsored

Assistance League of Bellingham Invites You to Their Annual Yule Boutique

Submitted by Assistance League of Bellingham

Assistance League Yule Boutique
Saturday, November 5, 2022
9 a.m. – 3 p.m.

Grace Center, Trinity Lutheran Church
2408 Cornwall Avenue, Bellingham
Free Admission and Parking

Our homes and shop rooms have been filled with a burst of energy as we are preparing to share our love this season. Here’s a peek at the variety of festive offerings for your shopping pleasure.

This year we’re embracing our creativity with these lovely hats and gloves made from recycled cashmere sweaters.

For every baker, there’s a holiday treat to match their personality. Our table of cookies, cakes, sweet breads and more reflect our members’ talents.

What better message to celebrate Christmas than to give a thoughtful sentiment of these delicious soup mixes. Perfect solution for busy holiday days.

Take great delight and joy in watching a little girl become a twirling fairy princess with magical powers.

Thank you for letting us become part of your holiday tradition. We look forward to seeing you at this fun-filled event!

Learn more about us at Assistance League of Bellingham.

Dine Out for Peace During Conflict Resolution Month

Submitted by Whatcom Dispute Resolution Center

October is Conflict Resolution Month, and this year marks the 30th anniversary of the Whatcom Dispute Resolution Center (WDRC). In honor of this the WDRC is hosting its second-annual month long promotion called Dine Out for Peace. The WDRC is a non-profit organization that works to help the Whatcom County community approach conflict in creative and healthy ways.

Close to 30 Whatcom County restaurants, brewpubs, and coffee houses have joined with the WDRC to promote peace and to support the local small business community. Participating businesses will donate a portion of proceeds to support the efforts of the WDRC to achieve its mission of providing and promoting constructive and collaborative approaches to conflict. Dine Out for Peace will culminate in the 19th annual Peace Builder Awards presented by Peoples Bank and PSE on October 21.

“We are excited to participate in Dine Out for Peace during the month of October,” said Layne Carter, Operations Manager of Aslan Brewing. “The work of the WDRC is so vital to the health and vitality of our community. Inclusivity, resilience and collaboration are at the heart of our business, especially during this time, and the WDRC represents this.”

Dine Out for Peace participants include:

Bellingham Cider Co.The Cabin
The Colophon CaféThe Waterfront Seafood and Bar
Boundary Bay BreweryTime and Materials
Café VeloZeek’s Pizza
Diamond Jim’s Goods Local Brews
Elizabeth StationJack’s BBQ
JUXT TaphouseAslan Brewery
Menace BrewingWander Brewing
Naan and BrewOvn Wood Fired Pizza
Nelson’s Market and Marlin’s CaféMain Street Bar and Grill
North Fork BreweryFringe Brewery
Pootie’s Grand Ale HouseCarnal
Sage Against the Machine/VGo’sYeah Baby Boards
The BagelryBarb’s Pies and Pastries

For more information, please visit www.whatcomdrc.org

The WDRC is a nonprofit dedicated to creative conflict resolution and building a peaceful community.

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