Bainbridge Island Review, April 18, 2014

Page 1

Review Bainbridge Island

GODFATHERS OF GRUNGE: Legendary rockers return for Kingston show. A9

FRIDAY, APRIL 18, 2014 | Vol. 114, No. 16 | www.BAINBRIDGEREVIEW.com | 75¢ Little League kicks off season with high-fives and smiles Bainbridge Island Little League held its season-opening Jamboree last weekend, as hundreds of players and their families gathered to celebrate the start of another season. At left, members of the Racers and other Little League teams stand along the baselines and give high-fives to T-ballers during the traditional rally at the end of the Jamboree. Below, Alec Stauffer of the Major Cardinals holds the American flag after the flagraising ceremony. He was assisted by fellow teammates Josh Philip, Jack Reilly, Alex Ledbetter and Nate Grattan. At bottom left, three players from the team Ice — Marissa Castillo, Aliyah Castillo and w Davies — show off their dance moves to the crowd before the Jamboree celebration begins.

Brian Kelly | Bainbridge Island Review

Sidewalk shops may get a break Business owners to accommodate five feet for pedestrian traffic BY CECILIA GARZA Bainbridge Island Review

To some, the outdoor dining and eclectic items that stack display racks throughout Downtown Winslow’s wide sidewalks is just another facet of Bainbridge’s vibrant culture. To those traveling with baby strollers, however, it may look like an obstacle course. In Monday’s meeting, City Manager Doug Schulze asked the council for policy direction to maintain Downtown Winslow’s pedestrian flow amidst sidewalk outdoor dining and merchandise displays. The overall consensus of the discussion was that merchants have the council’s support to continue what they’re doing as long as there is a five-foot clearance for passerby to use the sidewalk. “I think we should leave it up to the store owner in terms of the kind of display the storeowner wants and the kind of furniture that the store owner is going to put out there,” said Councilman Steve Bonkowski. The increase in sidewalk retail over the past two years has prompted an overflow of comments to the city’s planning and public works departments. Some residents, Planning Director Kathy Cook told the council, are concerned about handicap accessibility, the cluttered appearance and pinch points where pedestrians cannot walk side-by-side, which was a principle function of the Winslow redesign. Other residents, Cook said, are pleased with the turn to sidewalk | A21

A travel guide to wellness:

New Bainbridge yoga center offers community and variety of healing practices BY CECILIA GARZA Bainbridge Island Review

At the new Dayaalu Center on Wyatt Way, a stream trickles around three sides of the building. When the lower windows of the main studio are open, the water washes in and over students sitting in the natural light that filters through the room’s floor-to-ceiling windows. Six months ago, Dayaalu opened its doors for the first time. It has since proven true to its word. It is a place for community and a hub for a whole range of healing practices. “I feel like we are a birthing vessel

for a seed that is really going to help shift consciousness around healing and around living,” said Sue Steindorf, the founder of the nonprofit and co-op yoga center. “To take some of the shame around healing and realize it’s a privilege to heal. It’s not something to be embarrassed about.” Visitors may walk in for a beginners pilates class but leave with a newfound confidence to give meridian-based tapping a try, a stress dissolving practice based on acupressure. With a variety of wellness practices in one space, Dayaalu acts as a trustwor-

thy travel guide to new ways of caring for and fortifying the body, mind and spirit. The center offers almost 30 classes that range from yoga for teens to restorative-based practices like community meditation and posture workshops. It also contains a treatment and therapy cabin with an infrared sauna; a Sukhi Kitchen which provides affordable gluten-free, vegetarian and vegan meals on-the-go; and retreats for traditional and alternative practitioners alike. “Food is such a huge part of turn to healing | A10

Cecilia Garza | Bainbridge Island Review

Founder Sue Steindorf leads a gentle, stress reduction class in the Dayaalu Center’s main studio. The center, which opened this year, is located on Wyatt Way.


Page A2

Stylish in Seabold—View

www.bainbridgereview.com

Friday, April 18, 2014 • Bainbridge Island Review


People Bainbridge Island

Friday, April 18, 2014 • Bainbridge Island Review

K

Page A3

Kimberly McLaughlin - Broker 206 948 7135 kimsfirst@gmail.com

Kudos

~LUXURY~

Islanders step up to help fight MS Hundreds of Bainbrindge Islanders came out Saturday, April 12 for Bainbridge Island’s annual three-mile Walk MS fundraiser. Not including sponsorships, the event brought in more than $70,000 for multiple sclerosis research and life-changing programs.

McL

OPEN SATURDAY April 19, 1-4 pm

Cecilia Garza | Bainbridge Island Review

Walkers of all ages marched down Madison Avenue sporting the National MS Society’s colors, green and orange.

Face painting also proved a big hit among the younger crowd of participants.

LUXURY 494 Cosgrove Street NW Offered at $759,000 MLS #610406 BAINBRIDGE ISLAND BRANCH

Cecilia Garza | Bainbridge Island Review

– 5th Annual –

FACES OF THE FUTURE GALA Saturday, April 26, 2014 6:00–9:00pm

St. Barnabas Episcopal Church Please join us for an evening celebrating the Boys & Girls Club’s commitment to enriching Bainbridge Island’s youth. Engage with your Bainbridge Island neighbors as you playfully compete with each other in our Silent Auction and Dessert Dash. Indulge your senses over dinner with our great selection of Northwest wine and food.

TICKETS:

$75.00/ticket $600/table Free childcare at Boys & Girls Club

REGISTER AT:

www.bit.ly/bifaces14

MORE INFO AT: bi@positiveplace.org or (206) 436-1860


Page A4

www.bainbridgereview.com

Friday, April 18, 2014 • Bainbridge Island Review

Farmers market opens for the season

Sunday, April 20 

Join us during

H O LY W E E K Rolling Bay Presbyterian Church Luciano Marano | Bainbridge Island Review

Charles Schafer, of the West Sound Beekeepers Association, teaches market visitors the finer points of hive culture and maintenance during the first day of the Bainbridge Farmers’ Market Saturday, April 12.

11042 Sunrise Drive NE, Bainbridge Island 206.842.3098 www.rbpres.org

April 13April 17April 18 April 20-

Palm Sunday Worship: 9:30am Maundy Thursday: Soup Supper & Communion 6:00pm Good Friday Service: 7:00pm Easter Worship: 9:30am Easter Egg Hunt: 10:45am

Join us as we celebrate Holy Week

Luciano Marano | Bainbridge Island Review

Above, the start of the parade that moved through downtown Winslow to announce the return of the market. At right, market customers explore fresh, local offerings.

Maundy Thursday Good Friday

April 17 ~ 7PM April 18 ~ 7PM

BHS Garden Work Party April 19 ~ 9AM-Noon The Commons at Bainbridge High School (Bldg. 200) www.crosssound.org

Easter Sunday

April 20 ~ 10AM

All services will be held at the BHS Commons

Please see website for daily prayer gatherings including prayer walks on Bainbridge & in Poulsbo.

Celebrate Holy Week $320,000

SATURDAY 1-4

20974 Virginia Avenue NE – Kingston

$1,595,000

SATURDAY 1-4

4923 NE Tolo Road – B.I.

Charming home has 3 bedrooms/2.75 baths, sunny gardens, decks & patio with a hot tub. Built with fine details, quality materials, and detailed craftsmanship. Oversized garage with bonus room above. MLS #602296.

Fabulous waterfront retreat featuring 130 ft. of prime no-bank beachfront, sparkling Sound & Olympic Mountain views, expansive main house, plus charming guest cottage. MLS #508019.

Terry Klein 206.949.3360 TerryKlein.withwre.com Windermere Real Estate/BI, Inc.

Terry Klein 206.949.3360 TerryKlein.withwre.com Windermere Real Estate/BI, Inc.

Bethany Lutheran Church At High School & Finch roads

Good Friday service, 7 p.m. Passion for God Compassion for Others

Easter Sunday services, 8:30 & 10:30 a.m.

www.BethanyOfBainbridge.org There’s a place for you here

at St. Cecilia Roman Catholic Church

Holy Saturday - Easter Vigil April 19 • Mass - 8:00 p.m. • Rev. Bill Cleary, C.Ss.R.

Easter Sunday The Resurrection of the Lord April 20 • Masses - 7:30 a.m., 9:00 a.m., • Rev. Bill Cleary, C.Ss.R. 11:00 a.m. • Rev. Joseph Carver, S.J.

No 7:00 p.m. Mass on Easter Sunday

1310 Madison Avenue North • (206) 842-3594

SAINT BARNABAS EPISCOPAL CHURCH Easter Week Services are: Sundays: 4/17 8Maundy - Dinner 6 pm, am - Thursday Contemplative Liturgy & Holy Eucharist 7 pm, Watch 8 pm 10 am - Festive Service 4/18 Good Friday - 12:10Choir & 7 pm with

4/19 Easter Vigil - 8 pm (with incense) 1187 Wyatt Way NW • 206.842.5601 4/20 Easter Sunday - 9 & 11 am (11 am w/ incense); Bainbridge Island • stbbi.org Easter Egg Hunt between services at 10:15 am

206.842.5601 1187 Wyatt Way NW www.stbbi.org


Friday, April 18, 2014 • Bainbridge Island Review

www.bainbridgereview.com

Page A5

Taxi driver crashes into building BY BRIAN KELLY

Bainbridge Island Review

Learn about plans for Colman Dock! Washington State Ferries (WSF) plans to replace the aging and seismically vulnerable components of the Seattle Ferry Terminal at Colman Dock. You’re invited to learn about the project’s Environmental Assessment and provide comments between April 14, 2014 and May 12, 2014. How to learn more and comment: Attend the public hearing Monday, April 28, 4:00 – 6:30 p.m. Puget Sound Regional Council – Board Room 1011 Western Avenue, Suite 500, Seattle Talk to project staff on the ferry • Seattle/Bainbridge - Wednesday, April 23, 5:30 p.m. sailing from Seattle • Seattle/Bremerton - Thursday, April 24, 5:35 p.m. sailing from Seattle Stop by an info session • Colman Dock - Main Terminal Building - April 29, 3:30 - 6:00 p.m. • King County Water Taxi Waiting Area at Pier 50 - May 1, 3:30 - 6:00 p.m. • Bainbridge Terminal Building - May 5, 4:00 - 7:00 p.m. • Bremerton Terminal Building - May 6, 4:00 - 6:00 p.m. All materials will be available online April 14 at: www.wsdot.wa.gov/projects/ferries/colmanmultimodalterminal

The driver of a Taxis & Tours van lost control of her vehicle while leaving the Bainbridge Island Ferry Terminal and struck the outside of the San Juan Building on Winslow Way. The crash happened just before 9:30 a.m. Monday. The driver of the Ford van was the only person who appeared hurt in the accident; bystanders said there were no passengers in the van when it struck the three-story building at 900 Winslow Way. The driver was taken to Harrison Hospital for treatment. The driver was leaving the ferry terminal parking lot when bystanders said she drove across the sidewalk on the south side of Winslow Way, knocked down a chain link fence near the corner of the parking lot, then sheared off the stop sign on the other side of the street before hitting a concrete planter at the southwest corner of the building. The stop sign was pinned between the van and the building, and the street sign

Brian Kelly | Bainbridge Island Review

A firefighter with the Bainbridge Island Fire Department spreads absorbent material along Winslow Way after a taxi van hit the outside of the San Juan Building. was also cut in half, and the street signs for Winslow Way and Ferncliff Avenue landed on the hood of the vehicle. “Fortunately, she hit the part of my building that’s cement,” said John Ellis, one of the owners of the San Juan Building. Ellis was inside the building at the time of the crash, but was told by a fellow employee about the accident just after it happened. “I didn’t hear a thing,” he said. Ellis said he was glad no one was in the crosswalk next to the ferry parking lot when the accident occurred.

Firefighters from the Bainbridge Island Fire Department responded to the scene, along with two units from the Bainbridge Island Police Department. One lane of Ferncliff Avenue was closed while emergency responders were at the scene waiting for a tow truck. Traffic was light at the intersection, and a Bainbridge officer directed cars around the crash scene, which drew much interest from onlookers. “I hope the meter isn’t still running,” quipped one passerby.

Why do you buy Bainbridge?

With every dollar you spend at a locally-owned business in our downtown, you return nearly 40 cents to our local economy. That same dollar spent with a national chain store returns less than 14 cents locally. Why give up two-thirds of every dollar you spend outside our community?


Opinion Bainbridge Island

Page A6

www.bainbridgereview.com

Friday, April 18, 2014 • Bainbridge Island Review

In Our Opinion

A touching tribute

I

t was a sweet, yet perhaps somewhat unexpected, surprise to those who gathered to pay their respects to Frank Kitamoto, the longtime leader of Bainbridge Island’s Japanese American community who passed away March 15. A crowd of more than 500 people packed the gymnasium at Woodward Middle School on April 6 for his memorial service. Clarence Moriwaki, looking out over an audience filled with people in festive Hawaiian shirts or the blue-and-gold of the University of Washington — a sight that would surely prompt one of Frank Kitamoto’s legendary smiles — quipped, “It’s kind of like a Husky luau or something.” Frank Kitamoto was 74 when he died. Known to many as a devoted family man, or the local dentist with the treasure box for patients, he was familiar to many more as the man who tirelessly worked to preserve and share the history of the internment of Japanese Americans during World War II. Kitamoto and his family were among the 227 Japanese Americans to be taken from Bainbridge Island on March 30, 1942, and sent to internment camps. Later in life, he shared his memories of life in the camps, and made many, many visits to classrooms across Washington and beyond to talk about the history of Japanese Americans. A message that could have been rightfully delivered with indignation over the injustices suffered by Japanese Americans, was instead given with grace, and education as inspiration. But for all of his accomplishments, and there were many, enough to fill a book, the beautiful surprise of his memorial was a turn from what has become traditional at life celebrations, where a microphone is passed among the crowd and random stories are shared. Instead, Debra Grindeland and Aaron Chun read written recollections from his nieces and nephews. “He would ask me profound questions while I sat in his dental chair. I could not answer with my mouth numb, full of dental implements.” “I remember he was a good sport, pretending to be a customer at our pretend businesses. He dined at our fake food restaurants, he even came to our pretend spa and let us brush his hair.” “My visits to Uncle Frank as a patient were entertaining. I looked forward to the library of books and magazines he and Aunt Sharon offered. There were puzzle posters on the ceiling, great music, and a treasure chest full of fun stuff. I got my first mood ring over 40 years ago. And recently, I chose a bandana. Though there are a lot of things to treasure from those visits, I’ll always treasure his smiles, bright eyes and laughter. He was the greatest prize.”

Review Bainbridge Island

The Only Newspaper in the World that Cares about Bainbridge Island - Since 1923

www.BainbridgeReview.com Administration Circulation Classified Ads

(206) 842-6613 (206) 842-6613 800-388-2527

Display Advertising (206) 842-6613 Fax (206) 842-5867

Administration

EDITORIAL

CIRCULATION

Publisher: Donna Etchey Administrative Coordinator: Tirza Palmer

Editor:  Brian Kelly News Staff: Cecilia Garza, Luciano Marano

Circulation COORDINATOR: Christy Dano

ADVERTISING

KITSAP WEEK: Richard Walker

MARKETING REPRESENTATIVE: Marleen Martinez

PRODUCTION CREATIVE ARTIST: Clare Ortblad

WNPA

member

Named Washington’s Best Community Newspaper: 1990, 1992, 1993, 1997, 2001, 2004 Bainbridge Island Review (ISSN No. 1053-2889) is published weekly, every Friday by Sound Publishing Inc. Review: 911 Hildebrand Lane, Suite 202, Bainbridge Is., WA 98110. Headquarters: 19351 8th Ave NE, Poulsbo, WA 98370. SUBSCRIPTION RATES: $48/year carrier or motor route delivery; $69/year in-state mail delivery, (not available within carrier or motor route delivery area); $95/year out-of-state mail delivery. Periodicals postage paid at Seattle, Washington. POSTMASTER: Send changes of address to Bainbridge Island Review, P.O. Box 10817, Bainbridge Island, WA 98110. Copyright 2014© Sound Publishing Inc.

Letters In response

Some changes have been made in services To the editor: How are our county’s medical services doing? March 25, 2014 was the deadline for hospitals to post their Reproductive Health Care, End of Life Care, and Non-Discrimination policies on their websites to meet the WA Department of Health’s new transparency requirements. Now that Harrison Medical Center is affiliated with the Franciscan Health System what has changed so far? The website has a hard-to-find “Select Policies” section under the tab “Patients and Visitors” that describes three policies: admission, non-discrimination, and end of life. I believe these policies have not changed with the merger, and they seem the same as other hospitals. I had to use the “Contact Us” section to ask the official how their reproductive health care policies had changed regarding pregnancy care. She reported no change in treatment of ectopic pregnancies “that endanger life or fertility,” meaning that a patient would be treated there with a therapeutic abortion if needed. I do not know if this reassurance has been tested or if other emergent problems of pregnancy would also be treated. End-of-life treatment has definitely

Write to us The Review welcomes letters from its readers. Please limit letters to roughly 350 words; Letters should include a daytime phone number for verification purposes. Email to editor@bainbridgereview.com.

changed in the Harrison Medical Center system. This has been denied recently by a former chair of their Board of Trustees (Bainbridge Review, March 21) and it does not appear on the website. The hospital’s policy of refusal to participate has never been a problem, because over 90 percent of people who use the Washington Death with Dignity law do so at home. In July of last year articles in the Central Kitsap Reporter said the CEO, Scott Bosch, promised no changes would be made in available services. Then, on Nov. 13, Mr. Bosch reported in an email to Compassion & Choice’s Director that “Up until our affiliation with FHS, our employed physicians were allowed to write the prescription for the drugs. This changed Aug. 1, 2013 and HMC employed physicians are no longer able to write these scripts while on duty as an employed doc.” This means that Harrison’s community primary care doctors and specialists are no longer able to help

their patients obtain the medications for use of their legal choice of Death with Dignity. Compassion & Choices, the free service in Washington for assisting people with the Death with Dignity law, now has a much reduced source of physicians to help clients find the two needed for obtaining a prescription. How much will the Catholic Bishops’ ethical and religious directives affect our medical treatment in the future? RICHARD M. BAKER Bainbridge Island

Constitutional amendment

High Court is wrong: Money is not speech To the editor: If money = speech, then no money = no opportunity to speak. Our political system is being hijacked by the wealthy few, and it is weakening our democracy and destroying ordinary people’s confidence that they have any say in how this country is run. The recent Supreme Court rulings on corporate money in politics are an embarrassment to our democracy. We need and deserve a constitutional amendment that makes it clear that our government is not for sale to the highest bidder. DEBORAH RUDNICK Bainbridge Island


Friday, April 18, 2014 • Bainbridge Island Review

www.bainbridgereview.com

Around the Island KIWANIS BENEFIT

ShredFest returns April 26 The Bainbridge Island Kiwanis Club will host its seventh annual ShredFest on Saturday, April 26. The location will be the same as last year, at Columbia Bank on High School Road, across the street from Safeway. Hours are 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. There is no charge, but donations will be gladly accepted. Organizers note that ShredFest comes at a convenient time, the second Saturday after Tax Day. “Bring in your old tax information and

personal paperwork in grocery bags or boxes, and Kiwanis members will unload your vehicle. The shredding truck will do the rest,” said Tom Watson, the longtime project officer for the event. “This is an excellent way to protect you from identity theft,” he added. All donations go to Kiwanis Club scholarships for high school seniors and other youth programs here on Bainbridge Island. In the last 10 years, Kiwanis has awarded more than $125,000 in scholarships. For more information, contact Tom Watson at watsonct@tasvc.com, or call 855-9174.

Start your next road trip with...

We’ve handled your automotive & maintenance needs since 1899!

BAINBRIDGE POLICE

Work starts on review board

Don Macaluso photo

An islander brings a load of paperwork to ShredFest, an annual fundraiser held by the Bainbridge Island Kiwanis Club. This year’s event is on Saturday, April 26.

KEYPORT

• Diesel Trucks & Cars • AC/Heating • Full Vehicle Inspection • Brake Inspection/replacement • Transmissions & Clutch work Keyport Auto Repair Owner Ben Elmer

The Bainbridge Island Police Department may soon have its own commission made up of Bainbridge residents to review internal affairs. Over the course of the next month, the department will work with 10 community leaders, designated the Criteria Development Group, to come up with recommendations for whether or not a police commission is needed. “We owe it to the community to conduct ourselves ethically and professionally, and if we can show, by thorough and independent review that

AUTO

REPAIR

• Lube, Oil & Filter service • Tune-ups • Shocks • Tire Rotation • Minor/Major Services • Plus many other services Mon - Fri 8:00–5:30pm • 1954 St. Hwy. 308 • Keyport

HONOR ROLL

Max Daniels James Sovick Tyler Moravec Marit Ellerby John Velisaris Kendra Smith Samantha Rosen Jade Escamilla Ashelyn Holm Ari Jabloner Karlie Pickens Silvio Renna Eleanor DeVries Anna Jacobi

this is how we do business, both the community and the department will benefit,” said Police Chief Matthew Hamner. The Criteria Development Group will study the implications of instituting an independent citizen board that reviews internal affairs at the department, advises the chief and city manager on key issues and assists in community outreach. The group was assembled in response to a 2013 assessment of the department which advised that internal conflict may improve with a formal police commission. Members of the advisory group are Andrea Mackin, Dennis Tierney, Eric Wood, Jeff Brien, Katherine Dunn, Kimberly Hendrickson, Linda Thurott, Rex Oliver, Robert Dashiell and Varon Mullis. The group is currently scheduled to meet four times. Meetings will not be open to the public. Recommendations will

(360) 698-9528 or (360) 779-5232

Odyssey Middle School 3.2-3.9 GPA

Page A7

Drop-in Nail Trimming Full Service Grooming Ticks & Flea Treatments

Sally Anderson Owner-Groomer • Since 1998 Convenient WinsloW loCation

842-0881 • 381 Wallace Way NE #109

4.0 GPA

Cymbeline Brody Emma Chee Petra Ellerby Lindsay Freitas Emma Gace Elizabeth Genkinger Avery Johnson Michaela Leung Kalea Levy Lilian Moore Bayla Rosenkotz Lauren Witty Jessica Yoson

~ We love what we do! ~

1st Semester Honor Roll 2013-2014

be forwarded to Hamner at the end of the process. “If a Civilian Review Board for the Bainbridge Island Police Department is what this community needs, then we will have one,” Hamner said. PANEL DISCUSSION

Forum looks at health insurance The League of Women Voters of Kitsap’s next public forum is called “Health Insurance: The Complicated Issues.” It will consider many aspects of health insurance now that the sign-up phase for the Affordable Care Act has closed. The meeting will take place from 10 a.m. to noon Saturday, April 26 at Poulsbo City Hall, 200 Moe St. NE. Topics will include networks, why costs are increasing, where to seek assistance, how Kitsap County is handling the increase in patient load due to the Affordable Care Act, what individuals and businesses need to know when buying health insurance and an overview of the single-payer approach. Panelists include Nancy Schnoor, CFO of Peninsula Community Health Services; Wendie Pond, a health care billing and coding consultant; Stephanie Kirk, an independent insurance agent and producer/broker with J.C. Madison Inc.; and Vicki Decker of the speakers bureau for Health Care for All Washington.

13th Anniversary Sale Celebration!

PENINSULA SUBARU

Grand Opening!

Peninsula Mitsubishi

See our ad in

KITSAP WEEK!


Page A8

www.bainbridgereview.com

City seeks permits for sewer work BY REVIEW STAFF

The city of Bainbridge Island has started the permit process to replace three failing sewer pipes along Eagle Harbor. Bainbridge has been plagued by broken sewer lines and sewage spills along the north shore of the harbor, the most recent in January when 145,000 gal-

lons of raw sewage escaped from a 40-year-old sewer main and into Eagle Harbor. Most of the work for the new pipes will take place on the beach adjacent to Eagle Harbor, and trail work — including the construction of a boardwalk across wetlands and a stream in Hawley Cove Park — is also planned. One of the existing sewer connections at 11021 Wing

Point Way will also be redirected away from the beach. The city is seeking a shoreline conditional use permit for the project. Comments on environmental issues related to the project will be accepted by the city through Monday, April 28. For more information, contact planner Sean Conrad at 206-780-3761.

Safely Dispose of Unwanted Prescription Medications One day only! Drop off your expired or unwanted prescription medications at the Bainbridge Island Police Station on Saturday, April 26 between 10am and 2pm.This one day event is part of the National Drug Enforcement Agency’s Drug Take-Back Initiative. For a four hour period, the BIPD will collect medication to ensure it is disposed of properly. If you are unable to visit during this time, please hold your medication until the next event in October.

10 am – 2 pm, Friday, April 26, 2014 Bainbridge Island Police Station 625 Winslow Way E, Bainbridge Island, WA For more information, call (206) 842-5211.

Friday, April 18, 2014 • Bainbridge Island Review

AT YOUR SERVICE EVERYTHING YOU NEED FROM A TO Z: IT’S HERE, IN THE SERVICE DIRECTORY!

Home Building & Remodeling

Voted HBA Remodeler of the Year for 2011 & 2012

Sentinel Construction is a general contractor in Kitsap County specializing in the construction of energy efficient homes and remodels. If you’re considering building a quality, crafted custom home or remodel, call today for a free consultation.

Voted WA State Green Remodeler for 2012

www.sentinelconstruction.com (360) 297-0080

Home Building & Remodeling

Moving Services We Deliver Peace of Mind...Worldwide

Home Construction & Remodeling “Home for a Lifetime.” Winners of 9 Remodeling Excellence Awards

• Voted HBA Remodeler of the Year for 2011 & 2012 • Voted WA State Green Remodeler for 2012

26394 NW Pioneer Way• Poulsbo WA 98370

(206) 842-6715

Call (360) 297-0080 for a free consultation or visit our website at www.sentinelconstruction.com

(360) 697-3969

Home Building & Remodeling

US DOT 534666 www.hillmoving.com HG43090

Sewing Machine Servicing

Jim Mann Certified Technician jimmann7@hotmail.com

206-780-9648 • 206-713-0370 5404 Diamond Place NE Bainbridge Island, WA www.bainbridgeislandsewingmachine.com

Great parking • nice restrooms/showers laundry room • exercise room • sauna clubhouse w/kitchen • freezers for tenants

206.842.4003 www.eagleharbormarina.com

Eagle L imousine Landscaping WE DO IT ALL!

BEST RATES

• Landscape Design & Installation • Custom Maintenance Package • Paths, Patios & Rock Walls • Sprinkler Systems • Drainage • Natural Lawn Programs • Residential & Commercial Projects • Water Features • Grading • Mole Control • We Observe GREEN Practices

PER PERSON:

1: $28 • 2: $30 4: $32 • 6: $35 Call Andy • 206.384.9611 Airport & Ferry

Interior Designer Nationally Certified, Award Winning Professional Interior Designer since 1989 Start living a designed life now using local craftsman and artisans in your home and/or office.

diana kingsley 360.860.1354

d.zine.diana@gmail.com

LOOK IN THE KITSAP NEWS GROUP PAPERS ON APRIL 25TH FOR THE INSERT

Island Details Landscape & Maintenance

(206) 855-8047 CAPITLM925J9

Since 1978

Moss Stoppers Moss Stoppers Starting at

299*

$

(206) 842-9213 d.j.betten@att.net

LOCALLY OWNED LICENSED, BONDED & INSURED • Lic. ALLAMAH872CN (*Average 1400 sq.ft./5x12 pitch roof treatment)

NOTICE TO CONTRACTORS: Washington state law (RCW 18.27.100) requires that all advertisements for construction related services include the contractor’s current Department of Labor and Industries registration number in their advertising. Failure to obtain a certificate of registration from L&I or show the registration number in all advertising will result in a fine up to $5000 against the unregistered contractor. For more information call Labor and Industries Specialty Compliance Services Division at 1-800-647-0982 or check L&I’s internet site at www.wa.gov.


Arts & Entertainment

Friday, April 18, 2014 • Bainbridge Island Review

I

n the spring of 1980, more than a decade before Nirvana would release their second album and legitimize the Seattle sound to a world of listeners, two brothers from Bainbridge Island formed the band that would inspire an entirely new kind of rock-and-roll. Malfunkshun was formed on Easter Sunday in 1980 by brothers Andrew and Kevin Wood. Today, the group is most widely known as both the original act to boast the eventual frontman of Mother Love Bone, and as some of

W

www.bainbridgereview.com

the most critical early contributors to the creation of grunge. In celebration of the important legacy of the Seattle sound, and in memory of his brother Andrew who passed away in 1990, Kevin Wood will lead the band’s current lineup in a special concert event at The Point Casino in Kingston, at 8 p.m. Friday, April 25, kicking off their latest West Coast tour leg which is set to begin later this summer and which will include shows in Seattle, San Francisco, Los

ood leads the group’s roster - contributing vocals and guitar - which currently boasts Tony West on vocals, Rob Day on bass and vocals as well as Kevin Blackwood on drums. Also joining the group, as a special bonus during the Kingston show only, is former Nirvana drummer Chad Channing. “Chad is going to show up and we’re going to do a few songs with him,” Wood said, adding the show to be part anniversary and part reunion special. “We all knew each other back in the day.” Recalling the band’s early days, Wood said that Malfunkshun began with a youthful act of rebellion and then stayed true to their roots. “Easter Sunday in 1980, my brother Andrew and I decided to blow off Easter lunch at Grandma’s and do our first demo tape,” he said. “I [always] like to come up to Seattle and do a show to celebrate that birthday.” Though not originally from Bainbridge, Wood, who now resides in California, said that the island will always be his hometown. “I still call Bainbridge home,” he explained. “That was the place where I lived the longest in one place. We were Air Force brats, and we ended up on Bainbridge. My dad was a recruiter in Seattle, and

What’s happening

Angeles and more cities yet to be announced. “We’re really excited,” Wood said of the band’s mood earlier this week. “This show is celebrating the birth of Seattle sound, and Malfunkshun being the grandfather of that sound. We have an amazing group of talented guys who are throwing in, and I’m really excited about this lineup.”

that was his last duty station.” In retrospect, and from an outside perspective, it’s easy to believe that grunge was an instant phenomenon, and that the entire scene happened all at once. Wood is quick to set the record straight with an unsentimental insider’s perspective. “It was long years of playing and practicing and working on tunes,” he recalled. “It was definitely not an overnight sensation.” ood said that long before the world knew what grunge was, and Paris fashion models were decked out in ripped jeans and flannel shirts, the music that would define a decade was just a couple of guys trying something new. “We were doing our own thing,” he said. “We intentionally set out to be different, but we had no idea it would be so influential.” The rest, as they say, is history. “The thing did [eventually] get some momentum there,” Wood remembered. As the music became popular there was a mad rush on the part of record labels to sign Seattle acts quickly, but very few of those groups have proven to have staying power, he said. “Where are they now?” he

NATIONAL LIBRARY WEEK

Library open house event is Saturday

“Malfunkshun: The Andrew Wood Story,” the 2005 documentary abut the band’s original rise to fame, the creation of Mother Love Bone and the untimely death of Andrew Wood.

W

Image courtesy of Wind Hughes

Kevin Wood, original co-founder of Malfunkshun, will kick off the group’s latest tour at The Point Casino in Kingston Friday, April 25. The show is a celebration of the birth of the Seattle sound, of which Malfunkshun is critically accepted as one of the most influential early pioneers. laughed. “A lot of them are gone.” Music is an ever-changing industry. Indeed, even the Godfathers of Grunge themselves went through

Page A9

periods of silence in those early years. By 1988, Malfunkshun had all but disbanded and the members were pursuing other projects. “We never formally broke up,” Wood remembered. “It was just [that] Andrew got busy with Mother Love Bone, and we didn’t play very often. Around ’88 we took an unspoken hiatus. Andy’s intention was to come back and continue it, the band had been together a long time at that point and there had been periods of inactivity [before], so it was no big deal.” ollowing his brother’s passing, Wood founded and played with numerous other bands and remains an extremely prolific and active professional musician. “I never get tired of it,” he said. “I enjoy writing songs. I have the ability to create, and I relish that and I honor that in my everyday life. I enjoy what I’m doing. If you’re doing what you love, it just comes naturally.” While some musicians who find

F

turn to malfunkshun | A10

STORY BY LUCIANO MARANO | BAINBRIDGE ISLAND REVIEW

The Bainbridge Public Library will host an open house event from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Saturday, April 19 in honor of National Library Week. At 1 p.m. that day, Kitsap Regional Library will announce the title of the “One Book, One Community” selection for 2014. Each library branch will have a special guest announce the title of this year’s book. The program, organized each year by KRL, selects a single book and invites everyone in the county to read the book and connect through the shared experience. “A significant number of Kitsap residents are regular library patrons,” said Library Director Jill Jean. “But whether you spend a lot of time at the library, or not, we’d like to invite you to visit KRL during National Library Week, and especially for our open house on April 19.” Each library branch has its own plans for events during the open house. At the Bainbridge branch, island author Viki McCabe will host the event and be on hand with copies of her latest book “Coming to Our Senses: Perceiving Complexity to Avoid Catastrophes.” Proceeds from all book sales will be donated directly to the library. Her latest work challenges the way we think and make decisions. Using real world events as object lessons, McCabe draws a distinction between reality outside of ourselves and the theories and mental models that we consider to be reality in our own minds. McCabe and her husband Doug Tanaka are longtime friends of the library. Years ago, they designed and installed the lovely Japanese gardens at the Bainbridge library­ free of charge. Readers can see a description of those events at www.krl.org/ national-library-weekevents-krl.


Page A10

www.bainbridgereview.com

healing CONTINUED FROM A1

healing and wellness that we wanted to make it easy for people to get healthy food,” Steindorf said. Chef Nancy Travis has been serving vegetarian meals for 20 years. At the Sukhi Kitchen she offers simple food made from fresh, local ingredients. Here, students can drop in for their weekly class, and leave with a lunch in hand so they can continue a clean, healthy path outside of the center. Non-students are also invited to come in just for the food if they choose. In the same way, depending on the day of the week, visitors to the center can drop in for a half-hour community meditation either

malfunkshun CONTINUED FROM A9

success in their early days are content to perform the hits forever, Wood said that he does not allow himself to rest on his laurels. He promised fans that the Kingston show will feature classics from the Malfunkshun

Friday, April 18, 2014 • Bainbridge Island Review

from 12:30 to 1 p.m. or 1:30 to 2 p.m. The center is an open house during this hour for anyone interested in taking a time out from work or daily life. “Just to have a quiet place to sit,” Steindorf explained. “Again, it’s just to encourage people to take care of themselves and to give themselves a pause.” The meaning behind the name is one way of explaining what rests at the heart of Dayaalu. “Dayaa” means compassion in sanskrit, and “lu” is its verb ending. “Dayaalu” translates: to offer compassion. Another way of looking at it, is the name begins with “day” and ends with “lu,” the Latin for light. As Steindorf said, the

people and practices at the center are the “aa” that connects the two. Light-to-light, for Steindorf and Dayaalu’s patrons, the center is a place to share knowledge, good intentions and fellowship. Compassionate action is the underlying theme of it all. Like most things good, Dayaalu began with a series of ideas. Steindorf wasn’t always interested in yoga. Its restorative qualities were realized later in life. She had been with the Bainbridge Island School District for more than 13 years as a physical therapist working with students with disabilities. She worked with some of these students long enough to see them go from age 3 to their teens.

But over the years, it became apparent that there was nothing for these students to do in the community to continue their therapy outside school. No matter the work she and they did, they were socially isolated. Many became depressed and overweight. “What I started to see is that no matter how much I might work on how they walked or how they moved, there was no place for them to walk to,” Steindorf explained. “As a practitioner, as an educator, as a healer, I just started to get really sad that we were spending all this time and all this money, quite frankly, from the school district. “I really didn’t feel I was able to make a long-term, lasting impact on their lives,

canon, as well as never before performed material from the band’s early days, but he also said that the show will showcase entirely new material as well. “I’ve got new music coming down the pipe,” Wood said. “I keep moving forward. The Malfunkshun that we speak of, in that context, was over 20 years

ago. I don’t spend much time there. I’m continually moving forward, writing songs [and] booking shows. It’s an alive thing and very much in the present for me.” Recently, Wood contributed guitar tracks for a rerecording of the classic rock anthem “Born to be Wild” with the former members of Steppenwolf, and earlier

this year he was working at Newcalcutta studio in Manhattan recording a new single with Rich Pagano. “It’s like it never really stopped for me,” Wood said. “I’m living in the now with it.” Visit www.malfunkshun. org for all of the band’s latest news and tour dates.

because I had nothing I was preparing them for.” One thing led to the other. She began a school program called BRIDGE Fitness where her Bainbridge students could participate in adaptive physical education that includes everything from soccer to martial arts. She would bring in a coach, train them to work with students with disabilities and develop a program that would take them out to soccer fields in the community and in touch with peer buddies. One could say that this was Steindorf’s first crossroads, to give students with disabilities an outlet to continue therapy in the community. Yoga was crossroads number two. Through BRIDGE she

started to think about yoga as another accessible activity for her students to do. She attended a one-day training by an instructor who was trained by Sonia Sumar in the Yoga for the Special Child program. At the end of the session, the instructor said, “If you really think you want to pursue this, I highly recommend her training. It will likely change your life.” Steindorf researched the program and registered to attend it at the Intrical Yoga Ashram in Virginia. As the instructor said, it changed her life. “I had taken six classes,” Steindorf said. “I had never meditated. I was going to Yogaville, and I actually jokingly said, ‘Yeah, right, I wonder if I’ll see turn to healing | A11

Godfathers of grunge rock Kingston casino What: Grunge legends Malfunkshun in concert. When: Doors open at 7 p.m. Friday, April 25. Where: The Point Casino, Kingston Admission: $15 advance tickets, $20 at the door.

Bainbridge Homes

R

E

A

L

E

S

T

A

T

E

Open House Sun 1-4pm

253 Shepard Way $245,000 ~ NWMLS #620745 In-town Condo

8802 Hidden Cove $1,095,000 ~ NWMLS #620681 Port Madison Waterfront

Dave Manning ~ 206-427-0946

Fastest Growing Brokerage on the Island

| 166 Winslow Way E | Bainbridge Island, WA | 206-842-4400 | www.BainbridgeHomes.com |


Friday, April 18, 2014 • Bainbridge Island Review

healing CONTINUED FROM A10

Mr. Rogers there.’ And I was making fun of it saying, ‘Don’t worry, I’m not going to get wrapped up in that ‘Om’ crap. I’m not into that.’” “That’s who left,” she said. At the time, Steindorf said, she was a typical stressedout, working mom. She hadn’t slept well in about 10 years and averaged about three hours a night. She was

www.bainbridgereview.com

on medications for it. She had allergies and asthma. “I had a lot of energy and at that point my energy was really chaotic.” The training was difficult and painful at first. She wasn’t used to sitting for long periods of time in meditation. Her mind was racing. By day three, the sun came out and the power of yoga and meditation began to manifest itself. Like the sanskrit sutra “yogas citta vrtti nirodhah”

Happy Hour 40-50% Off on selected Appetizers, Rolls & Drinks 8pm to 9:30pm Tuesday-Thursday Lunch: Tue–Sat 11:30am to 2:30pm Dinner: Tue-Sun 5pm to 9:30pm 206-855-7882 | 403 Madison Ave. N., Suite 150, Bainbridge Island

teaches, yoga is the stilling of the natural turbulences of our thoughts. “When I came out of it … I was so overwhelmed with the sense of just the senses of life, sounds and smells,” Steindorf said. “I literally just hit the deck. “There’s a reason, you’ve probably heard the line, ‘There’s a (fine) line between enlightenment and insanity’ because it’s overwhelming to be thrown into the present moment.” As her practice progressed, her asthma and sleep deprivation faded away. Yoga became a way of life. Steindorf has since dedicated her work to bridging the gap between a whole spectrum of practices and sharing the healing nature of yoga and meditation to those with and without disabilities. It was from this that Dayaalu was conceived. The pieces of a yogic community center seemed to fall together just at the right time, in just the right way. When she found the building and began drawing the floor plan, every wall Steindorf drew fell where existing weight-bearing walls

THE RO C K C K RO SECOND ANNUAL

MUSIC

6 PM - 12 AM

LIVE MUSIC!

FROG WATER COCO LOCO ZACH FLEURY

Students stretch before Dayaalu’s Saturday Sound Flow class, in which participants practice yoga and meditation in synchronicity with live music. were already set. “That was the beginning of me understanding that this already existed,” Steindorf said. “It was in perfection, and I was just trying to not mess it up.” The same day the city said she would have to pay $60,000 for a site plan review, one third of her budget, she received a call from a fellow therapist asking if there was room to add her therapy business to the center. “I was like, ‘Oh, I get it,’” Steindorf explained. “It’s supposed to become more than a single-room operation. Maybe it’s supposed to be a healing center, and then the doors started flying open.” From the ground up, the

center grew and the building bloomed. The stream, which was dedicated in the memory of a familiar little boy, Owen Marshall, is just one detail in a whole arrangement of intentional architecture. Every facet of the new Dayaalu Center was constructed with the overarching mission for health and wellness in mind. Underneath the sheetrock, sanskrit prayers, poetry and chants are scrawled over the building’s walls. The main studio lights are contained in onyx shades, a type of stone with healing qualities for peace, harmony, balance, strength and flexibility, Steindorf explained. “So when you’re lying here, that’s the energy that’s

CATHOLIC SCHOOL RAISING FUNDS FOR

OUR FUTURE

FESTIVAL

Linda Wolf photo

coming out of the light, into your body,” Steindorf said. This — ­ combined with the wall-enscribed prayers, sounds of water and natural light filtering through floorto-ceiling windows — create an interconnected house for an interconnected experience. By teaching, learning and healing together the center is filled with a sense of community that, Steindorf said, emanates Dayaalu’s compassionate foundation. “Sometimes it’s been confusing to me because I don’t have a lot of money, why I was so driven to create a place with so much beauty and make this nice, quite frankly,” Steindorf said. “But I feel like creating a place where people want to be, a place that really emanates tranquility and peace will help people slow down and want to create a sense of community. So that people will feel connected on their path.” To get a taste, the Dayaalu Center will be offering an opportunity to sample six different practices and instructors Saturday, April 26. The 2 ½-hour event is free of charge, but limited in space. To register early or for more information on Dayaalu’s offerings, visit dayaalucenter.com.

SAINT CECILIA

S.C.C.S.

SPRING

Page A11

MAY 3, 2014

DONATE CARS, TRUCKS, BOATS,

CONGER

HALL

1310 Madison Avenue North

Bainbridge Island

WHY DONATE?

RVS, MOTORCYCLES, GOLF CARTS, SAIL BOATS, KAYAKS, CANOES, ETC.

It is NO LONGER useful to you. A new owner will VALUE IT. It GENERATES MONEY for our community.

SATURDAY, JUNE 28TH IT’S TAX DEDUCTIBLE!

Deadline for Tax Deductible Donations: Wednesday, June 25th

WHEN?

HOW?

Between

JUST CALL

NOW AND JUNE 25 For ticket info, visit www.saintceciliaschool.org or call (206) 842-2017 | $40 per person/$75 per couple Silent & live auctions, music, food and dancing included in ticket price. Catered by San Carlos Restaurant & Via Rosa 11. Sweet bites by BonBon Candy.

Art (360) 621-9090 Jay (206) 919-5376

For more info: www.bainbridgerotaryauction.com


Sports Bainbridge Island

Page A12

www.bainbridgereview.com

Friday, April 18, 2014 • Bainbridge Island Review

GRAND SLAM! NATALIE WOOD CRUSHES A BASES-FILLED HOMER TO BREAK BAINBRIDGE’S BASES-LOADED BUGGABOO Natalie Allen rounds second after smacking a grand-slam home run against Eastide Catholic. Jubilant Spartans gather at home base to welcome the sophomore slugger. Brian Kelly | Bainbridge Island Review

BY BRIAN KELLY

Bainbridge Island Review

The pitch was low and outside. Or as Spartan Natalie Allen calls it, “my favorite pitch.” Allen, a sophomore on the Bainbridge fastpitch softball team, stood at 1-2 in the count and waited for the next pitch. She was stressed, she said later. The bases were loaded, but not for the first time in this frustrating Metro League matchup against Eastside Catholic. Sure, the Spartans led 1-0, thanks to a lead-off triple by Riley Gregoire and a score on a wild

pitch in the first inning. But in the second, the Spartans had also loaded the bases — a lead-off double by Emma Lindsay, a single by Megan Spary and a walk to Tiana Rabang — but ended the inning with a big goose egg. It was deja vu in the third, too, as Bainbridge left the bases loaded despite one out singles by Kate Kinney, Deahna King and Lindsay, but the Spartans failed again at bringing home a run. Another zero for the scoreboard, and the score, still 1-0. Then came the fourth inning, and Eastside Catholic pitcher Abi

Kirsten instead of to first — and “It was really found herself Allen stepped up to the awesome because we plate. in another tough funk. A ball and two strikes, were having trouble Kirsten and Kirsten hurled her in that game. We had loaded fourth pitch to a waiting had the bases loaded Allen. the bases again — a Swing, smack, then a multiple times and walk to collective gasp from the we weren’t able to get small crowd watching the Tiana people in.” Rabang, a Spartans’ Metro League bunt single Natalie Allen matchup. by Riley It took a rainbow arc Bainbridge Spartans Gregoire, toward the left-centerfield and a comefence, and as Allen churned her way to second, the backer to the pitcher by Alison ball finally thunked to earth just Reichert that was thrown home

outside the fence. “Grand slam!” came the shouts from the crowd. The Bainbridge dugout emptied and the Spartans screamed and hollered as Allen rounded third. She was quickly swallowed up by the mob of high-fiving, backslapping and grinning girls at home plate. Allen, a second-year player for the Spartans, had hit the long ball just three other times in her high school career. “I knew that I hit it pretty hard, turn to GRAND SlAM | A15

Bainbridge crush Crusaders 14-9 in varsity baseball BY LUCIANO MARANO Bainbridge Island Review

It seemed like a definite Spartan ball game Friday, April 11, against the visiting Eastside Catholic Crusaders. At first. Leading 12-1 in the fourth inning, Bainbridge seemed to have things locked up pretty tight, and so they decided to mix things up on the mound. The slight Spartan shift may have been what the Crusaders needed, or maybe it was just a lucky streak at the plate. Whatever the reason, with Bainbridge’s own Tino Peleti debuting on the mound, the visitors managed a flurry of scoring activity and narrowed the gap to 12-9 by the end of the fifth. It was an uneasy moment for BHS fans, to be sure, but not enough to stave off the tide of defeat that would soon swamp Eastside Catholic. In their final at bat, the

Spartans quickly took things back in hand and ended the game 14-9. Offensive standouts from the Bainbridge lineup included Brett Green and Max Thomas. Green finished the game with two at bats, two hits, three runs and one RBI. Thomas managed two at bats, two hits, two runs and two RBIs. The victory on Friday marked the third win for the Spartans in the week, including a crushing shutout over Rainier Beach on Monday. Spartan Head Coach David Smart said that, despite some areas in need of improvement, the team was playing very well and morale was high. “Winning’s fun,” he said of Friday. “Winning’s good. We definitely got things we can work on from this game, but it’s been a good week. Three

Luciano Marano | Bainbridge Island Review

Ben Kussie at bat during the second of two Spartan victories over the Crusaders last week. games, three wins. [We] couldn’t have done better than that,” Smart said. Friday was the second victory for the Spartans over Eastside in one week, having bested them 6-1 on the road just a day before. “Wednesday, just like today, we jumped out to an early lead, which is always

an advantage,” Smart said. “Both days, I thought our pitching was good. Today [Friday], our defense let us down a little bit [and] we gave up a big inning and let them back into it, but I was proud of how the guys bounced right back and got a couple more runs to sustain that momentum and get us

back on top and get our spirits back up.” Discussing the benefits of an early points advantage, Smart said it’s an especially critical boost for a pitcher. “It’s huge, especially from a pitching perspective, when you can pitch from a lead and really challenge hitters,” he said. “It’s a game based on failure, so 70 percent of the time we get hitters and they get out. If we can throw pitches and make them put the ball in play, it not only keeps them active and aggressive, but it also keeps your defense in the game. If you’re walking guys over and over again it just delays the game and slows it down.” Smart said that, even for a great batter, a 70 percent failure rate is common at the plate. “The best guys strike out 60 or 70 percent of the time if you’re batting .300,” he explained. “It’s one of those

things where you have to be able to move beyond those failures.” As for the apparent tradeoff in Friday’s game, losing ground on the board to mix up the pitching rotation, Smart said he never viewed it as a trade and the ground the Crusades managed to gain back was unexpected. “I never expected us to lose any ground,” he said. “Tino came in and he threw strikes. He got the ball in play, but I think we had two or three errors behind him, and a couple of fluke hits, and it just kind of snowballed. I was actually pleased with the way he threw and I think he’s going to throw again next week for us. “I don’t have any issues with how he threw there, or putting a new guy in,” Smart added. “We’ve got three games in three days next week so everybody’s going to be on call to throw.”


Friday, April 18, 2014 • Bainbridge Island Review

Sports

Page A13

time for two heats, at 3:18. On Sunday, the Mens Masters 8+ (Marc Stewart, Tim Goss, Dean Dale, Matt Olson, Brandon Fleet, Bill McGonagle, Kurt Frost and Marc Olason and coxswain Rachele Turnbull) earned silver medals. Stewart also took to the water in a single scull, and won a bronze in the final.

Sports Roundup

Spartans finish where they start Anna Bernhard Carson photo

The Bainbridge Mens Masters 4+ (Marc Olason, Kurt Frost, Tim Goss, Brandon Fleet and coxswain Rachele Turnbull) rocketed past the competition in their race, placing first.

Rowers win top honor at regatta EUGENE, Ore. - The Bainbridge Island Rowing Team, showing strength and composure in dozens of races, took home the top honor — the Junior Team Trophy — at the Covered Bridge Regatta last weekend in Eugene, Ore. Recognized for exceptional overall race results, the Bainbridge rowers earned the first-place ranking out of 13 high schools competing in the regatta. The trophy honors the team with the highest average number of points won in each event entered. In the first regatta of the spring season, 113 Bainbridge rowers won gold, silver and bronze in a flurry of 22 races over the two-day period. Some 1,200 rowers converged on Dexter Lake, near Eugene, to compete in the regatta, now in its 20th year. Masters, collegiate and high school teams participated in 91 races over the weekend. The weather cooperated throughout, giving teams a fast course and ample sunshine. Bainbridge Head Coach Tim Goss said, “My hat’s off to all of them for racing hard, helping out, and having fun.” The varsity boys from Bainbridge — Connor Teddy, Alex Derry, Cole Sander, Bryson Allen, Gabe Schulz, Walker Hauptman, Thomas Musselwhite, Keegan Dymoke and coxswain Keith Carlson — took home nine medals, medaling in all races entered. Late Saturday afternoon, two 4 boats placed first and third, with another four placing third in their race.

Soon after, two Bainbridge Varsity 4+ boats took second in their respective races, with yet another Bainbridge 4+ boat placing third. The next morning, as the Varsity 8 backed into the start for their race, Walker Hauptman’s seat dropped a wheel leaving him only able to row on three wheels in the race. Despite the setback, the boys persevered and went on to place second, less than two seconds behind Stanford Rowing Center. Not to be outdone, the second Varsity 8s sprinted for gold and bronze in one of the last races of the weekend. Gold went to John Michael Najarian, Matthew Greenwood, Parker Isenman, Trevor Wikstrom, Zander Welch, Morgan Spray, Garrett Johnson, Henry Lant and coxswain Madeline Crawford. The varsity girls had a solid trip, and medaled in seven of nine entries. In the 4s, the first and second lightweight boats finished first and third. The first and second open-weight boats both placed second in their heats, with the third boat winning their race. Late on Saturday, the Varsity and Lightweight Varsity Girls 8+ boats both won their races convincingly, with the Varsity Girls boat subduing a Vashon crew that had beaten them by over a length in a scrimmage just two weeks ago. The Varsity 8 is Elisabeth Chun, Abby Leigh, Elizabeth Fawley, Faith Eckford-Prossor, Rosie Brown, Hannah Schneiderman, Kylie Van Aken, Justeen Komok and coxswain Natassja Haught; the Lightweight Varsity 8 is Jessie Sheldon, Anneke Karreman, Tica Drury, Emma Pazoff, Samantha Dore, Julia

Greg Millerd photo

Bainbridge varsity girls — Samantha Pelliciotta, Mira Rosenkotz, Carly Millerd, Eryn McCassey and coxswain Sydney Gibbs — celebrate a first-place win at Covered Bridge Regatta in Eugene, Ore.

Anna Bernhard Carson photo

Bainbridge varsity girls showed strength and composure racing in the Covered Bridge Regatta in Eugene, Ore. Pictured are coxswain Sydney Gibbs, Eryn McCassey, Samantha Pelliciotta, Mira Rosenkotz, Carly Millerd, Elsa Godtfredsen, Amina Lee, MaryAnn Samson and Kaylie Treskin.

Rick Hauptman photo

Smiles all around after Bainbridge varsity boys 4 won silver medals at the Covered Bridge Regatta in Eugene, Ore. From left: Alex Derry, Keegan Dymoke, coxswain Nathan Johnson, Cole Sander, Walker Hauptman.

Denlinger, Jemma Blazina, Kate Hathaway and coxswain Sydney Gibbs. Racing in their first 2K this season, the novice boys had great results, medaling in five of their seven races. In an early morning race on Saturday, the Novice Boys 4+ led the field and finished first by several boat lengths, earning the fastest time of the three heats at 7:37. The Novice Boys 8+ of

Aidan Stearns, Seth Ruud, Colby Hayes, Konner Vander Leest, Matthew Derry, Scott Musselwhite, Will de Rubertis, Colin O’Keefe and coxswain Sam Bryant also won their race handily on Sunday, and posted a time of 7:01. The novice girls also showed strength and speed in their first spring regatta, and medaled in two races. The Novice Girls 4+ of Isabella Frawley, Audrey

Clarke, Erika Mattes, Julia Fradkin and coxswain McKenna O’Leary clocked one of the fastest times for Bainbridge Island Rowing novice girls 4 boats, and placed second. The Novice Girls 8+ boat (Jade Greer, Caroline Lant, Delaney Erickson, Amalie Millerd, Erin McGee, Kayla Buchmeier, Sophia Townsend, Grace Nikunen and coxswain Caitlin Deavy) also earned silver, second only to Vashon. All other novice girls boats took a fourth-place finish. Novice girls coach April Podbregar said the girls are determined to become even faster and stronger in the weeks ahead to prepare for their next regatta in Canada. The Mens Masters also got a taste of victory, winning gold, silver and bronze for Bainbridge. On Saturday, their 4+ boat (Brandon Fleet, Tim Goss, Kurt Frost, Marc Olason and coxswain Rachele Turnbull) took first place, clearly outdistancing the competition and logging the fastest

BAINBRIDGE – Tied at half, tied at the end, the Bainbridge Spartans left the field in an 11-11 draw against Eastside Catholic in varsity girls lacrosse last week. The Spartans found ample offense from Paige Brigham and Sonia Olsen — the pair netted an impressive four goals each for BHS — but Bainbridge couldn’t break free from an all-around EC attack that saw seven Crusaders score in the stalemate showdown. The two teams forged a 5–5 tie at the half, then the two squads hammered out six goals each in the second to finish the contest knotted at 11. The draw was the first for both squads this year and the first blemish on an otherwise perfect Spartan season. Eastside Catholic dropped to 5-1-1. Brigham also added two assists to her total, while fellow Spartan Sallie Marx added two goals and an assist. Kyra Wortley also nailed the net for a goal to round out the Spartan scoring. For EC, Ashley Blanton, Maddie Banks, Meredith Troy and Tristana Leist contributed two goals apiece; Valerie Vachris, McKenzie MacIlvennie and Marcela Santos added one goal each. Spartan goaltender McKenzie Scott had eight saves, while Justice Gilbert stopped five for the Crusaders.

Two LAX Spartans dial in hat tricks SEATTLE - Two for three, and another Bainbridge victory. Sallie Marx and Ellen Carpenter shredded the net with hat tricks as Bainbridge humbled Holy Names Academy 17-7 in girls varsity lacrosse last week at Seattle’s Magnuson Park. The Spartans doubled-up on the Cougars in the first and took a 6–3 lead by intermission, then went on a scoring frenzy in the second half with turn to roundup | A14


Page A14 Sports

roundup CONTINUED FROM A13

another nine in the net. Marx finished the night with six points on three goals and three assists, while Carpenter had four (three goals, one assist). McKenzie Scott and Kelly Coffyn combined for eight saves in goal for Bainbridge. Holy Names was led by Ellie Rothrock and Madeline McDonald with two goals each. Freshman Martha Blatner had a strong performance with eight saves between the Cougars’ pipes. Marx also finished with two ground balls and three draw controls to accompany her hat trick for BHS. Other standouts for the Spartans included Paige Brigham with two goals, three assists and one ground ball; Sonia Olson with two goals; Robin Hilderman with one goal, one draw control and two caused turnovers. The win pushed Bainbridge’s record to 4-0-1, and the Spartans were scheduled to take on Snohomish-Glacier Peak (4-1-0), Thursday, April 17 at Glacier Peak High School in Snohomish. The loss dropped the Crusaders to 3-3-0.

BHS softball team wins in comeback BAINBRIDGE - The Spartans rallied from a two-run deficit to overpower the Panthers of Seattle Prep 9-5 in girls fastpitch softball in a Metro League matchup at home April 10. The victory kept Bainbridge perfect in Metro play at 5-0. The Spartans stood at 5-1 overall after the win. Bainbridge jumped out to a 2-0 lead in the first inning, but Seattle Prep evened the contest at 2-all in the top of the second after Abby Rockwell and Karina Diekema homered. The Spartans jumped back in front after a onerun second inning, but the lead quickly evaporated in the third inning after Jenay McAuley smacked a homer and brought in three Panthers for a 5-3 lead. Bainbridge closed the gap, however, with one run in the fourth inning and another in the fifth to tie the contest at 5-5 going into the sixth. There, the Spartans held Prep scoreless and then piled on another four runs to ice the score

Friday, April 18, 2014 • Bainbridge Island Review

at 9-5. Alison Reichert notched the win for the Spartans from the mound; she pitched four innings and struck out five Prep batters. Megan Spray led the Spartan offense; she went 2-for-2 at the plate and nearly peeled the leather off the ball with a home run and a double. She finished with two RBIs and two runs. Riley Gregoire also punished the Panthers at the plate. She went 2-for-3 with a triple and two runs. Deahna King went 2-for-4 with an RBI and two runs.

Bainbridge slams Blanchet in soccer BAINBRIDGE - The Bainbridge High varsity boys soccer team came away on the better side of a 4-1 game at home against Bishop Blanchet Thursday, April 10. Spartan co-captain William Economy was once again the leader of the team’s offensive efforts, scoring one goal and assisting with two others. The first BHS goal came at exactly 15 minutes of play and was scored by Peter Fawley, assisted by Economy. Then the game lapsed into a tense back-andforth, with little of the action translating to changes on the board however. Finally, at 55 minutes of play, Garrit Mahling, assisted by Economy, brought the team to two. BHS senior Ben Freedman, the other half of the Spartan co-captain duo, scored the third goal unassisted at 68 minutes. Then, at 76 minutes of play, Economy sealed the deal and scored the team’s final goal unassisted. The conference record for Bainbridge so far this season is 2-1, securing for them third place in the Metro Mountain Division.

Five Spartans to play at nationals BAINBRIDGE - Five girls from Bainbridge Island have been named to the 2014 Washington State Under-19 Girls Regional Lacrosse Team that will play to defend its divisional title at the U.S. Lacrosse Women’s National Tournament over Memorial Day weekend. The Bainbridge players — Sonia Olson, Truman Flynn, Olivia Peloquin, Kelly Coffyn and Ellen

ed Andy Lyong (Franklin) 6-4, 6-1 GIRLS DOUBLES No. 1: Darlina Souvatdy and Kyrlia Young (Franklin) defeated Jordan Jackson and Raya Deussen (BHS) 6-3, 7-6 (7) No. 2: Tara Nikomborirak and Cranny Curtis (BHS) defeated Rodelhyn Baba and Connie Tan (Franklin) 6-2, 6-2 BOYS DOUBLES No. 1: Nick Miner and Noland Pelly (BHS) defeated Antonio Dela Cruz Jr. and Ryan Tran (Franklin) 6-1, 6-0 No. 2: Ben Bergstrom and Brian Fay (BHS) defeated Daniel Bach and Andy Cao (Franklin) 2-6, 6-3, 6-4 MIXED DOUBLES Alan Aphoyarath and Phuong Phu (Franklin) defeated Hayden Tutty and Peter Sharp (BHS) 7-6, 6-2

Brian Kelly | Bainbridge Island Review

Spartan freshman sprinters Jessica and Nicole Vadez and teammate Lucy Donohue run in the 100-meter during last week’s meet.

Brian Kelly | Bainbridge Island Review

Amanda Siefert placed first in the 100-meter hurdles, and fellow Spartan Shelby Sundquist was second, in last week’s Metro League meet.

Carpenter — are among 25 that have been chosen to represent 15 high schools in Eastern and Western Washington. The team of ninththrough 11th-grade girls will travel to Bel Air, Maryland, for the competition that is recognized as one of the oldest and most prestigious lacrosse events in the country. The national tournament is May 24-25. Twelve studentathletes on the 2014 team — along with head coach Tami Tommila of Bainbridge High School — were a part of last year’s Washington State U-19 regional team that won its division at the national competition. Tommila will again return to coach the squad. She will be assisted by Lyndsey Gillis of Seattle Prep. More than 65 girls from high schools throughout the state competed for 20 active-roster spots and five alternate positions at tryouts March 23 at Marymoor Park in Redmond. Olson is an attacker and a sophomore on the BHS team. Flynn and Peloquin

are junior defenders, and Coffyn, also a junior, is a Spartan goalkeeper. Carpenter, a junior attacker, is an alternate on the squad. The U.S. Lacrosse Women’s National Tournament was first held in 1933 to showcase the best post-collegiate and club women’s lacrosse players in the country. Since that time, the tournament has grown into one of the largest women’s lacrosse events in the nation. The Schoolgirls’ Division is one of the top recruiting events in the U.S. In 2013, more than 1,400 student-athletes representing 66 teams from 31 states competed at the 80th annual tournament.

Notch another win for BHS tennis team SEATTLE - The varsity Spartan tennis team advanced their overall season record to 4-1 after dominating Franklin High 9-2 Wednesday, April 9. Bainbridge excelled in nearly every aspect of the match, but one Spartan

in particular gave a standout performance and remained undefeated so far this season. “Holt Ogden, playing No. 3 singles, ran his season record to 4-0 with a win,” said Spartan Head Coach Mike Anderson. The victory last week was important, Anderson explained, as the team prepared for a critical week of competition ahead. “Next week is a big week for Bainbridge tennis,” he said Wednesday. “The team takes on an improved O’Dea/Holy Names [combined team], traditional power Seattle Prep and current Metro number one Lakeside.” Two forfeits marred the match against Franklin in girls singles No. 1 and No. 3. Spartan co-captain Keet Curtis defeated Franklin’s Adam Zhu 6-0, 6-1 in No. 1 boys singles, and BHS teammates Eli Wagner and Holt Ogden secured wins in matches No. 2 and 3 as well. Bainbridge also claimed wins in the No. 2 girl doubles match and both matches in the boys doubles. The BHS tennis action begins again at 3 p.m. Monday, April 14 as the Spartans travel to Lower Woodland to face off against O’Dea / Holy Names. BHS vs. Franklin Results GIRLS SINGLES No. 1: Jordan Ferguson (BHS) defeated Asha Hahstad (Franklin) forfeit No. 2: Sammi Jiang (BHS) defeated Brenda Nghiem (Franklin) 6-0, 6-0 No. 3: Ellie Van Slyke (BHS) defeated Lailanie Rabena (Franklin) forfeit BOYS SINGLES No. 1: Keet Curtis (BHS) defeated Adam Zhu (Franklin) 6-0, 6-1 No. 2: Eli Wagner (BHS) defeated Alex Yeung (Franklin) 7-5, 6-3 No. 3: Holt Ogden (BHS) defeat-

O’Dea, Holy Names take first at meet BAINBRIDGE - O’Dea outlasted Bainbridge in boys track last week, while Holy Names edged the Spartan girls in last week’s Metro League meet at Memorial Stadium. The Fighting Irish finished with 105.5 points, while the Bainbridge boys tallied 34.5. Holy Names totaled 70 points in girls events, while BHS finished with 57. In boys events, O’Dea found success by sweeping the top three spots in the 100-meter run and the top five places in the 200-meter run. The Spartans, however, were unsurpassed in the 3200-meter run, the high jump and pole vault. Sean Simonsen took first place for Bainbridge in the 3200 meter with a time of 10:41.05. The Spartans also claimed first and second in the high jump. Jack Odell won the event with 6-04.00, while teammate Connor Evans was second in 5-08.00. Two Spartans tied for first in the pole vault. Connor Dalton and Jonathon Gallivan both cleared 6-06.00. In girls events, the Spartans ran to first place in both the 800-meter and 3200-meter runs. Bainbridge also dominated in the hurdles. Mikelle Ackerley was first for BHS in the 800 meter, with a winning time of 2:19.17. Naomi Von Ruden was first in the 3200-meter and finished in 12:34.70. The Spartans took first and second in the 100meter hurdles. Amanda Siefert was first in 19.44, while fellow Spartan Shelby Sundquist was second in 19.47. Siefert also won the 300-meter hurdles in 54.35. The Spartan 4x400 turn to roundup | A15


Sports

Friday, April 18, 2014 • Bainbridge Island Review

roundup CONTINUED FROM A14

relay also took first place. Alison Wise, Danielle Bogardus, Ackerley and Lindsay Wienkers won in 4:15.80. For complete track and field results, visit www. bainbridgereview.com.

BHS claims 10-5 win over Kennedy BAINBRIDGE - The Bainbridge High varsity boys lacrosse team

grand slam CONTINUED FROM A12

but I really didn’t actually know until it went over,” she said. The sensational slam was a game-changer. The Crusaders looked shellshocked afterward, and Bainbridge tacked on two more runs in the fifth and six innings to walk away with the win. “It was really awesome because we were having trouble in that game. We had the bases loaded multiple times and we weren’t able to get people in,” Allen said. “It just felt really nice that we could break through that.

claimed a 10-5 win over the visiting team from Kennedy Catholic Friday, April 11. Thomas Daniels, Jack Frickleton, Jackson Larkin and Max Wickline each scored two goals for Bainbridge. Spartan teammates Michael Rose and Lucas Pederson each scored one. The BHS player with the most points scored was Wickline, who ended the game with four. The Bainbridge man in the net, Reynolds Yarbrough, managed 11 saves.

BHS unstoppable in girls fastpitch

Everybody was so happy and psyched about it.” Allen later said she had her doubts that her big swing would clear the fence. Another Spartan had connected earlier in the game but the ball fell just short of the fence. “Just the feeling of watching it go over, it was such a good feeling. When I saw it, it looked pretty over,” she said. It looked pretty over for the Eastside Catholic players, as well, as the chargedup Spartans continued to vex the Crusaders. In the fifth, with two outs and no one on, Gregoire reached base on an infield single and Reichert was hit

by a pitch. The two pulled off a double steal to set up a two-run single by Allen, bringing her RBI total to six for the game. Then, in the sixth, Catie Muir, Alyssa Costello and Lauren Vchulek all singled to begin the inning, with Vchulek driving in Muir. With two outs, Gregoire drove in the final run with a single up the middle to settle the score 9-0. Alison Reichert pitched a complete game; a 2-hit shutout for her fourth win of the season against no losses. She logged four strikeouts. In the seventh inning, Carolyn Williams saved the shutout with an outstanding running catch in the right

SEATTLE - Nathan Hale was no match for the big bats of Bainbridge as the Spartans routed the Raiders 11-1 earlier this week in girls fastpitch softball. Bainbridge got on the board first, with two runs in the first inning, but Nathan Hale answered with a run to halve the score to 2-1. The Spartans tacked on another run in the third, then exploded with six more runs in the fourth

HELP!

PRESENTED BY WASHINGTON STATE BEEF COMMISSION

Page A15

for a commanding 9-1 lead. Two more runs by Bainbridge put the Spartans in front by double digits, 11-1, and the game was called after five innings in the visitors’ favor. The Spartans out hit the Raiders 16-2. Natalie Allen again led the Spartans with 3-of-4 batting, a home run and five RBIs. Riley Gregoire went 3-for-4 with two runs, and fellow Spartan Alison Reichert finished 3-for-4 at the plate with three runs.

Reichert notched her fifth win on the mound.

Game called due to weather SEATTLE -The fastpitch softball game between

Bainbridge and Bishop Blanchet was called off Wednesday in the third inning due to poor field conditions and continued precipitation. The game will be replayed or resumed at a future date and time.

SPRING SPECIAL ends April 30th

field corner. With the win Bainbridge stayed perfect in Metro League play at 6-0. The Spartans are 6-1 overall. Abi Kirsten led Eastside Catholic, she went 2-for-3 with a double. Other outstanding Spartans include Gregoire, who went 4-for-5, with a triple, RBI, two stolen bases and three runs. Lindsay went 2-for-3 with a double, and teammate Vchulek was 1-for-2 with an RBI.

Featuring the Ideal Protein Weight Loss Method!

206.718.5361 945 Hildebrand Lane #232 Bainbridge Island WA 98110 www.bainbridgeweightloss.com

Bainbridge Island Chamber of Commerce

HELP! Grand Old Fourth of July Friday July 4th

April 24 th / 7:30 - 10pm

6pm VIP early entrance PARAMOUNT THEATRE UNLIMITED SAMPLING FROM:

40+ Seattle Restaurants 15+ Local Master Mixologists

$50 G.A. $90 VIP

Specialty Foods & Desserts Food Trucks BENEFITING:

SEATTLE THEATRE GROUP

For more info: www.seattleweekly.com/promo

Help us put on the Island’s Biggest Party It takes about 100 volunteers! We need people for 2-3 hour shifts on the 3rd and 4th of July to: • • •

Monitor barricades Check in vendors Help with Information booths Contact

mickey@bainbridgechamber.com 206-842-3700

www.bainbridgechamber.com


Page A16 Sports

Friday, April 18, 2014 • Bainbridge Island Review

Spartans score fourth boys soccer shutout win this year BY LUCIANO MARANO Bainbridge Island Review

Central Kitsap High School has now joined the increasingly long list of schools to have fallen to the Bainbridge High varsity boys soccer team in a shutout loss this season. The latest Spartan spanking, 5-0 at home on Saturday, moved the team’s overall season record to 5-1. The latest victorious game marked the end of a long week for BHS, wherein they first played (and beat) Stadium High on Tuesday and Bishop Blanchet on Thursday. “I think it’s been a tough week,” said Spartan Head Coach Ian McCallum. “We played three games, and we play Monday next week. Even with a shutout win, we’re looking like a team that played three games in a week.” While proud of the team’s Saturday performance, it was actually Thursday’s win over Blanchet that McCallum said was the most important win for the team over the past seven days. “That went really well,” he said of the 4-1 win at home over the only team to have bested the Spartans so

Luciano Marano | Bainbridge Island Review

Bainbridge High senior, and varsity boys soccer team co-captain, William Economy scored the second goal of the shutout win over Central Kitsap High in the 24th minute of play Saturday, April 12. He was assisted by Spartan teammate Keats Hoonan. far this season (a 3-1 loss in Seattle on March 27). “I mean, basically we did to them what they did to us over in Seattle,” he laughed. “In Seattle, they came in and dominated the game. They were the team that wanted it more, and on Thursday night our guys came in and just busted it out and played

really, really well,” McCallum said. “It was a convincing win [and] I was really happy with how we played.” On Saturday, Bainbridge again took the early lead and ended the game in a rash of scoring, as has become their pattern of play. The first Spartan to get the team on the board was Gerrit Mahling, who made the game’s first goal

unassisted at 11 minutes of play. BHS senior and team co-captain William Economy, assisted by Keats Hoonan, made the second goal of the game at 24 minutes. Then, in the game’s 37th minute, Tanner Salmon scored the team’s third goal, unassisted, and cemented the Spartan lead. Things would be relatively quiet points-wise for a while after that, with neither team being able to gain substantive ball control for a bit, until Mahling, assisted by Economy, brought home the team’s fourth goal of the game at 53 minutes. Finally, with the BHS win all but assured, Wesley Hauser scored the final goal of the game at 70 minutes of play, assisted by Martin Van Druen. Coming off a winning streak like this past week, McCallum said he was not concerned that the team would lose focus or fall prey to an excess of bravado. “I don’t think this group of players get cocky - and maybe that’s a bad thing, I don’t know,” he laughed. “It seemed a definitely more relaxed performance [Saturday]. Again, we might be tired and whatever, but

you can’t complain with a shutout win.” McCallum said that despite the score, the Cougars were skilled competitors and the Spartans considered themselves lucky to have been able to take control of the game quickly. “I think they just had a couple of bad breaks,” he said of Central Kitsap. “And, we’re a talented group. We have some talented players and we got some nice breaks.” Entering into the middle of his first season as BHS head coach, McCallum said he was especially pleased with his exceptional working rapport with his two captains. “It’s going great,” he said Saturday. “I think we’re pretty much on pace for what we want to be doing. I turned to one of them Thursday night, and he knew exactly what I wanted right away. It was a simple thing; we were going to do a cool down and a stretch at the end of the game. I didn’t even have to say it; we were on the same page. “I think that we’re slowly getting there. Every week we get better, and it’s going well,” he said.

Trunk Show Introducing Baggallini’s New Spring Line new styles • new colors • old favorites

Drawings for Free Baggallini Bag

Saturday, April 26 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. The Traveler 265 Winslow Way E www.thetraveler.com | 206-842-4578 Baggallini representative, Ellen Stroud, will answer all your questions

Join the Day of Giving! 24 Hours, 200 Nonprofits Donate online May 6 to your favorite nonprofits. Your donations will be

Good Friday Gathering Friday, April 18, 8pm

Family Fun Day

Easter Gatherings Sunday, April 20

Saturday, April 19, 11am–2pm 7am Sunrise 5k Fun Run, Inflatables, Easter Egg Hunt, Music, Carnival Games, Food

Presenting Partner

Lead Sponsors A.Y. Petter Family Donor Advised Fund at Kitsap Community Foundation

Sponsors

magnified

by our sponsors.

GIVE WHERE YOU LIVE!

Media Sponsors

www.kitsapgreatgive.org

7am Community Breakfast 8am, 9:30 & 11am Easter Gatherings 11am Español

GATEWAYFELLOWSHIP.COM 18901 8th Ave NE, Poulsbo • 360.779.5515

Supporters Land Title Company Bainbridge Organic Distillers Bainbridge Community Foundation


Friday, April 18, 2014 • Bainbridge Island Review

www.bainbridgereview.com

Calendar Bainbridge Island

Friday

18

Half price at KiDiMu

Celebrate National Library Week at Kids Discovery Museum with half-price admission through Saturday, April 19. Library patrons are invited to present their library card for half-price admission and enjoy the many exhibits. Info: Call 206-855-4650 or visit www.kidimu.org.

BIGS shares research tips

The Bainbridge Island Genealogical Society will meet at 10 a.m. Friday, April 18, in the Bainbridge Public Library meeting room. It is an opportunity for members to share successes or challenges on any topic, but will focus on English research (England and Wales) in part as a follow-up to the Feb. 21 meeting on English research, which included quite a bit of information but not much time for dialogue or followup questions. The suggested donation for non-members is $5. Info: Visit www.bigenealogy. org or call 206-842-4978.

Discovery Friday at KiDiMu

Curious explorers are invited to Kids Discovery Museum for science-themed, hands-on activities at 10:30 a.m. Fridays, April 18 and 25. This STEM-based program takes on a different subject each week. Check the website for details. The program is free with admission or membership. Info: Call 206-855-4650 or visit www.kidimu.org.

New exhibit of landscapes

The Island Gallery presents “Western Landscapes” at the Winslow gallery through April 27. Presenting the works of local and regional artists depicting views of the changing seasons and moods of the Plains, the Palouse of Eastern Washington, the Pacific Northwest and color-drenched central California, the show features art from Mark Bowles, William Thompson, Jen Till, Theodore Waddell and Irene Yesley. The Island Gallery is at 400 Winslow Way E., Suite 120. Info: Call 206-780-9500.

‘A Peace of Earth’ at gallery

Stop by the Bainbridge Performing Arts Gallery in April for “Peace of Earth,” award-winning artist Scott Sawdon’s original photography to soothe the soul. Sawdon uses the five elements, Fire, Air, Water, Earth and Spirit to produce original art from the Northwest.

The exhibit includes both high resolution prints and professionally mounted canvases. Gallery hours are 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Tuesday through Friday, plus one hour prior to each performance. Admission is free at BPA, 200 Madison Ave. North. Info: Call 206-780-9500.

Composting 101

The Bainbridge Public Library hosts a free class on composting basics at 1 p.m. Friday, April 18. Are you interested in starting a home composting system? Would you like to improve your current set-up? Come by for a 60-minute workshop with master composter John Barutt. The program will be held in the library garden near the garden shed and is funded by the Bainbridge Island Friends of the Library.

Family movie matinee

The Bainbridge Public Library will present a free family movie matinee with the film “Born to be Wild” at 3:30 p.m. Friday, April 18 at the library. Celebrate Earth Day! Come to the library and learn about people who rehabilitate wild orangutans and elephants in Borneo. The film is rated G. An Earth Day craft is included in the program.

BHS students present ‘Fame’ The musical “Fame” will be presented by Bainbridge High Theater Club on at 7:30 p.m. April 18, 19, 25 and 26. Tickets are $10 for adults, and $7 for seniors and students at the door. The show is appropriate for seventh grade and up.

19

Saturday

Support group meets twice

Overeaters Anonymous meets on Bainbridge at 9:15 a.m. Saturdays at Eagle Harbor Congregational Church and 5 p.m. Wednesdays at Bethany Lutheran Church. Info: Call 206-780-0121.

Afternoon on the Trails

IslandWood hosts “Afternoon on the Trails” from 1 to 5 p.m. Saturday, April 19. Wild places are full of natural treasures and surprises around every corner. At this very special Afternoon on the Trails honoring Earth Day, attendees can discover the beauty in small things. Walkers can bring a small “natural treasure” back to campus for the Ask the Naturalist panel. Educators will be standing by during the event to examine and guide people

through the identification process. There will be microscopes set up, field guides and other scientific tools to dig deeper into identification and classification. Walkers are welcome to bring a picnic lunch or snacks. Please no dogs at this event unless they are a service animal. Pre-registration is recommended, more information is at www.islandwood. org/events. The event is free, but donations are appreciated.

Page A17

Adoptable pets of the week

Eagle Harbor Congregational Church invites all to an Easter sunrise service at 7 a.m. Sunday, April 20 at the beachlevel picnic shelter at Fay Bainbridge Park. There will be singing, Scripture readings, prayer, inspiration with coffee, bagels and lox afterward. All are welcome.

Wee ones have storytime

Toddler Storytime returns to the Bainbridge Public Library at 10:30 a.m. Mondays, April 21 and 28. Get a jump start on reading at this early literacy storytime geared just for toddlers. The program includes lots of full body movement, songs, stories and rhymes designed to build letter knowledge, vocabulary and narrative skills.

Messy Monday means fun

Kids can join a KiDiMu instructor for messy experimentation and sensory exploration on Messy Mondays, April 21 and 28 at Kids Discovery Museum. Drop by any time between 10:30 and 11:30 a.m. The program is free with admission or membership. Info: Call 206-855-4650 or visit www.kidimu.org.

Book-a-Computer-Trainer

Have questions about your Kindle Fire, Kindle Paperwhite, iPad, iPhone or personal computer? Sign up for an hour with a computer trainer at the Bainbridge Public Library and get your questions answered. Sessions are 1 to 4 p.m. Monday, April 21 and Tuesday, April 22. Register for free help at the library or call 206-842-4162.

Tuesday Tunes at KiDiMu

Join local musician David Webb at Kids Discovery Museum for a guitar singalong and enjoy favorite American folk hits for kids. Drop by at 11 a.m. on Tuesdays, April 22 and 29. The program is free with admission or membership. Visit www.kidimu.org or call 206-855-4650 for more information.

Library offers Baby Storytime Baby Storytime is at the Bainbridge Public Library at 12:30 p.m. Tuesdays, April 22 and 29. Nurture your baby’s mind with songs, rhymes, stories

Have questions about your mobile device or Mac computer? Sign up for an hour with a computer trainer at the Bainbridge Public Library and get your questions answered from 1 to 5 p.m. Thursdays, April 24. Register for free help at the library or call 206-842-4162.

Open house at the library

Next week Easter sunrise service

Book-a-Computer-Trainer

For adoption through PAWS: Sven is a 10-month-old shorthaired black male. He is a bit of a punk, with lots of personality. He has learned the word no and will put himself in timeout when he gets too overstimulated. He is hanging out at the PAWS Pleasant Beach center (open 11 a.m. to 5 p.m., Monday to Saturday). and games at the library’s baby group. Reading and playing together promotes language acquisition and a love of books to last a lifetime.

Library hosts Pajama Night

The Bainbridge Public Library presents Pajama Night from 6 to 8 p.m. Tuesdays, April 22 and 29. Bring the kids in their pajamas for some unstructured, open-house style library time. Read bedtime stories, do a craft, and enjoy the cozy atmosphere. Call 206-842-4162 or visit www.krl.org for more information.

The Green Muse is back

Ethan J. Perry hosts a night Inspired by the Goddess of Artistic Rebellion from 8 to 10 p.m. Tuesdays at Pegasus Coffee House. Come by for a spoken word and poetry open mic with a bit of music thrown in.

Preschool Storytime returns

Preschool Storytime returns to the Bainbridge Public Library at 10:30 a.m. Wednesdays, April 23 and 30. Join the children’s librarian for stories, rhymes and early literacy activities designed to strengthen your child’s reading readiness. Regular attendance at preschool storytime can ease the transition to school and promote a love of reading. The program is recommended for children ages 3 to 6.

Math Wednesday is back

Young explorers are invited for math-themed experiments and activities at 10:30 a.m. Wednesdays, April 23 and 30 at Kids Discovery Museum. Children will practice their critical thinking skills while having fun and parents will get tips on how to turn

For adoption through Kitsap Humane Society: Hello, my name is Taylor and I am a 4½-year-old chihuahua–Jack Russell terrier mix looking for a quiet, warm place to call home. I bond quickly with people and my adoption comes with free training! Meet me and other adoptable pets at the Kitsap Humane Society, www. kitsap-humane.org. everyday activities into a learning experience. Each week features a different topic. Check the website for details. The program is free with admission or membership. Info: Call 206-855-4650 or visit www.kidimu.org.

Book-a-Computer-Trainer

Have questions about your personal computer? Stop by and ask a computer trainer at the Bainbridge Public Library and get your questions answered. No appointment is necessary from noon to 1 p.m. Wednesdays, April 23 and 30. Register for a one-hour time slot at 1, 2 or 3 p.m. by calling the library at 206-842-4162.

It’s ‘Music To Our Beers’

Ethan J. Perry & His Remedy Band host “Music To Our Beers” at the Bainbridge Island Brewing Company from 7 to 9 p.m. Wednesdays. It’s an open jam, and musicians are welcome to get up and play with the house band. Solo musicians can perform a set, too. There is no cover; admission is free.

ABC Thursday at KiDiMu

Come to Kids Discovery Museum for ABC Thursday, with fun activities for young book enthusiasts at 10:30 a.m. Thursday, April 24. Practice early literacy skills while having fun. Each week features a new project, inspired by favorite children’s stories, to help young learners master reading and writing. Check the website for details. The program is free with admission or membership. Info: Call 206-855-4650 or visit www.kidimu.org.

A National Library Week open house will be held from 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Saturday, April 19 at the Bainbridge Public Library. Join in the celebration. The library will be taking photos all day, hosting a Library Fair in the meeting room from 11 a.m. to 1 p.m., and revealing the title of this year’s One Book, One Community selection at 1 p.m.

Teen gaming at the library

Youth in grades 7-12 can have fun with teen gaming at the Bainbridge Public Library from 2 to 4 p.m. Monday, April 21. Teens can go low-tech with board games and hi-tech with the Wii and PS3. There will be Mario Kart, Super Smash Bros, Wii Sports, Little Big Planet and more. All video games rated Teen and under. The program is for youth in grades 7-12.

Friends hold big book sale

Friends of the Library will hold a big book sale from 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. Tuesday, April 22 at the Bainbridge Public Library. Proceeds benefit the library. Info: Visit www.bifriends.org.

Floral workshop at Bloedel

Bloedel Reserve ushers in spring with a wide-variety of activities. The reserve presents a floral workshop with a Bloedel Reserve florist in two sessions on Wednesday, April 23, from 10 a.m. to noon or 2 to 4 p.m. Cathy Tyler creates magnificent floral arrangements for the reserve using cuttings she grows onsite, resulting in unique arrangements full of color and texture. Participants will learn the art of floral arranging and will leave with a beautiful centerpiece of their own. The class fee is $40 for members, $47 for non-members. Advance registration is required. Reserve your spot at www.brownpapertickets. com and search “Bloedel Reserve.”

Book group meets

The Bainbridge Island Book Group will meet at 7 p.m. Wednesday, April 23 at the Bainbridge Public Library. This month the group will talk about “Guns, Germs & Steel” by Jared Diamond. New participants are always welcome.


Page A18 Calendar

Winslow Tree Walk

Join Olaf Ribeiro, plant pathologist and arborist, as he leads a tour of the historic and champion trees that grace downtown Winslow on a tree walk Friday, April 25. Sponsored by the Bainbridge Historical Museum, this annual event is always popular. Make a reservation by calling 206-842-2773 or stop by the museum and sign up.

The first walk is at 10 a.m. Free to members, non-members $10. Info: Call 206-842-2773 or visit www.bainbridgehistory. org.

Sparks of Glory finale

Music of Remembrance will conclude this season’s free Sparks of Glory concert series with a performance at 7 p.m. Friday, April 25 at Grace Church.

Music of Remembrance fills a unique cultural role in Seattle and throughout the world by remembering Holocaust musicians and their art through musical performances, educational programs, musical recordings and commissions of new works. The concert will include works by Lori Laitman, Gideon Klein, David Beigelman and Jake Heggie.

Friday, April 18, 2014 • Bainbridge Island Review

Performers include Megan Chenovick, soprano; Julia Benzinger, mezzo-soprano; and Jonathan Green, double bass. The program is presented as part of the Sparks of Glory series of concerts with commentary. The series is made possible, in part, by a grant from the National Endowment for the Arts. Thanks to donors and the NEA, this series is presented free to the public.

Digital ’zines drop-in

Have questions about downloading magazines from the Bainbridge Public Library? Drop in between 10 and 11:30 a.m. Saturday, April 26 and library staff will provide the answers.

Plush Pet Clinic at KiDiMu

Bring your favorite plush animal to Kids Discovery Museum for a plush pet clinic and well-check exam with

visiting veterinarian Dr. Lisa Barfield at 2 p.m. Saturday, April 26. Learn more about how to help your (real or toy) pet stay healthy and happy and become a responsible pet owner. Barfield will answer questions and even help fix minor plush pet injuries. The program is free with admission or membership. Info: Call 206-855-4650 or visit www.kidimu.org.

Worship Directory

Kitsap County’s Store for New County’s Store NewNew Kitsap County’s Storefor for & Kitsap Gently Used Building Materials County’s Store for New & Kitsap GentlyUsed UsedBuilding Building Materials & Gently Materials &Don’t Gently Used Materials dump it - Building donate & deduct it! Kitsap County’s Store for New dump donate & deduct it! Don’t dump ititit---donate deduct &Don’t Gently Used Building Materials Don’t dump donate && deduct it! it! Drop-off Location

Bethany Lutheran Corner of Sportsman’s and Finch roads

Sunday worship services 8:30 and 10:30 a.m. “There’s a place for you here.” info@bethanyofbainbridge.org ELCA

2.2dump miles north Agate Pass Bridge it! Don’t it - of donate & deduct Drop-off Location Drop-off Location Drop-off Location

on Hwy 305 near Poulsbo www.kitsaphabitat.org 2.2 miles north of Agate Pass Bridge 2.2 miles north of near Agate Pass Bridge 2.2 miles of Agate Pass Bridge 360-377-1800 onnorth Hwy 305 Poulsbo on Hwy 305ofnear near onmiles Hwy 305 Poulsbo www.kitsaphabitat.org 2.2 north AgatePoulsbo Pass Bridge 100% of the profits support building more Habitat homes! 360-377-1800 on Hwy 305 near Poulsbo www.kitsaphabitat.org www.kitsaphabitat.org

Drop-off Location

Blessed The Gospel to be a Can Change Anyone At Blessing Anytime

www.kitsaphabitat.org

360-377-1800 100% of the profits360-377-1800 support building more Habitat homes! 360-377-1800

100% the support building Habitat homes! 100% of theof support more Habitat 100% ofprofits the profits profits support building building more more Habitat homes!homes!

SAINT BARNABAS EPISCOPAL CHURCH

Bainbridge High School Commons Sunday••10:00 9:30 a.m. Sunday a.m. www.crosssound.org

Sundays: 8 am - Contemplative 10 am - Festive Service with Choir 1187 Wyatt Way NW • 206.842.5601 Bainbridge Island • stbbi.org

SundayWorship Worship 10:30 am am Sunday at 9:30 Sunday-Adult 9:00 am Birth 12th Education Grade Programs

Rolling Bay Presbyterian Church

Advertise your Church Services here Contact Marleen at 206-842-6613

Yo u t h G ro u p S u n d ay 6 – 7 : 3 0 p m 206.842.3098

www.rbpres.org

1 1 0 4 2 S u n ri s e D ri ve N E B a i n b ri d g e I s l a n d

Stay Connected to what’s happening on the island EVERY WEEK Delivered on Fridays

NAME*: _______________________________________________________________ STREET ADDRESS*: _____________________________________________________ BILLING ADDRESS (if different): _______________________________________________ E-MAIL: ______________________________ PHONE*: _________________________ CHECK OR MONEY ORDER ENCLOSED OR CREDIT CARD PAYMENT

Check or Money Order Credit Card Number

Credit Card Expiration Date

CVC Number

SPECIAL

OFFER

$39 a YEAR

Signature: _____________________________________________________________ May not be combined with other offers or discounts. *Required information.

P. O. Box 657 • Kirkland, WA 98083 • 1-888-838-3000 • www.bainbridgereview.com/subscribe

“The only newspaper in the world that cares about Bainbridge Island” since 1923 www.BainbridgeReview.com • 1-888-838-3000 • 206-842-6613


Friday, April 18, 2014 • Bainbridge Island Review

Legal Notices IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON IN AND FOR THE COUNTY OF KING In re: the Estate of: MICHAEL A. MACDOWELL, Deceased. NO. 14-4-02254-6 SEA NOTICE TO CREDITORS (RCW 11.40.030) The Personal Representative named below has been appointed as Personal Representative of this estate. Any person having a claim against the Decedent must, before the time the claim would be barred by any otherwise applicable statute of limitations, present the claim in the manner as provided in RCW 11.40.070 by serving on or mailing to the Personal Representative or the Personal Representative’s attorney at the address stated below a copy of the claim and filing the original of the claim with the court in which the probate proceedings were commenced. The claim must be presented within the later of: (1) Thirty days after the Personal Representative served or mailed the notice to the creditor as provided under RCW 11.40.020 (1)(c); or (2) four months after the date of first publication of the notice. If the claim is not presentcd within this time frame, the claim is forever barred, except as otherwise provided in RCW 11.40.051 and 11.40.060. This bar is effective as to claims against both the Decedent’s probate and nonprobate assets. DATE OF FIRST PUBLICATION: April 18, 2014. PERSONAL REPRESENTATIVE: Linda L. MacDowell ATTORNEY(S) FOR PERSONAL REPRESENTATIVE: George S. Holzapfel LASHER HOLZAPFEL SPERRY & EBBERSON ADDRESS FOR MAILING/SERVlCE: 601 Union St., #2600, Seattle, WA 98101-4000 COURT OF PROBATE PROCEEDINGS: King County Superior Court CAUSE NO: 14-402254-6SEA Date of first publication: 04/18/14 Date of last publication: 05/02/14 (BR555961) AMENDED NOTICE OF TRUSTEE’S SALE Grantor/Trustee: Law Offices of Stuart M. Ainsley, P.S. Grantee/Unit Owner: Michael J. McGovern and the heirs of Janet M. McGovern Abbrv. Legal: Unit 23, Island Crossings, a Condominium, V/P 7/133 of Condos, additional legal on page 4 Assessor’s Parcel Number 8167-000-223-0003 I. NOTICE IS HEREBY

GIVEN that the Law Offices of Stuart M. Ainsley, P.S., as Trustee on the 16th day of May 2014, at the hour of 10:00 o’clock a.m. under the covered area at the front entrance to the Administration Building, 619 Division Street, Port Orchard, WA 98366, in the City of Port Orchard, State of Washington (subject to any conditions imposed by the Trustee to protect the unit owners association and the unit owner) will sell at public auction to the highest and best bidder, payable at the time of sale, the following described real property, situated in the County of Kitsap, State of Washington, to wit: Legally described on the attached Exhibit A which is incorporated herein by this reference which is subject to that certain Condominium Declaration recorded on April 20, 2006, recording No. 200604200017 records of Kitsap County, Washington, as amended, that secures the assessment obligations of the condominium unit owners in favor of the Island Crossings Owners Association (the “Association”). II. No action commenced by the Association or the Association’s successor is now pending to seek satisfaction of the obligation in any Court by reason of the Owner of Unit 223’s (the “Unit Owner”) default on the obligation secured by the Declaration. III. The defaults for which this foreclosure is made are as follows: 1. Failure to pay in full the monthly assessments payments for November, 2012 through February, 2014, inclusive, in the total amount of $4,907.98, as of February 7, 2014; 2. Failure to pay interest of $430.83 (as of February 1, 2014); 3. Failure to pay late charges of $375.00 for November, 2012 through January, 2014, inclusive; and 4. Failure to reimburse beneficiary for attorneys’ fees and costs incurred in connection with this foreclosure which are estimated to be $3,422.05 as of the date of this notice. IV. The total sum owing on the obligation secured by the Declaration as of February 7, 2014 is $8,435.86 and such other costs and fees as are due under the Declaration or other instrument secured, and as are provided by statute. V. The above described real property will be sold to satisfy the expense of sale and the obligation secured by the Declaration as provided by statute. The

www.bainbridgereview.com

Page A19

For Kitsap Countywide Legal listings, please turn to Real Estate Now/Kitsap Classifieds sale will be made without warranty, express or implied, regarding title, possession or encumbrances on the 16th day of May, 2014. The defaults referred to in paragraph III must be cured by the 5th day of May, 2014 (11 days before the sale date), to cause a discontinuance of the sale. The sale will be discontinued and terminated if at any time on or before the 5th day of May, 2014 (11 days before the sale date), the defaults as set forth in paragraph III (and any additional defaults) are cured and the Trustee’s fees and costs are paid. The sale may be terminated any time after the 5th day of May, 2014 (11 days before the sale date), and before the sale by the Grantor or the Grantor’s successor in interest or the holder of any recorded junior lien or encumbrance paying the entire amount secured by the Declaration, plus costs, fees and advances, if any, made pursuant to the terms of the Declaration, and curing all other defaults. VI. A written notice of default was transmitted by the Association to the Unit Owner at the following address: Michael J. McGovern and the heirs of Janet McGovern 300 NE High School Rd Unit 223 Bainbridge Island, WA 98110 Michael J. McGovern and the heirs of Janet McGovern 16105 Wool Wine Rd Charlotte, NC 28278 by both first class and certified mail on the 1st day of November, 2013 and on the 19th day of November, 2013 respectively, proof of which is in the possession of the Trustee; and the Unit Owner or the Unit Owner’s successor in interest was personally served with said written notice of default or on the 5th day of November, 2013, the written notice of default was posted in a conspicuous place on the real property described in paragraph I above, and the Trustee has possession of proof of such service or posting. VII. The Trustee whose name and address are set forth below will provide in writing to anyone requesting it, a statement of all costs and fees due at any time prior to the sale. VIII. The effect of the sale will be to deprive the Unit Owner and all those who hold by, through or under the Unit Owner of all their interest in the above-described property. IX. Anyone having any objection to the sale on

any grounds whatsoever will be afforded an opportunity to be heard as to those objections if they bring a lawsuit to restrain the sale pursuant to RCW 61.24.130. Failure to bring such a lawsuit may result in a waiver of any proper grounds for invalidating the Trustee’s sale. X. NOTICE TO OCCUPANTS OR TENANTS The purchaser at the trustee’s sale is entitled to possession of the property on the 20th day following the sale, as against the grantor under the deed of trust (the owner) and anyone having an interest junior to the deed of trust, including occupants who are not tenants. After the 20th day following the sale the purchaser has the right to evict occupants who are not tenants by summary proceedings under the unlawful detainer act, chapter 59.12 RCW. For tenant-occupied property, the purchaser shall provide a tenant with written notice in accordance with RCW 61.24.060 and/or applicable Federal law. Dated as of February 7, 2014 LAW OFFICES OF STUART M. AINSLEY, P.S. By:/s/Stuart M. Ainsley Stuart M. Ainsley, President P.O. Box 1678 1836 NW Lutes Road Poulsbo, WA 98370 Phone 206-780-9024 Date of first publication: 04/18/14 Date of last publication: 05/09/14 (BR548140) ORDINANCE NO. 2014-11 Approved: 04/14/14 Published: 04/18/14 Effective: 04/23/14 AN ORDINANCE of the City of Bainbridge Island, Washington, making changes to the membership of the Utility Advisory Committee, clarifying the functions and duties of the committee, and amending Chapter 2.33 of the Bainbridge Island Municipal Code. Date of publication: 04/18/14 (BR556199) IN THE SUPERIOR COURT OF WASHINGTON, COUNTY OF KITSAP In the Matter of the Estate of: SUSAN L. MARTIN, Deceased. NO. 14 4 00225 3 AMENDED PROBATE NOTICE TO CREDITORS RCW 11.40.030 The administrator named below has been appointed and has qualified as administrator of the above estate. Any person having a claim against the decedent must, before the time the claim would be barred by any otherwise applicable statute of limitations, present the claim

in the manner as provided in RCW 11.40.070 by serving on or mailing to the administrator or the administrator’s attorney at the address stated below a copy of the claim and filing the original of the claim with the court. The claim must be presented within the later of: (1) Thirty days after the administrator served or mailed the notice to the creditor as provided under RCW 11.40.020 (1)(c); or (2) four months after the date of first publication of the notice. If the claim is not presented within this time frame, the claim is forever barred, except as otherwise provided in RCW 11.40.051 and 11.40.060. This bar is effective as to claims against both the decedent’s probate and nonprobate assets. DATE OF FIRST PUBLICATION: April 4, 2014 /s/Beverly Martin BEVERLY MARTIN Administrator Attorney for Estate: Brittany Cline Address: 17791 FJORD DRIVE NE, STE 154 POULSBO, WA 98370 Phone: 360-850-1049 Date of first publication: 04/04/14 Date of last publication: 04/18/14 (BR552322)

NOTICE OF APPLICATION / SEPA COMMENT PERIOD Date: APRIL 18, 2014 Applicant: PAUL AND CYNTHIA PARKER Permit Request: EXEMPTION FROM SHORELINE SUBSTANTIAL DEVELOPMENT PERMIT File Name & Number: PARKER SSDE12534 Description of Proposal: The applicant requests approval to install a cable lift on the waterfront slope. Location of Proposal: 6542 Monte Vista Drive Tax Account Number: 4157-000-014-0106 Date of Application: March 6, 2014 Complete Application: April 3, 2014 Environmental Review: This proposal is subject to State Environmental Policy Act (SEPA) review as provided in WAC 197-11. The City, acting as lead agency, expects to issue a Determination of Non-significance (DNS) threshold determination for this proposal. Utilizing the optional DNS process provided in WAC 197-11-355, the comment period specified in this notice may be the only opportunity to comment on the environmental impact of this proposal. The proposal may include mitigation measures under applicable codes, and the project review process may incorporate or require mitigation measures regardless of whether an EIS is prepared. A copy of the subsequent threshold determination for the proposal may be obtained upon request. Other permits/studies:Geotechnical Investi-

gation Meeting: The City of Bainbridge Island may conduct a public meeting concerning this proposal. Comment period: The City will not make a threshold determination or take a final action on the proposal for 14 days from the date of this notice. Any person may comment on the proposal and/or the SEPA review. Additionally, any person may participate in any public meeting and may request a copy of any decision. For consideration under SEPA environmental review, comments must be submitted by May 2, 2014. If you have any questions, please contact: Kelly Tayara. Planner City of Bainbridge Island Department of Planning & Community Development 280 Madison Ave. N. Bainbridge Island, WA 98110 Telephone Direct (206) 780-3787 D e p a r t m e n t (206) 842-2552 / Email: pcd@bainbridgewa.gov Date of publication: 04/18/14 (BR556158) NOTICE OF APPLICATION/SEPA COMMENT PERIOD The City of Bainbridge Island received the following land use application: Date: April 18, 2014 Owner: Applicant: PBPBS LLC Charles Wenzlau Permit Request: Pleasant Beach Village Phase II (Formerly known as Blossom Hill) Major Adjustment to Site Plan and Design Review Application and Conditional Use Permit SPRA13880B & CUP13880 Description of Proposal: The proposed modifications to phase II of the Site Plan Review (SPR) include replacing (17) housing units with a neighborhood pool complex and associated parking. The applicant intends to submit for relocating the residential units to other portions of the site master plan under a later SPR amendment to retain the overall density. Location of Proposal: Lynwood Center Road 042402-1-004-2006, 042402-1-007-2003, 042402-1-008-2002, 042402-1-009-2001, 042402-1-010-2008, 042402-1-088-2005, 042402-1-089-2004 and 042402-1-055-2004 Date of Application: July 11, 2013 Complete Application: April 9, 2014 Public Meeting / Hearing: The City of Bainbridge Island may conduct a public meeting / hearing concerning this propo-

sal Environmental Review: This proposal is subject to State Environmental Policy Act (SEPA) review as provided in WAC 197-11-800. The City, acting as lead agency, expects to issue a Determination of Nonsignificance (DNS) threshold determination for this proposal. Utilizing the optional DNS process provided in WAC 197-11-355, the comment period specified in this notice may be the only opportunity to comment on the environmental impact of this proposal. The proposal may include mitigation measures under applicable codes, and the project review process may incorporate or require mitigation measures regardless of whether an EIS is prepared. A copy of the subsequent threshold determination for the proposal may be obtained upon request. The City will not take a final action on the proposal nor make a threshold determination for 14 days from the date of this notice. Any person may comment on the proposal and/or the SEPA review. Additionally, any person may participate in a public hearing, if any, and may request a copy of any decision. For consideration under SEPA environmental review, comments must be submitted by May 2, 2014. If you have any questions concerning this application, contact: Joshua Machen, AICP, Planning Manager City of Bainbridge Island Department of Planning & Community Development 280 Madison Ave. N. Bainbridge Island, WA 98110 (206) 780-3765 Fax: (206) 780-0955 Email: pcd@bainbridgewa.gov Date of publication: 04/18/14 (BR556160) NOTICE OF APPLICATION/SEPA COMMENT PERIOD The City of Bainbridge Island received the following land use application: Date: APRIL 18, 2014 Applicant: ALICE & JOHN TAWRESEY Permit Request: MAJOR SITE PLAN REVIEW (SPR) File name & number: CAVE LANDING/TAWRESEY SPR15353 Description of Proposal: CONSTRUCT A MULTIFAMILY PROJECT, CONSISTING OF FIVE UNITS IN TWO BUILDINGS. Location of Proposal: BETWEEN 305 AND CAVE AVENUE, SOUTH OF THE RAVINE, PROPOSED LOTS D & E OF CAVE LANDING SUBDIVISION. Date of Application:

FEBRUARY 26, 2014 Complete Application: MARCH 24, 2014 Tax Parcel Numbers: 262502-3-011-2006, 4118-002-009-0008 & 4109-000-010-0000 Public Meeting / Hearing: The City of Bainbridge Island will conduct a public meeting with the Planning Commission concerning this proposal. Environmental Review: This proposal is subject to State Environmental Policy Act (SEPA) review as provided in WAC 197-11-800. The City, acting as lead agency, expects to issue a Mitigated Determination of Non-significance (MDNS) threshold determination for this proposal. Utilizing the optional DNS process provided in WAC 197-11-355, the comment period specified in this notice may be the only opportunity to comment on the environmental impact of this proposal. The proposal may include mitigation measures under applicable codes, and the project review process may incorporate or require mitigation measures regardless of whether an EIS is prepared. A copy of the subsequent threshold determination for the proposal may be obtained upon request. Comment Period: Any person may comment on the proposed applications request notice of & participate in a public meeting, request a copy of any decision or appeal any decision. The City will not act on the application for 14 days from the date of this notice. Comments must be sent no later than 4:00 pm on Friday, May 2, 2014. If you have any questions concerning this application, contact: Heather Beckmann, Associate Planner Department of Planning & Community Development 280 Madison Avenue North Bainbridge Island, WA 98110 (206) 780-3754 Fax: (206) 780-0955 Email: pcd@ci.bainbridge-isl.wa.us Date of publication: 04/18/14 (BR556149) NOTICE OF APPLICATION The City of Bainbridge Island has received the following land use application: Date: APRIL 19, 2014 Applicant: City of Bainbridge Island Owner: City of Bainbridge Island Permit Request: Shoreline Substantial Development Exemption SSDE 15223

Continued on next page.....


Page A20 Calendar

‘Tales of Hoffmann’ preview

Get a free preview of the Seattle Opera’s premiere of “The Tales of Hoffmann” at 2 p.m. Saturday, April 26 at the Bainbridge Public Library. Three fabulous shows in one, Offenbach’s sumptuous collage of whimsy, creativity, heartbreak, and artistic salvation enchants and delights with luminous music and compelling theater. The preview will be presented by opera aficionado Norm Hollingshead and is funded by the Bainbridge Island Friends of the Library.

‘Gideon’s Knot’ at the library

Island Theatre at the Library presents “Gideon’s Knot” by Joanna Adams at 7:30 p.m. Saturday, April 26 and Sunday, April 27 at the Bainbridge Public Library. Over the course of a 90-minute parent teacher conference, a grieving mother and an emotionally overwhelmed elementary school teacher have a fraught conversation about the tragic suicide of Gideon, the mother’s son and the teacher’s student. Gideon may have been bullied severely — or he may have been the

abuser. As his story is slowly uncovered, the women try to reconstruct a satisfying explanation for Gideon’s act and come to terms with excruciating feelings of culpability. The show is directed by Steve Stolee.

Sensory Sunday at KiDiMu

Families with children affected by autism or a similar sensory processing challenge are invited to explore Kids Discovery Museum, while enjoying a supportive environment and therapist guidance on Sunday, April 27. The program is offered on the fourth Sunday each month, between 10 and 11:30 a.m., before the museum opens to the general public and is made possible by Bainbridge Community Foundation. Register at 206-855-4650 as space is limited to provide the best experience for visiting families. Last-minute registrations are welcome if space is available. The cost per person is $6/non-members; free for members. Info: Call 206-855-4650 or visit www.kidimu.org.

Yom HaShoah on Bainbridge Yom HaShoah, also known as Holocaust Remembrance Day, will be commemorated at 2 p.m. Sunday, April 27 at Congregation Kol Shalom, 9010 Miller Road. Shoah, which means catastrophe or utter destruction in Hebrew, refers to the atrocities that were committed against the Jewish people during World War II. Islanders will gather to honor the victims with songs, prayer, testimonials and readings. All are welcome.

Teen Writers’ Group meets

The Teen Writers’ Group will meet at 2 p.m. Monday, April 28 at the Bainbridge Public Library. Writers should bring the pieces they’re currently working on to get feedback from the

Dr. Paul Baker, immunologist and beloved family man, passed away from complications during heart surgery last Thursday in Seattle. He was 67. A native of Kansas City, Missouri, Paul earned his BS and MS in Biology from the University of Missouri and his PhD from UConn. He completed postdoctoral research at Dartmouth before working for Montana State University—where he loved the fly-fishing—and for the Seattle Biotech Immunex. He later owned Cascade BMW Motorcycles, before returning to the UW’s Health Sciences Department. Known for his gregarious sense of humor and lust for life, his keen intelligence and boundless generosity, Paul is survived by his children, Katie and Scott, and his wife, Carol. In lieu of flowers, donations may go to the American Heart Association.

Continued from previous page..... Description of Proposal: After-the-fact emergency repair of force sewer main by placing a repair band on the pipe. Location of Proposal: Eagle Harbor beach at Wing Point, on the beach in a utility easement in front of 1281 Irene Place. Date of Application: February 26, 2014 Complete Application: March 24, 2014 Comment Period: Any person may comment on the proposed application, request notice of and participate in a public hearing, if any, request a copy of any decision or appeal any decision. The city will not act on the application

for 21 days from the date of this notice. Comments must be submitted by no later than 4:00 p.m. on Friday, April 9, 2014. If you have any questions, contact: Heather Beckmann, Associate Planner City of Bainbridge Island Department of Planning & Community Development 280 Madison Ave. N. Bainbridge Island, WA 98110 Phone: (206) 780-3754 Fax: (206) 780-0955 Email: pcd@ci.bainbridge-isl.wa.us Date of publication: 04/18/14 (BR556155) 2EACHåTHOUSANDSåOFå READERSåWITHåONEåCALLå å

Fly fishers to meet

Bainbridge Island Fly Fishers will meet at 7 p.m. Tuesday, April 29 at Seabold Hall. Join Bainbridge Island Fly Fishers and Trout Unlimited for an auction of gently used fly fishing equipment, gadgets, collectable and more. Donations and participation are welcome from the public. Proceeds from the auction support fish stocking at Battle Point Park pond and local youth fly fishing programs.

Call Dave Boyce at 206-842-8374 for more information.

‘Theatrical Cats’ at BPA

All the world’s a stage, even for cats. Stop by the Bainbridge Performing Arts Gallery in May for “Theatrical Cats,” a whimsical collection of colored-pencil assemblages by Susan Eileen Wiersema. In this collection, Wiersema creates her own small theatres. She chose the poems of T.S. Eliot as her scripts. Her reflection on the poetry inspired new images and created a special vehicle for the use of her colored pencils, and of course, her cats. “With theatre and cats,” she said, “you can’t really go wrong.” A special artist reception will

be held at the BPA Gallery for the First Fridays Art Walk from 5 to 7 p.m. May 2. All are welcome for a fun evening of art, food and friends. Gallery hours throughout the month are 10 a.m. to 5 p.m. Tuesday through Friday, plus one hour prior to each performance. Admission is free at BPA, 200 Madison Ave. North.

LOL with The Edge

Step up to the plate with The EDGE Improv at 7:30 p.m. Saturday, May 3 as the troupe presents an ingeniously improvised evening of on-the-spot comedy. Tickets are $16 for adults, and $12 for seniors, students, youth, military and teachers, at www.bainbridgeperform ingarts.org.

Richard William Boden

Noni Buchanan Roybal Reiman

April 25, 1970 – April 9, 2014

March 11, 1962 – April 7, 2014

Rick was born April 25, 1970 in Monroe, La. and grew up in Lutherville, Md. He graduated from Towson High and attended University of Florida and University of Maryland. Rick was a lifelong O’s fan and a loyal, committed fan of the Terps and Gators. He loved to cook and believed that all things tasted better with a sprinkling of Old Bay. Rick and Jennifer have made their happy, loving home on Bainbridge Island for nearly six years after having started their adventure together and family during their 10 years in Denver, Colo. A service will be held at 3 p.m., April 26 at Grace Episcopal Church on Bainbridge Island; all are welcome. In lieu of flowers Jennifer has requested that donations be made in Rick’s honor to www.OneCureMelanoma.com. Additional details can be found at http://www.caringbridge. org/visit/rickboden. Arrangements entrusted to Cook Family Funeral Home.

TRIBUTE Paid Notice

Legal Notices

group, learn new strategies for putting ideas into words, and get writing questions answered. The free program is for teens in grades 7-12 and is cosponsored with Field’s End.

Loving husband to Jennifer and proud father to Allison and Anna; youngest son of Dana and Bill Boden; “little” brother to Kathy Boden Holland and David Boden; “crazy” uncle to Devin, Cade, Carson, Elsie and Will; and dear, loyal friend to more people than could possibly be named or imagined.

Paul E. Baker August 1, 1946 – April 3, 2014

Friday, April 18, 2014 • Bainbridge Island Review

We lost our dear Noni April 7th, peacefully at her home in West Seattle with her husband at her side. Noni embraced all there was to take from life. She was known as a woman that loved humanity, appreciated the fun of life, was playful and energetic, giving of herself, dramatic; she possessed a keen sense of humor and a take-no-prisoners kind of intelligence. She had a noble grace and an ability to command a presence with an ease that defies explanation. She will be remembered and missed by an enormous circle of family, friends and colleagues. She was preceded in death by her mother, Ellie and father, Richard, and is returned to them now. She is survived by her husband, Dave Reiman; her brother, Richard Buchanan; her niece whom she adored, Sofie; Rick’s wife Nancy, and two step daughters whom she cherished, Carissa and Maddy Reiman. There will not be a service as Noni’s wish of celebrating her life was fulfilled by holding living memorials over the past 10 months with her loving friends and family. Donations in lieu of flowers may be sent to Treehouse of Seattle an organization helping foster children: 2100 24th Avenue S., Suite 200 Seattle, WA 98144.

TRIBUTE Paid Notice

TRIBUTE Paid Notice

For Kitsap Countywide Legal listings, please turn to Real Estate Now/Kitsap Classifieds Revised Notice The City posted a legal notice and notified adjoining land owners of the same project on March 28, 2014. In that notice the project was listed as a Shoreline Conditional Use Permit (SCUP). Based on a further evaluation of the scope of the project and in consultation with the Washington State Department of Ecology, the City has revised the project’s permit status to a Shoreline Substantial Development Exemption (SSDE). This exemption status for the project is based on the scope of the project; replacing a sewer main of the same size as the existing main and right next to the existing main. We apologize for any confusion.

NOTICE OF APPLICATION/SEPA COMMENT PERIOD The City of Bainbridge Island has received the following land use application: Date: APRIL 18, 2014 Owner: City of Bainbridge Island Permit Request: Shoreline Substantial Development Exemption File Name & Number: SSDE 15773 Description of Proposal: Replace three failing sewer force mains located in city owned easements along the intertidal portion of Eagle Harbor. One existing force main sewer connection at 11021 Wing Point Way NE will be redirected to a low-pressure force main in Wing Point Way NE rather

than re-connecting to the replacement force main on the beach. Location of Proposal: The majority of the project will occur on the beach adjacent to Eagle Harbor with trail work at Hawley Cove Park. Tax Parcel Number: N/A Date of Application:February 25, 2014 Complete Application: March 25, 2014 This proposal is subject to State Environmental Policy Act (SEPA) review as provided in WAC 197-11-800. The City, acting as lead agency, expects to issue a Determination of Nonsignificance (DNS) threshold determination for this proposal. Utilizing the optional DNS process provided in

WAC 197-11-355, the comment period specified in this notice may be the only opportunity to comment on the environmental impact of this proposal. The proposal may include mitigation measures under applicable codes, and the project review process may incorporate or require mitigation measures regardless of whether an EIS is prepared. A copy of the subsequent threshold determination for the proposal may be obtained upon request. The City will not take a final action on the proposal nor make a threshold determination for 14 days from the date of this notice. Any person may comment on the proposal and/or

the SEPA review. Additionally, any person may participate in a public hearing, if any, and may request a copy of any decision. For consideration under SEPA environmental review, comments must be submitted by Friday, May 2, 2014. If you have any questions, contact: Sean Conrad, Planner City of Bainbridge Island Department of Planning & Community Development 280 Madison Ave. N. Bainbridge Island, WA 98110 Phone: (206) 780-3761 Fax: (206) 780-0955 Email: pcd@ci.bainbridge-isl.wa.us Date of publication: 04/18/14 (BR556178)

Be the icing on their cake... Advertise in the Service Directory in The Classifieds.

Call: (800) 388-2527 e-mail: classified@soundpublishing.com

or go online 24 hours a day: www.nw-ads.com to get your business in the


Friday, April 18, 2014 • Bainbridge Island Review

sidewalk CONTINUED FROM A1

sidewalk retail and say that it adds vibrancy to the downtown commercial area. During Monday’s meeting, Schulze asked the council for guidance in areas ranging from removing outdoor furniture during particular seasons to serving alcohol at sidewalk cafes. The council agreed that little should be changed. Although the city has a means to regulate alcohol service through the state Liquor Control Board, alcohol will continue to be served to customers at outdoor downtown restaurants. Likewise, dining areas and display racks will be removed on the merchant’s terms, whether on a seasonal basis, during non-business hours or never. “I think the merchant will do what is the best thing for them,” Bonkowski said. In either case, Schulze said that business owners will likely have to fill out a short permit application that identifies the amount of sidewalk space they intend on using. This would determine whether their plans for outdoor business will impede on downtown’s foot traffic and handicap accessibility, he said. “Probably the simplest procedure is that the city provides forms that actually have a typical section of right-of-way already printed out, and then the applicant will draw in where they want tables and chairs … and put in the dimen-

www.bainbridgereview.com

sions,” Schulze told the council. To maximize usage, business owners can utilize spaces that don’t have much foot traffic anyway, Schulze advised, such as the perimeters where utility poles are set and just outside doorway entrances. The city will review the application to make sure the appropriate five-foot clearance is accommodated before it is approved. Private benches like those outside of Blackbird Bakery and That’s-a-Some Pizza were given the same weight as retail racks and cafes. Councilman Val Tollefson at first suggested that permitting this type of street furniture may be a decision best left for the Design Review Board. The idea didn’t last long, though. “I’m a little nervous about adding a regulatory aesthetic value to that,” Councilman Roger Townsend said. Mayor Anne Blair said that if the size of furniture is the issue with sidewalk clearance, than the permit application should be able to catch anything that is too large. “Otherwise, I really agree that this is something that adds to everybody appreciating downtown for its unique storefronts,” Blair said. The council agreed that their directives should apply to downtown as a whole rather than solely Winslow Way. It would extend from Ferncliff to Grow Avenue and to south Madison Avenue and Parfitt Way. “We don’t know how that’s going to develop over time, and it wouldn’t inhibit anything by being applicable,” said Councilman Val Tollefson.

Page A21

Outbreak of measles spreads into Kitsap County State health officials said the measles outbreak in Washington has continued to spread, and passengers aboard the ferry M/V Tacoma during morning sailings on Friday, April 4, may have been exposed to the measles virus. Authorities said a Kitsap County resident, described as a man in his 40s from Bainbridge Island, visited several places in Friday Harbor, including a restaurant where a contagious San Juan County man was at the same time. San Juan County now has five cases of measles, and Kitsap County has one. In Whatcom County, the case count remains at six. According to state health officials, the Kitsap County man may have been exposed to measles March 21 at Cask and Schooner Public House and Restaurant, where San Juan County’s first case was also present while contagious. The Kitsap resident also traveled around Puget Sound while contagious, going to Seattle from Bainbridge Island on the ferry, then flying to Friday Harbor. A list of the places visited

REDUCED $20

REDUCED $10 NEW! FS 38 TRIMMeR NOW JUST

12995

$

Bainbridge Island - passenger area; April 9 10:30 a.m. to 4 p.m. Virginia Mason Bainbridge Island Medical Center (380 Winslow Way E). People who are unvaccinated, or aren’t sure if they’re immune, and develop an illness with fever and unexplained rash should consult a health care professional immediately. Call ahead to their clinic, doctor’s office, or emergency room before arriving so people in waiting rooms aren’t exposed. Officials noted that measles is highly contagious even before the rash starts, and is easily spread when an infected person breathes, cough or sneezes. People can get the measles just by walking into a room where someone with the disease has been in the past couple of hours. People at highest risk from exposure to measles include those who are unvaccinated, pregnant women, infants under six months of age, and those with weakened immune systems.

by both cases while they were contagious is available online. Anyone who was in those places at the listed times should find out if they’ve been vaccinated for measles or have had measles before. Times and locations of possible public measles exposures on Bainbridge Island, which include the two hours of potential exposure after the person with measles left each location, is: April 4 6 a.m. - 8:20 a.m. Washington State Ferry passenger walk-on terminal, Bainbridge Island; 6:20 a.m. sailing Washington State Ferry “Tacoma,” Bainbridge Island to Seattle – passenger area; 6:45 a.m. - 9:15 a.m. Washington State Ferry passenger terminal, Seattle 7:05 a.m. sailing Washington State Ferry “Tacoma,” Seattle to Bainbridge Island—passenger area; 7:55 a.m. sailing Washington State Ferry “Tacoma,” Bainbridge Island to Seattle - passenger area; 8:45 a.m. sailing Washington State Ferry “Tacoma,” Seattle to

FS 56 Rc-e TRIMMeR NOW JUST Was

Was $139.95

19995

$

sNW-sRP

$219.95

sNW-sRP

“It is easier on the arms and shoulders and can be used for 30 minutes with no stress. Another fine STIHL product.“

“Reliable and tough with Easy2Start™ and ease of handling thrown in. It’s a combination that’s hard to beat.”

– user Mike1075

– user Mac56

Check out these reviews and others on the product pages at sTIHLdealers.com

JOIN US.

Indicates products that are built in the United states from domestic and foreign parts and components. all prices are sNW-sRP. available at participating dealers while supplies last. © 2014 sTIHL sNW14-122-116087-1

Bainbridge Rental

8820 Miller Road Northeast | Bainbridge Island 206-842-3303 | BainbridgeRental.net

STIHLdealers.com SNW14-122-116087-1.indd 1

4/11/14 10:57 AM


Page A22

www.bainbridgereview.com

Friday, April 18, 2014 • Bainbridge Island Review

Visconsi proponents and opponents ask examiner to modify conditions BY CECILIA GARZA Bainbridge Island Review

Bainbridge Island Hearing Examiner Stafford Smith received requests from lawyers on both sides of the controversial Visconsi development to make minor modifications to his conditions for approving the project late last month. Dennis Reynolds, the attorney who represented Ohiobased developer, Visconsi, requested Smith modify his conditions for two crosswalks

that Smith ordered installed as part of the shopping center project on High School Road. Reynolds has asked for the developer to be given the option of installing stop signs at two of the crosswalks in the project instead of an elevated crosswalk flanked by speed humps and tables. In his explanation, Reynolds said, “Visconsi has no quarrel with utilizing techniques to ‘calm’ traffic … However, Visconsi believes a better and safer option is use

of stop signs at Crosswalks B and D.” Ryan Vancil, the attorney who represented Islanders for Responsible Development, the group that opposed the shopping center project, filed a request for several minor adjustments to Smith’s conditions. Of these adjustments, Vancil asked that the 120-foot fence that will be placed north of Polly’s Lane be extended to 150 feet. Vancil also asked that the speed limit on Polly’s Lane

be lowered to match the 15 mph limit on the main road that runs through the heart of the development. Vancil also asked Smith to reword his decision, because Vancil said it characterizes Planning Commissioner Maradel Gale as the sole person involved in writing the planning commission’s recommendation on the project. The commission had asked Smith to reject the proposal. While Gale was the author of the commission’s findings,

Vancil explained, they were voted on, discussed, deliberated and adopted by the entire Planning Commission. Motions for reconsideration are typically sought to correct substantive errors in the hearing examiner’s filed decision. The 62,000-square-foot shopping center proposed by Visconsi would provide space for retail, restaurants, professional services and health care facilities on High School Road, directly across from the Ace Hardware.

Islanders for Responsible Development challenged the city’s environmental review of the shopping center proposal and a conditional use permit for the development, but Smith cited zoning code and existing law that allowed the proposed land to be developed for commercial use. According to city rules, the request for reconsideration will be decided by the examiner based on the record that already exists, unless the examiner determines another public hearing is needed.

Please Join Us! Fletcher Landing Road End Community Outreach Meeting You are invited to attend a community outreach meeting hosted by the City of Bainbridge Island Planning Department. The purpose of the meeting is to review, comment and vote on the three draft improvement project plans for the Fletcher Landing Road End. Your input matters and the public is encouraged to attend.

24/7 News at BainbridgeReview.com

Thursday, May 1 - 5 pm to 7 pm City Council Chamber, Bainbridge Island City Hall 280 Madison Avenue, Bainbridge Island, WA For more information or questions, contact Sean Conrad, Department of Planning and Community Development, (780-3761) or sconrad@bainbridgewa.gov. To view the draft improvement plans please visit the City’s website: http://www.bainbridgewa.gov/548/Fletcher-Landing-Road-End-Development.

LINDA TANNER IS ONE OF THOSE REMARKABLE INDIVIDUALS who understand that assisted living is mostly about living. Linda’s like our jack of all trades. She may start the day at Wyatt House helping out in the kitchen, work the front desk for a bit, line up a game of cup pong, then finish the day at Madrona House swapping stories with a few of her favorite friends. There’s a personalized level of care at Bainbridge Senior Living that goes above and beyond. That whatever level of assistance a resident may need, whatever activity may be on the schedule, staff members like Linda are always ready with a smile. Must be the hats.


Friday, April 18, 2014 • Bainbridge Island Review

Bainbridge blotter Selected reports from the Bainbridge Island Police Department blotter: Tuesday, April 8 11:21 a.m. Two kayaks were stolen from a private beach property. 11:38 a.m. Police received a report of telephone harassment by a potential scam artist. A resident told officers that she had received a call from the scammer for the sixth time. The scammer had an Indian accent and was pretending to be with an enforcement agency for the IRS. He demanded payment for alleged back taxes. The resident

Googled the phone number and found multiple blogs warning about the scam. Police called the phone number and pretended to be an 88-year-old woman named Ethel Murray. The person on the other line had an Indian accent and told the officer there was a warrant out for her arrest. The scammer hung up when the officer did not give any personal information. During the call, the officer could hear others in the background which sounded like a “boiler room” call center. The number used by the scammer is 315-210-6164. 2:08 p.m. A couple were bothered by a pizza delivery man.

www.bainbridgereview.com Instead of coming to the door and ringing the door bell, the couple heard footsteps around the house and saw the man peer through their windows. He then turned around and began to leave. The two were expecting the pizza delivery. When the woman came out to confront the delivery man, he said he thought this was a library and it was closed. The man appeared strange to them. Sunday, April 6 3:31 p.m. A couple were sitting on their back porch when they saw someone hiding in the bushes. When the wife called out, a man jumped out of the bushes and ran to a gold SUV that was waiting. The couple believed the man was casing

Page A23

the property for things to steal. Shortly after the incident the man returned with two women. The husband told police he recognized them as former high school classmates. The three told the couple there was an abandoned building nearby that they were exploring. They said the first floor looked like it could be a fun place to set up a secret cafe for selling pot brownies. Saturday, April 5 11:48 p.m. Jewelry was reported stolen from a Meadowmeer residence. The homeowner lives alone and had been out of town for a couple days. When she returned, she found a sliding glass door to the residence was unlocked and items stolen. She told police that she locked the

house prior to leaving. Also, she told police she had an electrician do some work at her house just hours before she left town. Of the items stolen, she discovered a gold charm bracelet with several gold charms on it missing. It was valued at $7,500. An amethyst pendant and earrings were also taken. These were valued at $1,000. Wednesday, April 2 4:57 p.m. A man was on his way home from the bus stop when an orange Ford F-150 sped past him. As the truck passed by, the man gave the driver a “questioning shrug.” At this, the driver stopped the truck, got out and asked, “You got a problem?” The man was not sure what the driver was going to do, so he

pulled out his cell phone, took a photo and told the driver he was going to report him. The driver got back in his truck and left. The man told police that when he got out of the bus the next day, however, the driver was in the woods nearby. He followed the man walking home. Later that same day, the driver drove in front of the man’s home, stopped momentarily and squealed his tires past the house. Police contacted the driver who lives a block over, and were told that he was just walking home when he was following the man from the bus stop. The driver did not admit to stopping his truck in front of the man’s house. Police told him that driving past the man’s house was borderline stalking and harassment.

RECEIVE $300 OFF*

Absolutely FREE

April 18 - June 16

Now when you purchase any Stressless® seating, you can personalize your choice with a FREE accessory*.

Stressless Sunrise® in select colors. *See your sales associate for complete details.

April 18 - June 16 Swing Table: Keep your cup of coffee, your novel, or your remote control close at hand. This small, versatile table fits most Stressless® recliners with our famous wooden base.

THE INNOVATORS OF COMFORT™

Personal Table: Surf the web and read your emails in your favorite recliner with the help of this clever table. This firm and stable workspace folds out of the way when not in use. Elevator Ring Set: Tall? Give your Stressless® a boost with our Elevator Ring set. The Elevator Ring set is for both the world famous Stressless® recliner and ottoman.

Go places in your mind

Corner Table: This free-standing table fits between two Stressless® sofas. An ideal solution for any home theater seating.

Choose the Stressless® that fits you best. Stressless® seating is customized to your body for the ultimate in comfort. Ellipse Table: Flexible and easy-to-move, our Ellipse table keeps everything close at hand. Simply slide it in close, to maximize your comfort.

Stressless® Sunrise - SAVE $300

Stressless® Dream

Stressless® Voyager

Stressless® Vegas w/ Swing Table

Save up to 20% – on purchase of all Stressless® Sofas* *Select colors only. See sales associate for complete details.

Something ELSE Receive $300 off the purchase of a Stressless® Sunrise recliner and ottoman in select colors as a substitution for the FREE accessory*.

Stressless® Kensington

Stressless® Taurus

Stressless® Liberty Low-Back Sofa

*See your sales associate for complete details.

3520 Kitsap Way • Bremerton 360-377-5582 • 1-800-533-5311 www.arnoldshomefurnishings.com

Interest will be charged to your account from the purchase date if the purchase balance is not paid in full within the promotional period or if you make a late payment. Photos are for illustration purpose only. All items are subject to prior sale. Expires 6/16/14

12 MONTHS NO INTEREST

O.A.C. - SEE STORE FOR DETAILS. MINIMUM PAYMENT REQUIRED.

Mon-Fri: 9:30am - 6pm Sat: 9:30am - 5:30pm Sun: 12pm - 5pm


Page A24

www.bainbridgereview.com

Friday, April 18, 2014 • Bainbridge Island Review

Bainbridge Island’s Real Estate Experts PORT MADISON

COASTAL LIVING BEACH HOUSE...

NEW LISTING! THE PERFECT BEACH

BRACKENWOOD

O

pe n

Sa

tu r

da

y

SUNRISE WATERFRONT

literally right on a fabulous sandy walking beach, with breathtaking Sound and Mountain views! Gorgeous remodel with Seri Yeckel kitchen and master suite design. Light, airy and happy! MLS #593980. $1,398,000.

Vesna Somers

· vesna@windermere.com

206/947-1597

cottage with amazing 180° views and full western sun! Architect-designed with 2-story interior and flooded with light. In the heart of the neighborhood with community beach, dock, and boat ramp. MLS #619749. $949,000.

OPEN SATURDAY, 1-4: 10429 BRACKENWOOD LANE.

Architect-designed home offers classic NW style— open plan, vaulted ceilings, stone entry, fireplace and panoramic views of Sound, shipping lanes & Mountains. Private community beach. MLS #619495. $950,000.

Bill Hunt & Mark Wilson 206/300-4889

· HuntWilson.com

Carl Sussman 206/714-6233

· BeautifulBainbridge.com

SUNRISE

TIMBERBROOK—FLETCHER BAY

OPEN SATURDAY, 1-4: 8317 HIDDEN COVE RD.

G R AC I OU S , W E L L - B U I L T H O M E AT

ONLY 2 REMAINING! BEAUTIFUL NEW

Jackie Syvertsen

Susan Grosten & Ellin Spenser

O

pe

n

Sa

tu

rd

ay

PORT MADISON

New Listing! Private, sunny and gorgeous acreage featuring mature gardens & rolling lawn. Timeless MidCentury design with great bones, 3-bedrooms, newer roof, deck and fantastic shop. MLS #620306. $698,000. 206/790-3600

·

BainbridgeIslandLiving.com

the end of a sunny lane with open space, trails & duck pond. Open plan, gleaming hardwoods, cook’s kitchen. Wonderful blend of elegance & comfort w/1-story living + large upper-level bonus. MLS #596779. New Price: $680,000. 206/755-8411

·

206/914-2305

construction homes on 1/2 acre+ lots. Still time to select your finishes & colors. Great flexible floor plans, granite counters, stainless appliances. Quiet area and lovely neighborhood! MLS #557391. $694,950.

Ana Richards 206/459-8222

· anar@windermere.com

EAGLEDALE

FLETCHER BAY

WINSLOW CONDOMINIUM

CHARMING, MOVE-IN READY 3BR/2.5BA

NEW LISTING! WELL-MAINTAINED,

NEW LISTING! SUPER LIGHT & CHIC

Patti Shannon

Ana Richards & Joe Richards

updated home with new roof, furnace, hot water heater, propane fireplace, stainless appliances, more! Fully fenced, gated shy half acre with fruit trees. Near beach access, parks. MLS #581336. Listed at $465,000. 206/755-5139

· BuyNSellBainbridge.com

1-level home in forest setting surrounded by sunny gardens & close to town! Offering 1,400+ sq. ft. with 2 bedrooms, 1.75 baths and large rooms. Home shares 3 acres of open space with shop/storage. MLS #612411. $292,500. 206/459-8222

· 206/459-8223

in-town living! Spacious contemporary condo featuring NANA door, 1BR/1.5BA plus den, vaulted ceilings, in-floor heat, stainless appliances, propane cooktop & fireplace. Sunny deck & parking space. MLS #619250. $245,000.

Diane Sugden

206/355-9179

· dianesugden@windermere.com

– trust & confidence since 1978 — 206/842-5626 · windermerebainbridge.com 840 MADISON AVE NORTH · WRE/BI, Inc.


kitsapweek A p r i l 1 8 —2 4 , 2 0 1 4

LIFE AND CULTURE

Lots of savings in Kitsap’s largest Classified section Pages 16-23

On the hunt Egg hunts and much more planned in Kitsap — page 2

what’s up this week Arlo Guthrie makes a stop in Bremerton for one-night performance

By RICHARD D. OXLEY Kitsap Week

I

f the Guthrie family has a legacy, being a musical voice of the common people would be it. Woody Guthrie brought forth that voice during the Dust Bowl era and beyond, with songs such as “This Land Is Your Land,” “Worried Man Blues,” and “Hobo’s Lullaby.” His influence spread farther than the regions

he sang of, inspiring the likes of Bob Dylan, Pete Seeger, Bruce Springsteen and others. Woody’s son, Arlo Guthrie, echoed that voice and forged his own with a lifelong folk music career, producing hits such as “The City of New Orleans,” “The Motorcycle Song,” and the renowned 1967 tune “Alice’s Restaurant,” a spoken-word song that tells an 18-minute long tale. The popularity of “Alice’s

Restaurant” carried it onto the big screen in 1969 in a movie starring Guthrie himself. The folk legend hasn’t stopped since. Guthrie has continued his family’s tradition of songs of protest, of injustice, and of the beauty of the American landscape. He has further entered into the pop culture sphere with numerous albums over the decades, See Guthrie, Page 15

Arlo Guthrie will perform in Bremerton on April 19.

65,000 circulation every Friday in the Bainbridge Island Review | Bremerton Patriot | Central Kitsap Reporter | North Kitsap Herald | Port Orchard Independent


page 2 kitsapweek Friday, April 18, 2014

Malfunkshun & One Foot Down | April 25th The Seattle sound that started it all

$15 advance • $20 day of show

ABBA FAB | April 26th

A tribute to the music of ABBA Hawaiian Luau | April 27th

Buffet Dinner, Po’okela Street Band & Ke’ala ‘O Kamailelauli’ili’i 4:00 PM - 7:00 PM | $15 advance • $20 day of show Lollipops Children’s Boutique on Bainbridge Island offers photos with live bunnies for little ones each Easter season. The shop will have bunny photo shoots on April 18-19. Karin Lehotsky / Courtesy photo

WHISKEY RIV19EthR This Saturday, April

A tribute to the music of Lynyrd Skynyrd Doors open 7:00 PM | Shows 8:00 PM $10 Advance • $15 Day of Show

Hunt is on in Kitsap By RICHARD D. OXLEY Kitsap Week

K

$50,000 Spring Bling Zoom Ball

itsap is certainly home to plenty of rabbits. Just ask anyone who lives in a rural area or has taken a stroll through a wooded park. A certain bunny will likely make an appearance this weekend as Kitsap communities celebrate Easter with egg hunts and other events — including geocaching, helicopter egg drops, and even baby bunny photo shoots.

You could win $50,000!

Egg Hunts

Full schedule available online

Tuesdays & Thursdays in April | 6:00 PM - 9:00 PM

Kingston, WA www.the-point-casino.com 1.866.547.6468

Close to Home... Far From Ordinary.®

Tickets available now at these locations: In the gift shop | On our website For more information Call 866.547.6468 | Ages 21 and over The Point Casino is proudly owned and operated by The Port Gamble S’Klallam Tribe. See the Wildcard Players Club for complete details. You must be a member of The Point Casino’s Wildcard Players Club to participate in some programs. Some restrictions may apply. Point Casino promotions, offers, coupons and/or specials may not be combined without marketing management approval. Management reserves all rights to alter or cancel without prior notice. You must be at least 21 years old to participate in gaming activities, to attend entertainment events and to enter lounge/bar areas. Knowing your limit is your best bet—get help at (800) 547-6133.

TPC-5041-4 Kitsap_week.indd 1

4/16/14 10:29 AM

North Kitsap and Bainbridge Island n Throughout Bainbridge Island, starts at 9 a.m. April 19 and continues through April 20. This is a geocache hunt, so get your GPS units ready. Coordinates will be posted on the Bainbridge Island Metro Park & Recreation District’s website at 9 a.m. on April 19. Use the GPS coordinates to locate items hidden all over Bainbridge Island.

Cover Story Free. Info: www. biparks.org. n Strawberry Hill Park, off of NE High School Road, Bainbridge Island, April 19, begins at 11 a.m. For ages 12 and younger. All hunting groups will be divided by age. Come early to visit with the Easter bunny at 10 a.m. A 4-H petting area will also be included. Info: www. biparks.com. n Olympic Evangelical Church, 14861 Silverdale Way, Poulsbo, April 19, 10 a.m. An egg hunt divided by age groups, including a forest trail. Find a golden egg and win a prize. Free. n Village Green Park, off of West Kingston Road, Kingston, April 19, 10 a.m. For children in grades 5 and below. Prizes will be given for the most eggs found in each age group. Sponsored by Bayside

Community Church. n Buck Lake Park, off of Buck Lake Road in Hansville, April 19, 10:30 a.m. Rain or shine, children ages 10 and younger can hunt for eggs in Buck Lake Park. Find an egg with a golden coupon and win an Easter basket. Ages 2 and younger can have help from mom and dad. n KiDiMu, 301 Ravine Lane, Bainbridge Island, April 19, 10:30 a.m. to 3 p.m. Search for eggs at the Kids Discovery Museum. Find the eggs, then hide them again for fellow hunters. Also enjoy crafts. Info: www.kidimu.org. n Kola Kole Park, 11128 NE Maine St., Kingston, April 19, 11 a.m. An egg hunt for children in grades 5 and below. Bring a basket. n West Sound Community Church, 2356 Rude Road, Poulsbo, April 19, 11-11:45 a.m. A hunt for eggs and candy for children in grades 6 and below. See Easter, Page 3


Friday, April 18, 2014

The 20th annual Easter Egg Hunt in Poulsbo’s Raab Park is on April 19. Children can search for eggs and exchange them for prizes.

Easter

Continued from page 2 n Gateway Fellowship, 18901 8th Ave., Poulsbo, April 19, 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. Not only an Easter egg hunt (at 1 p.m.) but also a barbecue, games, face painting, a 5K run and walk, and more. n Sons of Norway, Waterfront Park, Poulsbo, April 19, noon. An Easter egg hunt for grades 6 and below. n Heritage Park, April 20, noon to 3 p.m. An egg hunt for children and adults on the trails of Heritage Park. Exchange the eggs for prizes from Kingston businesses. Kingston Adventures in Kingston has maps for the hunt. n Bainbridge Aquatic Center, 8521 Madison Ave., Bainbridge Island, April 19, starting at 1 p.m. Age groups will begin an egg hunt in the pool at staggered times, starting at 1 p.m. Admission $6, includes free swim at 2 p.m. Info: www.biparks. org. n Edgewater neighborhood tennis courts, off of Edgewater Boulevard, Poulsbo, April 19, 1 p.m. The Edgewater neighborhood, just north of the Poulsbo border, hides more than 500 eggs for its annual egg hunt at the local tennis courts. n Raab Park, 18349 Caldart Ave., Poulsbo April 19, 1 p.m. The 20th annual Easter Candy Hunt in Raab Park for ages 11 and younger. Hunt for candy and eggs in the park. Exchange the

eggs for prizes. Sponsored by the Poulsbo Lions Club, Poulsbo-NK Rotary Club and Hill Moving. Info: 360779-9898. South Kitsap and Bremerton n Bremerton Nazarene Church, 924 Sheridan Road, Bremerton, April 19, 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Two egg hunts begin at 11 a.m. and 1 p.m. Egg hunts for kids in grades 6 and below. Includes other family events. Free. n First Christian Church, 4885 W Hovde Road, Port Orchard, April 19, 10 a.m. An egg hunt with a pancake breakfast. Free. n Olalla Elementary School and Triangle Park, 6100 SE Denny Bond Blvd., Olalla, April 19, 10 a.m. Hosted by the South Kitsap Fire and Rescue and South Kitsap Professional Firefighters Union. Children ages 8 and younger will hunt for eggs at Olalla Elementary School; ages 9 and older will hunt at Triangle Park. n Mile High Gymnastics, 4242 Mile Hill Drive, Port Orchard, April 19, 10:15 a.m. For ages 10 and younger. Age groups hunt for eggs in a maze of mats and foam pads. n Abundant Hope Fellowship, 1940 Sylvan Way, Bremerton, April 19, 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. For ages 10 and younger. Free. n South Kitsap Regional Park Playground, off of Jackson Avenue, Port

Orchard, April 19, noon. This year will be the 22nd annual Easter Egg Hunt in the Park, hosted by Fathoms o’ Fun. Be ready to hunt. More than 450 children participated in the event last year. n Kiwanis Park, between 4th and 5th streets in Union Hill, Bremerton, April 19, 1-3 p.m. Hunts are organized by age groups. Sponsored by the City of Bremerton, Kiwanis International and area churches. Free. n Port Orchard Public Market, 715 Bay St., Port Orchard, April 20, noon. An Easter egg hunt at the new public market. Free. n Bremerton Elks, 4131 Pine Road NE, Bremerton, April 20, 1:30 p.m. Hunting parties, divided by age groups, will hunt for approximately 6,000 eggs. For ages 10 and younger. Free.

Other events Lollipops 11th annual Easter Photo Shoot, 278 Winslow Way, Bainbridge Island, April 18-19, 10 a.m. to n

4 p.m. Lollipops Children’s Boutique hosts its annual photo shoot for children with live bunnies and fresh flowers. Kids pose for memorial pics with fluffy, cuddly bunnies. Prices start at $20. Info: www.lollipopsboutiqueonline.com, karinphoto@ mac.com. n Adult Easter Egg Hunt, April 18, 8 p.m., Kola Kole Park, 11128 NE Maine St., Kingston. The only egg hunt for ages 21 and older. Bring a flashlight and hunt for eggs and prizes such as scratch tickets, candy and more. Cost: $15 per person. Ticket includes a drink from Kingston’s Filling Station. Live music included. n Easterpalooza, 924 Sheridan Road, Bremerton, April 19, 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. An egg hunt and more at the Bremerton Nazarene Church with face painting, pancakes, cotton candy among other attractions. n Olalla Easter Breakfast, 8696 Olalla Valley Road, Olalla (Olalla Fire Station No. 12) April 20, 8 a.m. to noon

People helping pets...pets helping people. Misty is an 18 month old shorthaired grey and white female who came to us when her owner went to college. She had only had Misty for 3 weeks. Misty is a very friendly young girl. She has lived with a younger kitten and did well with him. There was a dog in the house that she was getting used to in that home. She is a petite girl who has pretty markings and beautiful amber eyes. She’ll be at the Poulsbo Petco this week hoping to meet her new forever family. 1-888-558-PAWS • www.northkitsappaws.org

kitsapweek

The 51st annual Olalla Easter Breakfast hosted by the South Kitsap Fire and Rescue and South Kitsap Professional Firefighters Union. $5 for adults, $4 for children. Proceeds benefit community members in need. n Operation Hop Drop (a different kind of egg hunt), April 20. NewLife Church puts novel twist on Easter egg hunting. A helicopter will navigate fields across Kitsap, dropping eggs for hunters to find. Free. Locations: In Belfair,

Grand Opening

page 3

Richard Walker / North Kitsap Herald

the Theler Community Center at 1 p.m. In South Kitsap, Sedwick Junior High School at noon. In Central Kitsap, the hunt is on at 2:30 p.m., but to discover the location, one must attend the church’s Easter Gathering Sunday morning. Participants will learn the location, get a wrist band for entry, and hunt for eggs. In North Kitsap, North Kitsap High School at 2 p.m. See Easter, Page 4

NK RV & Boat Storage Call Us Today for Special Prices!

10x20, 10x30 or 10x40 spaces

Electronic Gate Access • Access 7 Days a Week 24 Hour Video Monitoring 7990 NE Ecology Rd. • Kingston WA 98346

360-981-8099

Dennis@nkrvboat.com

Looking for A Fundraiser? Organizations can buy-out a show at a discount for one night to host a party or re-sell the tickets to raise money. For more info about theater sponsorship, buy-out or fund-raising opportunities, contact Cindy Garfein at poulsbojewelbox@hotmail.com.

225 Iverson St., Downtown Poulsbo

JewelBoxPoulsbo.org


page 4 kitsapweek Friday, April 18, 2014 Karin Lehotsky, owner of Lollipops Children’s Boutique, hosts live bunny photo shoots for Easter every year. It helps to socialize the bunnies, which are adopted out after the event.

Karin Lehotsky / Courtesy photo

Easter

Continued from page 3

Church Services n Easter service on the Indianola dock, April 20, 9 a.m. Living Hope Church will hold a morning of Easter services and events starting with a special

Easter worship service on the Indianola dock at 9 a.m., followed by Easter breakfast at 9:45 a.m., Celebration Service at 10:30 a.m., and Easter brunch at noon. n Poulsbo First Lutheran Church 18920 4th Ave., Poulsbo. April 20, 6:30 a.m. sunrise worship; 8:30 a.m., 9:45 a.m. and 11 a.m. services. Hear stories of John the

Evangelist. Easter breakfast from 7:30-10 a.m. n Port Madison Lutheran Church, 14000 Madison Ave., Bainbridge Island. April 20, 10:30 a.m. service preceded by Easter potluck breakfast at 9:15 a.m., egg hunt at 10 a.m. n North Point Church, 1779 NE Hostmark St., Poulsbo. April 20, 9:30 a.m.

n St. Olaf Catholic Church, 18943 Caldart Ave., Poulsbo. April 19, 9 p.m. Easter vigil. April 20, 8 a.m. and 10:45 a.m. service; 1 p.m. Spanish language service. n Anglican Church of St. Charles, 20295 Little Valley Road, Poulsbo. April 19, 5 p.m. Easter eve baptism and communion. April 20, 8:30 a.m. and

10:30 a.m. services n Rolling Bay Presbyterian Church, 11042 Sunrise Drive, Bainbridge Island. April 20, 9:30 a.m. service, 10:45 a.m. Easter egg hunt. n Cross Sound Church, in the commons at Bainbridge High School. April 20, 10 a.m. n St. Cecelia Roman Catholic Church, 1310 Madison Ave., Bainbridge Island.

Generations of care Luncheon a benefit for the Martha & Mary family of companies

SUNDAY, APRIL 27, 2014 Kiana Lodge from Noon – 3:30 pm Guest Speaker – Erik R. Lindbergh

FOR TICKETS/RSVP email us at events@mmhc.org or call (360) 626-7879 ~ A Special Thank You to our sponsors ~

Consonus Healthcare • McKesson Optum • Sodexo Senior Living Thomas & Associates Insurance Broker, Inc. Media Sponsor:

WE HAVE REOPENED! SERVING DINNER THURSDAY - SUNDAY!

OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK 32400 RAINIER AVE. NE | 360.297.7636

WWW.PORTGAMBLEGENERALSTORE.COM

April 19, 8 p.m. Mass. April 20, 7:30 a.m., 9 a.m. and 11 a.m. Mass. n St. Barnabas Episcopal Church, 1187 Wyatt Way, Bainbridge Island. April 19, 8 p.m. Easter vigil. April 20, 9 and 11 a.m. (11 a.m. with incense) services. n Bethany Lutheran Church, on High School and Finch roads. April 20, 8:30 a.m. and 10 a.m. services. n Christ the Rock, 4100 SW Old Clifton Road, Port Orchard. April 20, 6:30 a.m. sunrise service and breakfast; 8:45 a.m. and 10:30 a.m. Easter services. n Adventure of Faith Church, 4705 Jackson Ave., Port Orchard. April 19, 7 p.m. April 20, 8:30 a.m., 9:45 a.m. and 11:15 a.m. services. n Coram Deo, 5951 Highway 303, Bremerton. April 20, 8:30 a.m., 9:45 a.m. and 11 a.m. services. n Bremerton Nazarene, 924 Sheridan Road, Bremerton. April 20, 6:30 a.m. sunrise service; 9:30 a.m. Easter service. n Abundant Life Foursquare Church, Baymont Inn Ballroom, 5640 Kitsap Way, Bremerton. April 20, 10 a.m. to 11:30 a.m. n Bremerton United Methodist, 1150 Marine Drive, Bremerton. April 20, 7:30 a.m. sunrise service; 8:30-10:15 a.m. brunch; 10:30 a.m. traditional Easter service. n Holy Trinity Roman Catholic Parish, 4215 Pine Road, Bremerton. April 19, 8 p.m. Easter vigil. April 20, 8 a.m., 9:45 a.m., 11:30 a.m. services; 4 p.m. service in Spanish.


Friday, April 18, 2014

kitsapweek

page 5

Whites shine in 2012 and 2013 vintages

W

ine lovers are just beginning to see white wines show up from 2013, and we’re still enjoying those from the superb 2012 vintage. We got a good dose of both at the second annual Great Northwest Wine Competition, held in early April at the Columbia Gorge Hotel in Hood River, Ore. The featured wines below earned gold medals at the competition. Check for them at your favorite wine merchant or contact the wineries directly. Hogue Cellars 2012 Late Harvest Riesling, Columbia Valley, $11: Hogue Cellars has been crafting this inexpensive off-dry wine for ages, and it’s always refreshing and delicious. Aromas of baked apple, fresh pear and clove lead to flavors of apricot, apple and golden raisin. Kyra Wines 2013 Chenin Blanc, Columbia Valley, $15: Winemaker Kyra Baerlocher is a onewoman revival show for noble Chenin Blanc. Every year, she consistently crafts one of the finest anywhere, and this young wine is no exception. It opens with aromas of intriguing minerality, melon, sweet herbs and Asian pear, followed by luscious flavors of pear, Granny Smith apple and honeydew. Indian Creek Winery 2013 Muscat Canelli, Snake River Valley, $15: The Stowe family opened its winery in Idaho’s Snake River Valley in 1982, making it one of the oldest producers in the Gem State. This lus-

NW Wines By ANDY PERDUE and eric degerman

cious Muscat opens with aromas of orange water, lychee and a hint of clove. On the palate, it reveals delicate flavors of rosewater, orange and grapefruit. L’Ecole No 41 2012 Semillon, Columbia Valley, $15: L’Ecole No. 41 has earned its reputation as arguably the Pacific Northwest’s top producer of Semillon, and this vintage might be its best effort. There’s a beautiful nose of dusty apple, pineapple, poached pear, fresh fig and a touch of oak. Inside comes a rich and buttery structure that also offers fig and pear flavors, along with a spoonful of lemon yogurt, a cut of grassiness and a kiss of oak in the finish. Martinez & Martinez Winery 2013 Tudor Hills Vineyard, Pinot Grigio Yakima Valley, $16: This two-generation winemaking family in Washington’s Horse Heaven Hills also has family ties to this vineyard in the Yakima Valley. Aromas of starfruit, Bosc pear, lime peel and alyssum lead to flavors that scream of fresh-cut Golden Delicious apple, more pear and Key lime pie. While the residual sugar is reported at 1.5 percent, it finishes dry with no perception of alcohol. Mount Baker Vineyards 2012 Madeleine Angevine, Puget Sound, $17: Madeleine Angevine is a rare grape in the Western Hemisphere. It’s traditionally grown in the Loire Valley but is rarely found in the United States

Above, more than 900 wines were entered in the 2013 Great Northwest Wine Competition, held in early April at the Columbia Gorge Hotel in Hood River, Ore. Below, L’Ecole No. 41 in Lowden, Wash., has dedicated itself to crafting superb Semillon, a white grape variety famous in Bordeaux but somewhat obscure in the Western Hemisphere. The 2012 vintage won a gold medal at the Great Northwest Wine Competition in Hood River, Ore. Andy Perdue / Great Northwest Wine outside of the cool Puget Sound region of Washington. This example comes from Mount Baker Vineyards, a winery in the Nooksack Valley that is so close to the Canadian border, it wouldn’t hurt to know the metric system. Aromas of fresh-cut hay, melon and minerality lead to flavors of bright flavors of honeydew, lemongrass and flinty acidity. This is a perfect wine to pair with

oysters (raw or baked). Smasne Cellars 2013 Otis Vineyard Pinot Gris, Yakima Valley, $12: Yakima Valley winemaker Robert Smasne is starting to get his hands more deeply into one of Washington’s most historic vineyards, and this Pinot Gris is a sign of more great things to come. It’s focused on minerality, Asian pear, starfruit and lemon peel

— both in the aromatics and the palate. The entry is akin to a bite into juicy Bartlett pear before the focus swings into a bonedry approach with persistent acidity. Tsillan Cellars 2012 Estate Nudo Chardonnay, Lake Chelan, $18: Winemaking Shane Collins crafts superb wines on the south shore of Lake Chelan using

estate grapes. This treefree Chardonnay shows off aromas of flint, Key lime, Mandarin orange and white pepper, followed by flavors of crisp apple, Asian pear and steely minerality. — Eric Degerman and Andy Perdue run Great Northwest Wine, a news and information company. Learn more about wine at www.greatnorthwestwine. com.

Projects Needed! Calling all Nonprofit, Government Agencies, Schools, and Faith Based Organizations. Do you have large projects that you have been putting off?

Over 500 volunteers completed 46 projects in 2013. Go to www.volunteerkitsap.org today to register your agency to be part of this volunteer event. Don’t delay, volunteers can begin signing up for projects on May 1.

Day of Caring Event: June 27, 2014 For more information call Carl Borg at (360) 377-8505


page 6 kitsapweek Friday, April 18, 2014

kitsapcalendar Calendar submissions The Kitsap Week calendar is a free listing of events in Kitsap County. To submit an event, email the name of the involved organization, the event’s date, purpose, cost (if applicable) and contact information to roxley@northkitsapherald.com.

Arts April at the Front Street Gallery: April, 5-8 p.m. as part of Poulsbo’s Second Saturday Art Walk. Glass art for the garden by Kuy Hepburn. Artists on the bay at ChocMo: April at ChocMo, 19880 Front St., Poulsbo. A group show of watercolors on a variety of themes by eight artists. Western Landscapes at the Island Gallery: Through April 27 at the Island Gallery, 400 Winslow Way, Bainbridge Island. Artist reception March 7, 6-8 p.m. Featuring Western Landscapes by Mark Bowles, William Thompson, Jen Till, Theodore Waddell and Irene Yesley. April at Bainbridge Arts & Crafts: Through April 28, at Bainbridge Arts & Crafts, 151 Winslow Way, Bainbridge Island. Featuring “The Nature of Johnpaul Jones,” with drawings from local architect Johnpaul Jones. Also, “Outside the Line,” with drawings from artists such as Amy D’Apice, Paula Ensign, Jeannie Grisham and Bill Hemp. Ars Poetica at Collective Visions: Through April 27, First Friday Art Walk April 4, 5-8 p.m. and a special poetry reading, April 13, 1:30 p.m. Selected poems from Ars Poetica 2014 are displayed at the gallery for poetry month. Artists from the gallery will display their visual interpretations of the juried poems by regional artists. John Wood at Treehouse: The spring show of artist John Wood

at the Treehouse Cafe, 4569 Lynwood Center Road, Bainbridge Island. David Eisenhour at Bainbridge Island Museum of Art: Through June 1. Public reception March 22, 2-4 p.m. Sculptures by David Eisenhour are featured in the exhibit “Dialogue with Nature,” including more than 50 pieces from his new series in bronze, stainless steel, found stones, cast concrete, coal and mixed media. Susan Dinteman at Viridian Gallery: Tuesday to Saturday, 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. at the Viridian Gallery, 1800 Mile Hill Drive, Port Orchard. Info: 360-871-7900. Kitsap Arts & Crafts Festival Juried fine art show: A call to artist for the show. Deadline to enter is June 14. Info: www. callforentry.org, 360-271-8236, evyhh@comcast.net. Kitsap Arts & Craft Festival poster contest: Deadline is May 1. A call to all artist. Info: evyhh@comcast.net, 360-2718236, www.kitsapartsandcrafts. com. First Saturday art walk in Port Orchard: April through November, 2-5 p.m., rain or shine, along Bay Street in downtown Port Orchard. Experience local artists, musicians, food and specials.

Benefits & events Martha and Mary annual volunteer luncheon: April 24, noon, at the First Lutheran

Church, 18920 4th Ave., Poulsbo. Volunteers are awarded Years of Service pins, and other awards for their service at Martha and Mary. Info/RSVP: www.marthaandmary.org. Indie film premier: April 24, 2 p.m. at Olympic College, Bremerton Student Center. The independent film “A Beautiful Thing” by Himesh Bhargo will be premiered at the Olympic College in Bremerton. Bhargo is an Olympic College student and previously won “The Indie Fest“ for best actor. Info: www.facebook.com/abeautifulthingmovie. Fibers & Fabrics: April 25-27, Saturday 10 a.m. to 5 p.m., Sunday 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. in the scenic Hood Canal Vista Pavilion Building in Port Gamble. Quilts will also be on display in the historic St. Paul’s Church. Just between friends childrens consignment event: April 25, 9 a.m. to 7 p.m. at the Kitsap County Fairgrounds. Shop, sell, and save at the nation’s largest children’s consignment event. Children’s clothing, toys, and equipment. Info: www.bremerton.jbfsale.com. Beyond Crayons fundraiser: April 25, 6:30-8 p.m. at Vinland Elementary in Poulsbo. Beyond crayons is a fundraiser for Vinland Elementary’s budding artists to showcase their work. Students will have artwork for sale. Silent auction as well. Come support local artists. $10 adults, in advance. $15 at the door. Kids are free. Holocaust Rememberance Day: April 27, 2 p.m. at Congregation Kol Shalom, 9010 Miller Road, Bainbridge Island. Yom HaShoah, also known as Holocaust Rememberance Day, will be commemorated at Congregation Kol Shalom. Gather to honor victims with songs, prayer and readings. Master Gardener plant sale: May 9, 9 a.m. to 5 p.m., May 10, 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. at the Kitsap County Fairgrounds, Sheep barn, Bremerton. The Annual master Gardener Foundation Plant Sale with 1,000s of plants including trees, shrubs, perennials, veggie starts, herbs and natives as well as garden art. Proceeds support the master gardener program. Info: www.kitsapgardens.org. South Kitsap High School Class of ’64 reunion: July 26 at McCormick Woods Club House in Port Orchard. If you are a classmate, relative or friend of a classmate please contact on of the

following emails: acbuss@wavecable.com, joiebrigham@yahoo. com. Info: http://darkslide47.wix. com/skhs-class-of-64. 55th Annual Kitsap Arts & Crafts Festival: July 25-27 in downtown Kingston. Featuring a juried art show, crafts, food, and live music. Info: www.kitsapartsandcrafts.com. Tours at The Island School: Tour The Island School on Bainbridge Island weekdays 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. For grades K-5. Call ahead, 206-842-0400. Info: www.TheIslandSchool.org. Bainbridge historical museum’s free first Thursday: The prize-winning Bainbridge Island Historical Museum is free on the first Thursdays of each month. Open 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. at 215 Ericksen Ave. Featuring “Whales in Our Midst” chronicling Orca whales in Puget Sound, “The Overland Westerners” an epic 20,000 mile trip by horseback 100 years ago, and “A Portrait of Manzanar” by world famous photographer Ansel Adams. Info: www.bainbridgehistory.org. Bingo: Sundays, early bird at 5 p.m., and Wednesdays, early bird at 6 p.m., at the Bremerton Elks Lodge on Pine Road. Open To The Public. Concession stand and Bar open. Info: 360-4791181.

Classes Sports photography workshop: April 22, 6:30-8 p.m. and April 23, 4:30-6:30 p.m. Follow-up critique session to be announced. At the Haselwood Family YMCA, Silverdale. Learn how to capture athletes in action. A photography class for beginning to advances beginners with DSLR or adjustable compact cameras. $25 students, $35 adults, $50 provides additional support for fundraiser. Info: lacrossephoto@earthlibnk. net. A fundraiser for Klahowya Girls Lacrosse. Volunteer management 101: April 25, 8:30 a.m. to 4:15 p.m. at Olympic College. VolunteerKitsap.org will provide a day of free professional volunteer management training. Space is limited. Info: VolunteerKitsap.org. RSVP: http://bpt.me/576127. Amateur radio technician class: April 26, May 3, may 10, and may 17, 8 a.m. to noon at the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter Day Saints, 6256 Nels Nelson Road, Silverdale. The North Kitsap Amateur Radio Club offers amateur radio technician training. SQUARE DANCE LESSONS: Paws and Taws Square Dance Club

DONATE YOUR VEHICLE... POULSBO LIONS CLUB will come get your old or unused, running or non-running car or truck

FREE!

Call for more info.

100% of proceeds stay local. Maximum Tax Benefits.

Call Kevin Hogan 360-621-8548

host lessons from 7-9 p.m. at Kitsap Square Dance Center, 6800 Belfair Valley Road, Bremerton. $3/adult, $1.50/youth, first night free. Singles, couples, and families welcome. Info: 360-9305277 or 360-373-2567 or www. pawsandtaws.net.

Meetings, support groups & lectures Evergreen Bonsai Club meeting: April 18, 7 p.m. at the Cross roads Neighborhood Church, 7555 Old Military Road, Bremerton. Dave DeGroot, curator of the Pacific Rim Bonsai Collection will present a program on displaying bonsai. Guests welcome. Free. Info: 360-626-1264, rutha33@ msn.com. Bainbridge Island Genealogical society meeting: April 18, 10 a.m. to noon at the Bainbridge Public Library meeting room. Share success and challenges, and learn about English research (England and Wales). Suggested donation is $5. Info: www.bigenealogy.org, 206-8424978. HAM Radio meeting: April 19, 10 a.m. to noon at the Central Kitsap Fire and Rescue building, 7600 Old Military Road, Bremerton. Kitsap County Amateur Radio Club meets to discuss classes, getting licensed, operating emergency communications, and more. Visitors welcome. Info: www.nkarc.org. Kitsap computing seniors general meeting: April 21, 10 a.m. at the Silverdale Community Center, 9729 Silverdale Way, Silverdale. Program with speaker followed by a light potluck. All ages welcome. Kitsap Photography Guild: April 24, 7-9 p.m., Cavalon Place Building, 3rd floor, 2011 Myhre, Silverdale. Award winning wildlife photographer Bonnie Block will share the experiences of her first African Safari through her photography. Info: info@kitsapphotographyguild.com. Equine Experiential Learning and Psychotherapy Open House: April 24, 5:30-7:30 p.m., and May 4 and June 1, 1-3 p.m., at the Heart of the Herd Ranch and Retreat Center, 12620 Willamette Meridian, Silverdale. For mental health care providers, educators, counselor and others to experience the power horses have to help heal trauma and improve social/emotional and leadership skills. Meet the staff and learn how equine work might enhance work with clients and students. Preregistration is required. Space limited to six per session. Info/RSVP: drea.b.bowen@gmail.com. Port Gamble Forest Block as habitat for native Birds: April 26, 9 a.m. to 2 p.m., at the WWU Center at Olympic College Poulsbo. Take a morning field trip with ornithologist Daniel Froehlich to learn about avian residents, while considering possible fates of the bird habitat. $39. Info: www.wwu.edu/ee/ poulsbo/events.

Bethel Grange welcomes Mayor Matthes: April 28, 6:30 p.m. at the Bethel Grange 404, 2998 Bethel Road SE, Port Orchard. Port Orchard Mayor Tim Matthes will visit the grange for an open forum to discuss upcoming happenings in the city. Beta Zeta Master Chapter Beta Sigma Phi: April 30, 6 p.m. McCormick Woods Restaurant, 5155 McCormick Woods Drive, Port Orchard. Beta Zeta master Chapter of Beta Sigma Phi will host the Founds Day event at McCormick Woods Restaurant. Info: 360-8303630, sesau@wavecable.com. I am Norsk Seminar: May 3, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. at Our Savior’s Lutheran Church, 1015 Veneta St., Bremerton. Learn about Norway and research your ancestors. The main theme will be “Norse Sagas, the Vikings. Our Heritage.” Learn how the Viking era helps research today. Includes lunch, vendors, Norwegian costumes and prize drawing. $30. Register at www.bremertonsonsofnorway.org, ddowell@wavecable. com, 360-479-1189. Effects of technology on AD/ HD: May 13, 7-8:30 p.m. at Group Health cooperative classroom, 10452 Silverdale Way, Silverdale. Kitsap CHADD presents Dr. Niran Al-Agba and “The Effects on Screen Time & Technology on AD/HD.” Free. NARFE state convention: May 13, 14 and 15 at the Silverdale Beach Hotel. Info: 360-6971946. History and the current status of the electricity infrastructure in the Northwest: May 20, 5:30 p.m. at the WWU Center at Olympic College, Poulsbo. Kevin Schneider will discuss the electricity infrastructure of the Northwest and how it has evolved over the course of more than 103 years. Free. Info: www. wwu.edu/ee/poulsbo/events. North Kitsap Parent Support Group: Do you want to be part of a support group for families of gifted children? Call 360-6382919 or email northkitsapgifted@gmail.com. Quaker silent worship: 1011 a.m., Sundays at Seabold Hall, 14450 Komedal Road, Bainbridge Island. Agate Passage Friends Meeting. Info: 877-235-4712. 12-Step Biblical-based Recovery Group: Wednesdays, 7-8:30 p.m., Cornerstone Christian Fellowship, 901 N. Wycoff, Bremerton. “Honu Life in Christ”: a support group for addictions/ compulsions, alcohol, drugs and general life issues recovery. Info: David, 360-509-4932. Alzheimer’s caregivers support group: Fourth Wednesday of the month, 1-2:30 p.m. as Harrison Medical Center Annex, 750 Lebo Blvd., Bremerton. A free support group for unpaid care partners, family members and friends of individuals with memory loss. Info: 206-402-9857. ABUSE RECOVERY MINISTRY & SERVICES: Free faith-based domestic abuse victim recovery classes for women. These weekly classes are designed to help women heal from domestic abuse. Participants may begin attending at See Calendar, Page 7


Friday, April 18, 2014

Payday Daddy: April 26, 8 p.m. at the Manchester Pub, 2350 Colchester Drive, Port Orchard. May 2, 8 p.m. at the Red Dog Saloon, 2591 SE Mile Hill Drive, Port Orchard. May 3, 9 p.m. at JR’s Hideaway, 22540 Washington 3, Belfair. May 17, 8 p.m. at the Manchester Pub, 2350 Colchester Drive, Port Orchard.

Adult Egg Hunt Adult Easter Egg Hunt: April 18, 8 p.m. at Kola Kole Park in Kingston. The park will be filled with 1,000 eggs filled with prizes such as cash, scratch tickets, raffle tickets, candy, gift cards and more. Live rock music by House of Cards. Ages 21 and older. $15 admission, includes one drink (wine, draft beer, or well drink) from Kingston’s Filling Station. Bring flashlights and baskets. Hunt is on rain or shine. Tickets sold at the Filling Station, or call 360-731-3326. Presented by Kingston Cooperative Preschool, and sponsored by the Filling Station.

ARlo Guthrie Guthrie at Admiral Theatre: April 19, 6 p.m. dinner, 7:30 p.m concert, at the Admiral Theatre, 515 Pacific Ave, Bremerton. Legendary folk artist performs at the Admiral. Admission is $20-80. Tickets/info: admiraltheatre.org, 360-373-6743.

Bawdy musical “I love you, you’re perfect,

Calendar

Continued from page 6 any time. Info: 866-262-9284 for confidential time and place. American Legion Veterans Assistance Office: Open every Thursday (except holidays), 10 a.m. to 3 p.m., 19068 Jensen Way, Suite 3A, Poulsbo. Free services to assist veterans and widows with VA claims. Info: 360779-5456. At Ease Toastmasters: Wednesdays, 7-8 p.m., Subway meeting room, 3850 Kitsap Way, Bremerton. Learn valuable public speak-

now change”: Through April 19, Friday’s and Saturdays at 8 p.m. at the Jewel Box Theatre, 225 Iverson St., Poulsbo. A musical comedy about love and relationship following multiple couples through a series of vignettes. A first date comes before dealing with marriage, which comes before children. Everything you have ever secretly thought about dating, romance, marriage, lovers, husbands, wives, and in-laws, but were afraid to admit. $17/$15. Info/RSVP: 360-6973183, jewelboxtickets@gmail. com. Tickets online at brownpapertickets.com.

Peter Gabriel

Gabriel on the big screen: April 23, 7:30 p.m. at Bainbridge Cinemas, 403 Madison Ave., Bainbridge Island. Peter Gabriel’s “Back to Front” concert is aired on the big screen at Bainbridge Cinemas. Gabriel will be inducted into the Rock & Roll Hall of Fame this month. $15. Tickets at the box office, or online at www. farawayentertainment.com.

Shatner’s world

Shatner’s one-man show on the big screen: April 24, 7:30 p.m. at Bainbridge Cinemas, 403 Madison Ave., Bainbridge Island. William Shatner of Star Trek fame performs a one-man show that is presented on the bigscreen at Bainbridge Cinemas. With anecdotes, songs, jokes audience members experience Shatner’s path through life from a Shakespearean actor to cultural ion. $12. Tickets at the box office, ing, evaluation and leadership skills in a friendly, supportive atmosphere. Info: Dave Harris, 360-478-7089 or harriscd.wa@ comcast.net. Bainbridge Island Republican Women: Second Wednesday, 11 a.m., Wing Point Golf and Country Club, 811 Cherry Ave., Bainbridge Island. Lunch: $17. Guests welcome. RSVP: 206-3375543. Bainbridge Island Toastmasters: Meets twice monthly on the 2nd and 4th Wednesdays, 7:15-8:30 p.m. in the Winslow Arms Apartments Clubhouse, 220 Parfitt Way, Bainbridge Island. An afternoon club meets

page 7

Fathom Events presents William Shatner’s oneman show, “Shatner’s World,” on the big screen at Bainbridge Cinemas on April 24.

kitsapnightlife Bar band

kitsapweek

or online at www.farawayentertainment.com.

Ongoing Pub Trivia Trivia time live: Pub trivia at multiple venues across Kitsap. Mondays: Hare & Hound, Poulsbo, 7 p.m. Tuesdays: Main Street Ale House, Kingston, 7 p.m. Wednesdays: Silverdale Beach Hotel, Silvderdale, 7 p.m. and at the Clearwater Casino, Suquamish, 8 p.m. Thursdays: Puerto Vallarta, Kingston, 7:30 p.m. Saturdays: Island Grill, Bainbridge Island, 8 p.m. Info: www.triviatimelive.com.

Blues open mic Blues and Brews open mic: Tuesdays, 7-10 p.m. at Bella Luna Pizza, 18408 Angeline Avenue, Suquamish. Open mic blues and rock music. Info: 360-598-5398.

Open mic cafe The Green Muse open mic: Tuesdays, 8-10 p.m., Pegasus Coffee House, 131 Parfitt Way, Bainbridge Island. Ethan J. Perry hosts a music, spoken word and poetry open mic night. All ages welcome.

Brewery jam Music To Our Beers jam: Wednesdays, 7-9 p.m., Bainbridge Island Brewery, 9415 Coppertop Loop NE. Open jam night hosted by Ethan J. Perry & His Remedy Band.

on the first and third Thursdays, 11:50 a.m. to 1 p.m. Open to all interested in developing their speaking skills in a fun supportive environment. Info: bainbridgeisland.toastmastersclubs. org, uspeakeasytoastmasters. toastmastersclubs.org. Bremerton Northern Model Railroad Club: First Mondays, 7-8 p.m., All Star Bowling Lanes, 10710 Silverdale Way NW, Silverdale. New members and guests. Info: Reed Cranmore, bremertonnorthern@comcast.net. Bridge Group: Tuesdays, 8 a.m., Stafford Suites, 1761 Pottery Ave., Port Orchard. Free to play, $4 for lunch. Info: Denise Hoyt, dhoyt@

Courtesy photo

Coffee Shop jam Biscuits & Gravy jam: Thursdays, 6:30-10 p.m., Pegasus Coffee House, 131 Parfitt Way, Bainbridge Island. Ethan J. Perry hosts a session in the round. Free, open to all musicians.

Karaoke with Eon Karaoke at Isla Bonita: Fridays, 9 p.m. to 1 a.m. 316 Winslow Way, Bainbridge Island. Hosted by Eon Smith with a voice as beautiful as her smile. Sing to your heart’s desire all night long at the most happening Friday night spot on Winslow Way.

Bremerton’s First Friday First Friday Art Walk: Each first Friday, 5-8 p.m. throughout 4th Street and Pacific Avenue in Downtown Bremerton. Shops and galleries open late to feature local art and music. staffordcare.com, 360-874-1212. Caregivers Support Group: Tuesdays, 2 p.m., Rolling Bay Presbyterian Church, 11042 Sunrise Drive NE, Bainbridge Island. Sponsored by Interfaith Volunteer Caregivers. Info: Karen, karen.carson@comcast.net, 206842-3539. Cat Fix Day: Second and last Tuesdays, 7-9 a.m., Kitsap Humane Society, 9167 Dickey Road NW, Silverdale. Low-cost spay/ neuter day for felines of lowincome residents. Limited to first 50 walk-ins. Info: 360-692-6977, ext. 1135; www.kitsap-humane. org/cat-fix-day.

Winslow’s first Friday First Friday Art Walk: The first Friday of each month, 6-8 p.m. along Winslow Way on Bainbridge Island. A variety of shops and galleries open late, many with refreshments and snacks, to feature local art.

Bluegrass Me and the Boys: Second Friday, 9 p.m., Tizley’s Europub, 18928 Front St., Poulsbo. Bluegrass, old and new. No cover charge.

Keyport Jazz Mark Lewis Jazz at Los Corales: Fridays, 6-9 p.m. at the Los Corales restaurant, 1918 NE Poulsbo Ave., Keyport. Jazz artist Mark Lewis performs with a series of guests. April 4 with John Stowell on guitar. April 11 with Brian Kinsella on piano. April 18 with Josh Mason on piano. April 25 with the cool jazz trio of Mark Cataldo Lodge (Sons of Italy): Third Wednesday, 5:30 p.m., VFW Hall, 190 Dora Ave., Bremerton. Dinner at 6:30 p.m. and meeting at 7:30 p.m. Free. Open to the public. Info: JoAnn Zarieki, 360692-6178. Central/South Kitsap Women and Cancer support group: Second and fourth Thursday, 10:30 a.m. to noon, Radiation Oncology Library, Harrison Medical Center, 2520 Cherry Ave., Bremerton. Facilitators: Sue-Marie Casagrande, oncology social worker; and Bonnie McVee, life coach and cancer survivor. Info: 360-744-4990, www.harrisonmedical.org.

newest series Special Gallery Showing • May 3 - June 15 Almost Candid Gallery 10978 Hwy 104 • Kingston, WA 360-297-1347 • www.almostcandid.net

Like Us

Lewis on saxophones, Richard Person on brass instruments and Ted Enderle on bass.

Poulsbo’s Second Saturday Second Saturday Art walk: Each second Saturday, 5-8 p.m. along Front Street in Poulsbo. Shops and galleries stay open late, many with refreshments and snacks, to showcase local art.

Charleston fourth Saturday Fourth Saturday Art Walk: Every fourth Saturday, noon to 8 p.m. in Bremerton’s Charleston District. Walk through shops and galleries featuring fine art.

Europub jam Celtic Jam Sessions: Fourth Sundays, 2-5 p.m., Tizley’s Europub, 18928 Front St., Poulsbo. Listeners and players welcome.

Computer training: Wednesdays, noon to 4 p.m., Bainbridge Library, 1270 Madison Ave. Sign up for an hour with a computer trainer and get your questions answered. Info: 206-842-4162. Depression & Bipolar Support Group: Tuesdays, 6-7:30 p.m., Saint Paul’s Episcopal Church, 700 Callahan Drive, Bremerton. Open to those living with depression and/or bipolar disorder, and loved ones and supporters of people living with mood disorders. Info: Richard, 360-377-8509.

See Calendar, Page 8


page 8 kitsapweek Friday, April 18, 2014

Calendar

Continued from page 7 Kitsap Al-Anon: Al-Anon meeting for anyone troubled by another person’s drinking. Sundays: Manchester Library, 8 a.m.; Winslow Arms Apartments, Bainbridge Island, 10 a.m. Mondays: Harper Church, Port Orchard, 10 a.m.; Jackson Park Community Center, Bremerton, noon; Saint Barnabas Church, Bainbridge Island, 7:30 p.m.; Belfair Haven Of Hope, 7:30 p.m.

Kitsap Foot & Ankle Clinic

Put your feet in our hands

OUCH!! Do you suffer from terrible Foot and Ankle pain? Our group of experienced doctors are here to help you get moving again! Call Today ! Dr. David Gent, DPM Dr. Kirsten Grau, DPM Dr. Andrew Hune, DPM

360.377.2233

900 Sheridan Road, Suite 101 Bremerton 1950 Pottery Ave., Ste 120, Port Orchard Cedar Heights Professional Center

Tuesdays: Silverdale Lutheran Church, noon; First Lutheran Church, Port Orchard, 7:30 p.m.; Park Vista Apartments, Port Orchard, 5:30 p.m.; Anglican Church of St. Charles, Poulsbo, 7 p.m. Wednesdays: Belfair Haven Of Hope, 10:30 a.m.; Anglican Church Of St. Charles, Poulsbo, noon. Thursdays: Port Gamble S’Klallam Wellness Center, Kingston, noon; Holy Trinity Church, Bremerton, noon; First Christian Church, Bremerton, 5:30 p.m.; First Lutheran Church, Poulsbo, 7 p.m.; First Lutheran Church, Port Orchard, 7:30 p.m. Fridays: Bethany Lutheran Church, Bainbridge Island, noon; First Lutheran Church, Port Orchard, 7:30 p.m. Saturdays: Washington Veterans Home, Port Orchard, 7:30 p.m.; Anglican Church Of St. Charles, Poulsbo, 6:30 p.m. Info: www. kitsap-al-anon.org. Navy wives club of America: Meets the second Saturday each month at 11 a.m. in the Jackson Park Community Center on Olding Road., Bremerton. Open to all Navy, Marine Corps, Coast Guard spouses wishing to support military and community projects. Info: 360-779-6191, jjprice@ embarqmail.com. Olympic Koi and Water Garden Club: Looking for new members. Meetings are once a month at various locations centered around Poulsbo and Port Orchard. Info: Helen Morgan, 360779-1475, email hrmorgan314@ gmail.com. Orca Club Meeting: Second Wednesdays of each month. 7 p.m. Venue subject to change. Discuss club business, promote the flying of radio controlled aircraft. Public welcome. Info: Ken Maguire, kenmaguire36@ hotmail.com, 360-779-5137. Parkinson’s Support Group: Third Thursday, 1 p.m., Bradley Center, Suite 140A, 26292 Lindvog Road, Kingston. For patients or caregivers, all are welcome. Info: Gary, 360-265-5993; Janet, 360-265-5992. Port Gamble Historical Museum lecture series: Second Monday, 5-8 p.m. Info: www. portgamble.com. Port Orchard Toastmasters Club: First and third Tuesdays, 6:30 p.m., Park Vista, 2944 SE Lund Ave., Port Orchard. Members learn to improve their speaking and leadership skills. Visitors welcome. Info: Bill Slach, 360-895-8519.

CENTRAL VALLEY ANIMAL HOSPITAL

NOW OPEN! NEW OWNERSHIP! 10310 Central Valley Rd NW • Poulsbo, WA 98370 360-930-5142 www.centralvalleyanimal.com

AFFORDABLE, State-of-the-art medical, dental, laboratory and surgical center Hours: Mon-Fri 8am-6pm Sat 8-12

11:30 a.m. at KiDiMu, 301 Ravine Lane NE, Bainbridge Island. Young explorers are invited for math-themed experiments and activities. Free with admission or membership. Info: www.kidimu. org or 206-855-4650. Storytime Thursday: 10:30 a.m. at KiDiMu, 301 Ravine Lane NE, Bainbridge Island. Practice literacy skills and have fun. Info: www.kidimu.org or 206-855-4650.

Teen

The musical comedy “I Love You, You’re Perfect, Now Change” will close its run at the Jewel Box Theatre in Poulsbo on April 19. Honey Toad Studio Reiki Circle: Second and fourth Tuesdays, 6:30 p.m., a private home on Bainbridge Island. Now welcoming new members. New to Reiki? Attunements and classes available. Info: 206-384-7081. NAMI Support group: National Alliance for Mental Illness meets on the second Monday of the month from 7-8:30 p.m. and on the second and fourth Tuesdays of every month from 1:30-3 p.m. at American West Bank on Hildebrand Lane, Bainbridge Island. Info: Jane at 206-898-6092.

Farmers markets Bainbridge Island Farmers market: Saturdays, April through Nov. 15, 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. at the town square by city on Bainbridge Island. Featuring a variety of veggies, herbs, native plants, food and live music. Bremerton Farmers Market: May through Oct. 16, Thursdays, 4-7 p.m. at Evergreen Park. And May 4 through October 12, Sundays, 10:30 a.m. to 2:30 p.m. Lynwood Community Market: Sundays, April 27 through Oct. 12, 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. in Lynwood on Bainbridge Island, on the corner of Lynwood Center Road and Point White Drive. Vendors include farmers, arts and crafts, food, jewelry and antiques. The market raises funds with the local parks and recreation district to build childrens playgrounds. Vendors welcome for $10 per space each Sunday. Info: 206-319-3692, lynwoodcommunity-market@ yahoo.com. Port Orchard Farmers Market: Saturdays, 9 a.m. to 3 p.m.

on the Port Orchard Waterfront. Featuring farmers, crafters, music, and food vendors. Poulsbo Farmers market: Saturdays, April 5 through Dec. 20, 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. on the corner of 7th Avenue and Iverson Street. Silverdale Farmers Market: April 30 through Sept. 24, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. in Old Town Silverdale between the boat launch and Waterfront Park.

Kids & Family Parents night out: April 19, 5:30-9:30 p.m. at the Kids Discover Museum, 301 Ravine Lane, Bainbridge Island. Kids spend the evening at KiDiMu for playtime, games and themed activities while parents enjoy a night out. Ages 3.5 to 9. Register by noon the day before the event. $30 per child for members, $40 per child for nonmembers. $10 off per sibling. Info: www. kidimu.org, 206-855-4650. Family movie “Born To Be Wild”: April 18, 3:30-4:45 p.m. at the Bainbridge Public Library. Celebrate Earth Day with a viewing of “Born To Be Wild,” rated G. Easter egg hunt: April 20, 10:30 a.m. to 3 p.m. at the Kids Discover Museum, 301 Ravine Lane, Bainbridge Island. Find eggs and then hide them again for the next hunters. Rain or shine, you will have fun! All ages welcome. Info: www.kidimu.org, 206-8554650. Jennifer K. Mann appearance: April 27, 3 p.m. at Eagle Harbor Book Co., 157 Winslow Way, Bainbridge Island. Author and

illustrator Jennifer K. Mann will read from her new picture book “Two Speckled Eggs” during a special story time. The story relates tales of grade school cliques and oddballs. Girls day out: May 3, 10 a.m. to 3 p.m., 9:30 a.m. at 3102 Wheaton Way, Bremerton. Space is limited. And event focusing on self-esteem with fun, interactive workshops and a resource fair with local organizations that support women and girls. Bremerton Mayor Patty Lent will speak. Local women business leaders will be present with workshops. Free mom and daughter photos. Sponsored by the Boys and Girls Club. Info/ RSVP: GirlsDayOut2014@gmail. com, 360-830-6947. Okee Dokee Brothers: May 3, 5:30 p.m. at the Bloedel Reserve on Bainbridge Island. Grammywinning duo entertains families with songs about outside and nature. $15. Tickets at www. brownpapertickets.com. Kitsap Local Market: Fridays, 1-6 p.m., Kitsap Mall, near Kohls and Hale’s Ales. Free face painting, children’s crafts. Info: www. Neighborlygreetings.com. Bainbridge Library story times: Toddler age Mondays, 10:30 a.m. Baby age Tuesdays, preschool age Wednesdays. Free. 1270 Madison Ave. N, Bainbridge Island. Info: 206-842-4162, www. krl.org. Storytime for Little Ones: Tuesdays, 10:30 a.m., Manchester Library, 8067 E. Main St., Port Orchard. Share stories, rhymes, songs and fun. Stay for music and crafts. Info: 360-871-3921, www.krl.org. KiDiMu activities: 301 Ravine Lane NE, Bainbridge Island. Free First Thursdays, hands-on exhibits and monthly programs, visit the website for schedule details. Info: 206-855-4650, www.kidimu.org. MESSY MONDAY: Come to KiDiMu for special art projects on Mondays. Drop in from 10:3011:30 a.m. Messy experimentation and sensory exploration are not only allowed but also encouraged. Free with admission or membership. Info: 206-8554650 or www.kidimu.org. Math Wednesday: 10:30-

Gaming: April 21, 2-4 p.m. at the Bainbridge Public Library. Low and hi-tech games from board games to Wii and PS3, including Mario Kart, Super Smash Bros., Wii Sports, Little Big Planet and more, all rated Teen and under. Grades 7-12. Writers group: April 28, 2-4 p.m. at the Bainbridge Public Library. Learn writing strategies, bring pieces you’re currently working one and get feedback, or start something new. Grades 7-12.

Literary Author David Sibley appearance: April 21, noon at Eagle Harbor Book Co., 157 Winslow Way, Bainbridge Island. Writer and naturalist David Sibley will launch his new “Sibley Guide to Birds, 2nd Edition.” Seating is limited. Tickets available at Eagle Harbor Book Co. or on the store’s website www.eagleharborbooks. com. Book sale: April 22, 10 a.m. to 3 p.m. at the Bainbridge Public Library. Info: bifriends.org. Poetry corners at BIMA: April 24, 7 p.m. at the Bainbridge Island Art Museum, 550 Winslow Way, Bainbridge Island. Poets read their poems selected for the month-long poetry corners display throughout Bainbridge.

Author Susan E. Flemming:

April 26, 4-6 p.m. at Liberty Bay Books, 18881 Front St., Poulsbo. Author Susan E. Flemming will be present. Flemming wrote the book “Seattle Pioneer Midwife,” about her greatgrandmother who traveled to Seattle in 1900 and was a midwife. Poet Laureate live: April 27, 7-8:30 p.m. at the Bainbridge Island Museum of Art. Washington State poets Sam Green and Kathleen Flennikin join forces to share favorite poems and reflect on the life of a Poet Laureate. Free. Info: ww.krl.org. Poetry reading at San Carlos: April 27, 1 p.m. at San Carlos Restaurant, 279 Madison Ave., Bainbridge Island. The 30th annual poetry reading at San Carlos. Poets of all ages and persuasions invited. The bar will be open. Info: nancyrekow@ msn.com, 206-842-4855. Art Book drive: Bainbridge Arts and Crafts seeks books to help build up the Bainbridge Library’s

See Calendar, Page 9


Friday, April 18, 2014

Calendar

Continued from page 8 collection of art, architecture and design. Drop books off at Bainbridge Arts and Crafts, 151 Winslow Way, Bainbridge Island, during business hours. Silverdale Writers’ Roundtable: Every Saturday, 9:30 a.m., Cafe Noir, 3261 NW Mount Vintage Way, No. 101, Silverdale. Looking for writers. Free. Info: Bob, 360-830-4968.

MUSIC Music of Remembrance: April 25, 7 p.m. at Grace Church, 8595 NE Day Road, Bainbridge Island. Music of Remembrance features Holocaust musicians and their art through musical performances, educational programs, and recordings. The performance will feature works by Lori Laitman, Gideon Klein, David Beiglman and Jake Heggie. Dances of universal peace: April 25, 7-9 p.m. at the Suquamish United Congregational Church, 18732 Division St., Suquamish. Join the circle of simple circle dances with songs and chants inspired by wisdom traditions

from around the world. No experience necessary. All dances are taught. Live music. $5 donation. Info: www.dancesofuniversalpeacena.org. Navy band concert: April 27, 2 p.m. at the Naval Undersea Museum in Keyport. The Snoqualmie Winds Saxophone Quartet and Five Star Brass Quintet will perform works by Astor Piazzola, and Bernstein and Copland. Also a presentation celebrating the American old west. Free. Info: navybandnw.cnmw@navy.mil. First Sunday Concerts presents cellist Zon Eastes: May 4, 4 p.m. at Waterfront Park Community Center on Bainbridge Island. $20 general admission, $10 youth. Tickets: www.brownpapertickets.com. Info: www. firstsundaysconcerts.org. Kirtan: First Thursdays, 7:30 p.m., Grace Church, 8595 NE Day Road, Bainbridge Island. Kirtan is musical yoga; a practice of singing the names of the divine in call-and-response form. Info: 206-842-9997, email grace@ gracehere.org. Kitsap Kickers Line Dancing Club: Fridays, 6 p.m., Sundays, 5 p.m. at Jackson Memorial Hall, 1961 Washington St., Silverdale. For beginners. $2 donation per night. Non-smoking, nondrinking family club. Info: 360277-9159. Kitsap Pines Chorus meeting:

Thursdays, 6:30-9 p.m. at Christ the Rock Community Church, 4100 SW Old Clifton Road, Port Orchard. Part of Sweet Adelines International, a group of women singers, a capella, barbershop style. Info: 360-710-8538, www. kitsappines.org.

Theater Ten-Minute Play Festival accepting submissions: Deadline is May 1 to submit to the Island Theatre Ten-Minute Play Festival. Aspiring and established Kitsap County playwrights are eligible. Winning plays will be performed on August 23 and 24 at Bainbridge Performing Arts. Info: www.islandtheatre.org, 206-842-3502. Dance to health: April 23, 7 p.m. at the Bremerton Community Theatre. Featuring dancers ages eight to 20-years-old from the Northwest School of Dance. Guest professional dancers will perform, including Sam Picart and Iyun Harrison from Seattle’s Ashani Dances, and also hip-hop dance crew Creative All Season. A benefit show to help fight childhood obesity and promote healthy, active lifestyles for kids. Proceeds will be donated to the Kitsap County Medical Society Alliance. Tickets online at www. bctshows.com, or 360-3735152. Info: 360-509-7468, www.

nwschoolofdance.com. CSTOCK performs “A Midsummer Night’s Dream”: April 2527, and May 2 through 11 at 7:30 p.m. Sunday performances at 6 p.m. Central Stage of County Kitsap performs Shakespear’s classic “A Midsummer Night’s Dream.”Tickets range from $8-15. Info/tickets: www.cstock.org/ shows/a-midsummer-night-sdream-2014. “Bye Bye Birdie”: April 25 through May 25, Fridays and Saturdays, 7:30 p.m. Sundays at 5 p.m. except May 25 at 3 p.m. at the Western Washington Center

$

for the Arts, 521 Bay St., Port Orchard. Tickets: $13-17. Info/ tickets: www.wwca.us, 360-7697469. Island Theatre at the Library “Gideon’s Knot”: April 26-27, 7:30-9:30 p.m. at the Bainbridge Public Library. Over the course of a 90-minute parent teacher conference, a grieving mother and a teacher discuss the suicide of Gideon. Info: www.islandtheatre.org. Free. “Kiss Me, Kate”: Through April 27, Fridays and Saturdays, 8 p.m. Sundays, 2:30 p.m. at the Bremerton Community Theatre,

kitsapweek

page 9

599 Lebo Blvd., Bremerton. A play within a play about a theatre company putting on a musical version of Shakespeare’s “The Taming of the Shrew,” with Cole Porter classics such as “Wunderbar,”“Too Darn Hot,” and “Brush Up Your Shakespeare.”The leading lady and director are exspouses whose backstage antics spill onto the stage. $17 general admission. $15 students, seniors and military. $10 children ages 12 and younger. Tickets: www. bctshows.com, 360-373-5152.

2H5TOHIFS AFD

WIT

CALL TOLL FREE 1-844-350-1114

GREATER KITSAP Come Join Us for Easter Brunch! Sunday, April 20th, 2014 10am - 2 pm

Assorted Salads, Fresh Fruit & Cheese, Carving Station, Prime Rib & Easter Ham, Vegetable Pasta Primavera, Vegetable Medley, Scalloped Potatoes, French Toast, Biscuits & Gravy, Cheesy Egg & Hashbrown Cassarole, Bacon & Sausage, Breakfast Breads, Dessert Tower Coffee, Soda, Tea Included

Adults: $18.95 Kids (6-12): $9.95 5 & Under: Free! Seniors & Military 10% Discount Reservations Suggested

DINING & ENTERTAINMENT FAMILY ~ PANCAKE ~

HOUSE $ 00 2 OFF

Breakfast, Lunch & Dinner Served All Day

VOTED BEST OF SOUTH KITSAP!

#1 KIDS MENU #1 FAMILY DINING

1034 Bethel Ave Port Orchard

(360)895-0545

ANY GUEST CHECK OF $15.00 OR MORE 1 coupon per table not valid with any other offer. Exp. 4/30/14

4115 Wheaton Way E. Bremerton (360)479-0788

3900 Kitsap Way Bremerton (360)479-2422

VIP CARD PROGRAM Purchase Price: Only $15.00, ask your server or bartender for details! NEVER EXPIRES!

15% DISCOUNT OFF OF EVERYTHING! (except alcohol). This includes Specials, Happy Hour Appetizers, Etc.

9989 Silverdale Way NW, Silverdale (360) 692-5888 www.fujiyamawa.com

Invite over 97,000 readers to your restaurant, special one-time or on-going events when you advertise in the weekly Dining & Entertainment guide.

Reserve your space now! May not be combined with any coupons

4215 Mile Hill Rd. Port Orchard (360) 443-2979

Bainbridge Review 206-842-6613 Central Kitsap Reporter 360-308-9161

North Kitsap Herald 360-779-4464 Bremerton Patriot Port Orchard Independent 360-308-9161 360-876-4414


page 10 kitsapweek Friday, April 18, 2014

Gourds are ‘home tweet home’ for martins Purple martins depend upon human help in order to maintain populations

Left, a purple martin feeds its young in a gourd-style birdhouse. Below, purple martins make use of a birdhouse colony set up in Poulsbo’s Oyster Plant Park. The Kitsap Audubon Society maintains such colonies in Poulsbo, Seabeck, Brownsville, Bainbridge Island, Driftwood Key and Hansville. They are set up each spring and cleaned during the off-season.

KITSAP BIRDING By GENE BULLOCK

P

urple martins can be engaging neighbors if you don’t mind their boisterous social chatter. The largest member of the swallow family, they get their name from the dark, glossy blue of the male. Like other swallows, they are known for their graceful aerial displays as they scoop up insects in flight. Like the storied swallows that have returned every March 19 since 1776 to Mission San Juan Capistrano in California, Kitsap’s purple martins come back each May to the same nesting colonies. In the early 1800s, ornithologist Alexander Wilson observed purple martins nesting in hollowed-out gourds that Native Americans placed around their villages. His notes are the first documented record of man-made bird houses being used by birds in North America. The birds rewarded the villagers by providing insect control

Don Willott and Gene Bullock / Courtesy photos

around their homes and food supplies. They also alerted villagers when a stranger or animal approached. With the introduction of European starlings and English house sparrows, purple martin populations plummeted because of the intense competition for natural cavity nesting sites. Without

Seattle Optometrist Helps LEGALLY BLIND to See!

Just because you have macular degeneration (or other vision-limiting conditions) doesn’t always mean you must give up driving or reading. A Seattle optometrist, Dr. Ross Cusic, is using miniaturized binoculars or telescopes to help people who have lost vision from macular degeneration, diabetic retinopathy or other eye conditions. “Our job is to figure out everything and anything possible to keep a person functioning,” says Dr. Cusic. “Whether it’s driving, reading, TV, seeing faces, check writing, bingo or bridge. We work with whatever is on the person’s ‘wish list.’”

Patient Driving with Bioptic Telescopic Glasses With interest-free payment options this technology is now more affordable than ever. “Definitely worth the $2150 cost. I should have come sooner,” said Dr. Cusic’s patient. For more information and a FREE telephone consultation,

human intervention, purple martins could have disappeared from North America altogether. In Western areas, some still use natural cavities, but most purple martins now rely on colonies hosted by humans. The males return early to scout for nest sites; but the rest usually arrive in May. If cold, rainy weather persists too long, however, it can threaten their survival. Their diet consists almost entirely of flying insects. If insects aren’t flying, the birds may starve. Kitsap Audubon has been parenting purple martin colonies in Kitsap County for more than 18 years, according to John McDonald and Paul Carson, who have man-

aged the program most of those years. Sandra

Reach 2.8 Million ReadeRs* Go Statewide or tarGet a reGion.

Call Today: 877-823-2020 Offices In: Bellingham, Kirkland and Olympia

contact YouR Bainbridge 206.842.6613 local WnPa Poulsbo 360.779.4464 MeMbeR neWsPaPeR Port Orchard 360.876.4414 to leaRn MoRe. Central Kitsap 360.308.9161 Bremerton 360.782.1581 A Division of Sound Publishing

Just By Placing One WNPA Statewide 2x2 Impact Ad.

includes 102 neWsPaPeRs & 33 tMc Publications. *BaSed on Statewide SurveyS 2.3 people read each copy of a community newSpaper.

ShowinG

Pavey has co-chaired the program for the last five years. Volunteer teams install, clean and monitor more than a hundred gourds and nest boxes in at least eight locations in Poulsbo, Seabeck, Brownsville, Bainbridge Island and Driftwood Key in Hansville. The gourds and nest boxes are put up each spring and taken down and cleaned each fall. Joan Carson recalls one year when the purple

martins watched patiently as volunteers mounted the gourds, and then promptly moved in. The teams also keep track of the number of nests used during each season, and estimate how many young are fledged. In 2011, for example, an estimated 133 young were fledged in the eight colonies monitored. Purple martins aren’t the only species that depend increasingly on See Martins, Page 15


2 5 T H

A N N U A L

C E L E B R A T I O N

C O M M E M O R AT I V E P U B L I C AT I O N S P O N S O R E D BY

A PR I L 2 2 , 2 014 • 12 : 0 0 N O O N • K I T SA P C O N F E R E N C E C E N T E R


2 0 1 4 Monica Blackwood, Principal/Director of Administration, Rice Fergus Miller Monica Blackwood has served as Principal/Director of Administration for Rice Fergus Miller Architectural Firm for more than 13 years. Monica’s extensive and longtime community involvement includes current president elect of the Olympic College Foundation and vice-president of fundraising, volunteer for Bremerton High School sports, board president for Holly Ridge Center, volunteer and organizer for Compassionate Friends of Kitsap County and active participant in the Parent Advisory Committee for the Olympic College Sophia Bremer Child Development Center. In addition, Monica was accepted into, and is now engaged, with the 2013/2014 class of 72 professionals at Seattle-based leadership tomorrow. Monica is the only member selected from the west sound area.

Charleen (Char) Burnette, Manager, BKAT Charleen (Char) Burnette was born in Chicago and graduated from Western Illinois University with a degree in Parks and Recreation. She met her husband, Mark, in San Diego, they have lived in Kitsap County since 1979. They have two sons, an awesome daughter-in-law, and two FABULOUS grandchildren. Her career with the City of Bremerton also began in 1979. She is currently the manager of the local Public Access TV Channel, BKAT. She has served on the Board of Directors for West Sound Arts Council, United Way and Kitsap County Commission on Children and Youth. She is a member and President Elect of East Bremerton Rotary.

Jennifer Forbes, Superior Court Justice Judge Forbes was elected to the Superior Court in 2012. Jennifer’s passion for community service started long-before. Jennifer has served the community in many capacities, as Board President and member of the American Red Cross to serving as a member on the Kitsap County Domestic Violence Task Force Respect Committee. Jennifer’s tenacity is attributed to her personal goal of building a safer and healthier community. Jennifer is passionate about youth issues, which is reflective in her dedication to the Youth Fundraising Campaign at the Haselwood Family YMCA, as a mentor for Kitsap County P.A.L.S and as a member of the Kitsap County Commission on Children and Youth.

THE

WOMEN

H O N O R E E S Charlene Edmond, advocate , ALIVE Shelter Charlene Edmond has served as an ALIVE Shelter advocate for seven years. After leaving in 2000, she returned in 2005, realizing her life’s work was a full dedication to serving survivors of domestic violence and their children. Soon after returning, Linda Joyce challenged Charlene to lead weekly support groups, after seeing her passion for helping women move beyond domestic violence. Charlene enthusiastically accepted the challenge, which is evident in the fact that her groups have outgrown space at the community center. She has taken her ability to touch hearts and minds into the community, not only with her church, but also as a passionate speaker of women’s issues throughout Kitsap County and the State of Washington.

Jamie Haywood , Community Volunteer Jamie Haywood is a passionate and dedicated community volunteer. Jamie has served on the Board of Directors for United Way of Kitsap County, where she also chaired Day of Caring and currently participates in the newly formed Vision Council. In 2008, Jamie was recognized as campaign Executive of the Year. Jamie has served on the Kitsap Community Foundation’s Celebration of Philanthropy Planning Committee, participates in walks for March of Dimes, volunteers at Pinecrest Elementary, Silverdale Pee-Wee’s, Habitat for Humanity and the Point-in-Time Homeless Count.

OF

Carol Johnson, owner, Styling Nook Hair Salon In addition to being a successful business owner of Styling Nook Hair Salon for more than 40 years, Carol Johnson is a passionate supporter of bettering the Kitsap community. Carol served on the Bremerton Parks and Recreation Commission for 14 years, where she assisted the fundraising efforts to build Pendergast Regional Park and for more than 13 years, Carol has contributed valuable hours to the Admiral Theatre Foundation. Carol served as Municipal Services Coordinator for the City of Bremerton Centennial Celebration in 2001, where she helped the city in raising thousands of dollars. In addition to her many volunteer endeavors, Carol is a stand-out soccer player with her team “Go Green”. In 2012, they claimed the title in the “Over-60” division at the Masters Futbol Cup in Bellingham.

ACHIEVEMENT

Amy Burnett was the first woman honored as a YWCA Woman of Achievement in 1989 for her tireless work for both our community and guaranteeing the future of YWCA in Kitsap County. After some challenging financial times during the 1980s’, when the YWCA was close to having to close the doors – Amy Burnett stepped forward with a special commissioned painting “The Circle of a Woman” – the same artwork as seen on this year’s invitations. Amy sold prints of this artwork and desperately needed the proceeds to be poured into the YWCA. Amy’s vision

STORY

escorted YWCA to a secure financial footing and YWCA was able to keep the doors open at both the ALIVE Shelter and to our entire community. Since 1989 Kitsap community members have nominated and honored over 300 extraordinary women. This is a day for celebrating women and community. Together we continue building partnerships and increasing community awareness to create positive social change.


2 0 1 4 Mary Nadar, Executive Director, North Kitsap Fishline As Executive Director of the North Kitsap Fishline, Mary Nadar has been instrumental in giving hope to hungry families in North Kitsap. Mary developed the “fish bucks” program, which allows families to shop the food bank in a more conventional way. Mary also developed the Hungry Heroes program to engage community members in supporting the food bank. Most notably, Mary lead the way for Fishline to obtain a larger, and much needed, facility to support the thousands of meals served each year.

Rebekah Uhtoff, Founder, Vice-president, Bremerton Beyond Accessible Play

H O N O R E E S

Leslie Reynolds Taylor, Captain, United Parcel Service Leslie Reynolds Taylor has been a commercial pilot for more than 40 years and currently is a Captain for United Parcel Services. Leslie began flying when she was 16 and since then, has been presented a national award for heroism for safely landing an airplane in distress. In addition to being a pilot, Leslie, with encouragement from her son Zachary, formed the South Kitsap Skateboard Association. After seven years of fundraising, the South Kitsap Skate Board Park opened last summer. Leslie is also involved with the Port Orchard Rotary, having served in many leadership roles in their exchange student and membership programs.

Jennifer Zuver, President, Silverdale Chamber of Commerce Jennifer Zuver currently serves as President of the Silverdale Chamber of Commerce, where she is active in the Military Affairs Committee, overseeing Military Appreciation Day at the Kitsap County Fairgrounds. Jennifer is passionate about literacy and serves as a board member for the Kitsap Adult Center for Education, volunteers at her children’s schools, is an active member of the PTSA Central Kitsap Council, Fairview Jr. High PTSA and Girl Scouts of America. In addition to her many volunteer endeavors, Jennifer works full time as an Advertising Representative for Sound Publishing.

K AT H L E E N D O N A H U E S H A R E S H E R P OW E R FU L S TO RY AT T H I S Y E A R’S WOA L U N C H E O N

Rebekah Uhtoff is founder and vice-president of Bremerton Beyond Accessible Play, an organization raising awareness for the need of inclusive playground equipment in local parks. Since February 2011, Rebekah has helped raise $500,000 for construction of the Evergreen Rotary Park Inclusive Playground and is currently organizing volunteer build teams to assist with the construction. Rebekah is also creating a disability awareness and anti-bullying program to be used during Saturday play dates at the park, which will encourage all children to accept their differences and celebrate their individual abilities.

Kathleen Donahue, Retired, Kitsap County Superior Court Kathleen Donahue is a recent retiree from the Kitsap County Superior Court. Having worked as a criminal interviewer, her knowledge of perpetrators became a personal matter when her own daughter, Georgia, was murdered

in Pierce County on Jan 22, 2011. As a wife, grandmother, and raising her daughter’s child, life, as she knew it, has become one of advocacy for the victims of homicide. Her story of domestic violence is one in which no mother or family should ever have to live.

ABOUT THE Y WCA EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR: Linda K. Joyce has served as the Executive Director of the YWCA of Kitsap County since June, 1994. Raised in Gary, Indiana (yes, she is a Hoosier!!) by parents who believed that community service was an obligation and human rights were Godgiven, Linda received a degree in Sociology from St. Joseph’s Calumet College which led to service at the Indiana Department of Welfare. There she worked as a Social Worker in the areas of family services, child protection, and senior services. Arriving in Kitsap County from Long Beach, California,

her life’s work in human services also included service with Catholic Charities of Los Angeles. As a Social Worker for the OASIS Program, she provided support for seniors, before being selected as the Director of the Catholic Charities Family Shelter for Homeless. Linda’s work with domestic violence survivors began at the YWCA Women Shelter in Long Beach. This experience, she is absolutely convinced, defined her mission in life. Under Linda’s leadership, the YWCA of Kitsap County has celebrated major successes: a three-phase renovation of the YWCA ALIVE Shelter and the relocation of the YWCA from a rented space into its own building, the YWCA Community Center,

allowing increased visibility and accessibility. Also, several programs were implemented, increasing the YWCA’s ability to provide a “safety net” for the over 6,000 community members who access services annually. In addition, YWCA events: Women of Achievement recognition Luncheon, Week without Violence and Take a Walk in Her Shoes attract supporters from throughout the county and beyond. “Since it’s incorporation in 1948, the YWCA is a community institution that has been historically innovative and bold. Through its creation and development of “life-changing and affirming” programs for women and their families, its work continues breaking down barriers. I have been blessed as a member

of the YWCA family with committed Boards of Directors, dedicated Staff and passionate community supporters….who are missiondriven.” Linda has been recognized by local groups such as Leadership Kitsap and Soroptomist International of Port Orchard with awards including the Women Helping Women Award, Keeper of the Dream Award as well as a Distinguished Leadership Award in observance of Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. and she has been recognized as a YWCA Woman of Achievement. One of seven siblings, she is the proud mother of a son who is a Deputy Sheriff and has a very handsome and smart grandson, Dion Jr.!!


H O N O R

R O L L

1 9 8 9

-

2 0 1 3

Lela Sharp Ardis Morrow Rowena Jongeward Marilyn Gordon Karen B Conoley Sakar Abdulazia Mitsuko Sharpe H Emily Moshay Linda K Joyce Patricia Graf-Hoke Barbara Cooper Denise Agee Dona Shaw Diane M Mosley Diane Juhl Karen Gray Coleta Corey Ivaly Alexander Claire Shearer Fran Moyer Laura Jull Marie Greer Dee Coppola Maureen Alexander Betti Sheldon Connie Meuller Gloria Kenlon Mary Guerroro Leone Cottrell-Adkins Bess Alpaugh Gwendolyn Shepherd Ellen Nakata Jamilah Khuja Jessica Guidry Joyce Cowdery Mourine Anduiza Sue Shipley Ellen Newberg Teresa Kiegler Lai Wan Gunter Paula Crane Elizabeth Annis Sue Shultz Cheryl Oakley Beverly A Kincaid Judge Karlynn Haberly Dayle Crane Jessica Annis Patty Sleasman Lori Oberlander Silvia Klatman Pam Hamon Susan Daniel Sherry Appleton Amelia Slingland Kathleen O’Brien Helen Knight Marilee Hansen Carissa Daniels Carol Arends Joan Soriano Felice Olson Marlene Kocur Johanna Hansen-Kelly Mildred Davis Augusta M. Asberry Jackie Souza Carla Olson Lucy Konizeski Joan Hanten, J.D. Irmgard Davis Liz Austin Barbara Stephenson Leah Olson Lisa Kostelac Shennell Harris Deanna DeFord Cynthia E Azari Julie Stevens Terrie O’Neill Tawni Danielle Krause Miah Harris Patricia DeGracia Norma Bailey Lisa Stirrett Ronda O’Sullivan Karen Kushner Cynthia Harrison Mary Ellen de la Pena Marcia Baker Jennifer Stowell Margaret Orn Anna Laurie Danielle Harvey Paula Del Rosario Maggie Ball Barbara Stuart Rene Overath Dori Leckner Joanne Haselwood Mary Louise DeMers Lisa Ballou Linda Streissguth Judge Marilyn Paja Lorinne M. Lee Janet Heath Sheila Determan Leslie Banigan Diane Sugzda Carolyn Palmer Nancy Leigh Gail Heistand Mary J Dimmen Kathleen Barrantes Lena Swanson Barbara Parker Patty Lent Janina Henson-Dinio Maryellen Dietz JoAnne Barker Loisanne Sykes Clara Parker Roberta Leonardy Carolyn Hershberger Stacy Dore’ Dr. Janet Barry Eliza D Taylor Vivi-Ann Parnell Marcia Lewis Deborah Hill Kiara Corrine Dozier Bonnie Bayes-McDaniel Tamika Tiller Kathy Paulsen Ann Lillig Anna Hoey-Dorsey Char Duey Dede Beckley Karen Timkim Delsie Peebles Dorothea Lintz Joan Holcomb Anne Dunne-Hayes Aquila Benton Patricia Moncure Thomas Helen M. Pendergraft Cheryl Lippy Judith Holden Teresa Duvall Ruth Bernstein Helen Thomas Patricia Peterson Geri Littlewood Linda Holt Alyce Eagans Chrisma Biggs Marge Thorne Marie ‘Muffy’ Pickel Loren Loftus Deborah P Horn Phyllis Eagans-Molina Carol D Blakely Shatara Tiller Margaret Pinkerton Estela Lopez Lynn Horton Billie Eder Denise Blas Peggy Tillery Julie Poston Vickie Lott Deborah Howard Keturah Edmond Irene Bowling Mariwyn Tinsley Julie Pounds A Ann Lovell Peggy Howland Jane Polworth Ekberg Audrey Boyer Val Torrens LeeAnn Powers Lavonne L Lynam Sandra Howes-Smith Ruth Enderle Laura T Boyle Rosemary Tracy Charlotte Puccia Rev. Suzelle Lynch Deborah Hughes Christine Endresen Claire Bradley Stacey M Tucker Cynthia Purser Debbie Macomber Judge J Robin Hunt Jane Erlandsen Megan Brauner Elaine Turso Valerie Quill Barbara P. Malich Christina S Hunter Sharon Fields Georgie Brewer Elaine Valencia Cherry Ann Rachal Phyllis Mann Dr. Elizabeth Hyde Maria Finch Maggie Brewton-Hight Karen Vargas Denise Rahman Marilyn Mantzke Angelie Ibay Estella Finister Jocelyn Bright Thanks Caroline Veenstra Mary Randolphto Our Sponsors Barbara J Markovich A Special Amy Igloi Dr. Willa A Fisher Marion Brittian Lillian Walker Susan Rankin Mary Anne Mascianica Vicki Ignacio Dee Fitzwater Lindsay Brockman Janet West Nancy Reid Marsha Masters Tamra Ingwaldson Gail Fleming Marcia Brixley Martha Westcott Elinor Ringland Martitha May Clarissa Ingwaldson Faye Flemister Debbie Brockman Chelsey L. Wheeler Chong Rio Carolyn McClurkan Sandy Isaacson Winnie Flores-Logan Deborah Brown Dr. Carol Whitehead Opal Robertson Teresa McDermott Joy Isham PROUD MEDIA SPONSOR Karen Flynn Jackie Brown Winifred Whitfield Dianne Robinson Reshondra McInnis Peggy Iversen Pam Foster Harriette Bryant Tania Whitney Jill Robinson Virginia McKinney Jan Jackson Dorothy Franklin Roxanne Bryson Jan Williams Ellen Rubens Lennie Meder Nomrah Jacobs AngelaSponsors Friehs Natalie Bryson Thanks to Our A Special Anita Williams Erica Runyan Jane Miles Holly James Vicki Gambrell Amy Burnett A Special A Special Thanks to Our Sponsors Karen Wilson Dale Russell Wendy Miles DarleneThanks Jenkins to Our Sponsors Mary Garguile Mary Campana Charisse Wise Kathleen Sanford Katha Miller-Winder Tina Jeu Charlotte Garrido Jolene Canaga A Special Thanks to Our SponsorsPat Woodbury Bree Schaaf Jessie Milligan Nikki Johanson Dorothy George Rebecca Carlson Linda Yerger Gussie Schaeffer April Mills Christine Johnson June CL Gerard Anna M Carney OUD MEDIA SPONSOR Sam Schicker Nancy Moen Particia Johnson Dr. Dorothy Ghylin Karen Carson Alexandra Schlicher PROUD MEDIA SPONSOR Jeannie Johnson Mercy G Montero IA SPONSOR Elizabeth A Gilje Oletha Carter-James Michiko Schulbach Joyce Montgomery Helen Johnson Elia Ginn Sandy Charbonneau Oletha Carter-James MEDIA SPONSOR Agnes Schultheis WandaPROUD Moore Marva Jones Teresa Goheen Shannon Childs Angela Sell Imelda Moore Marilyn Jones Mary Golden Gloria Clark A Thanks AASpecial Special Thanks totoOur Our Sponsors Mary Serbousek Kay Morgan Special Thanksto OurSponsors Sponsors Mary Jones Ellen Golombek Josephine Clark Hayley Shapley Lawan Morrison Eugenie Jones Carmen Gorak Vicki Collins Darrell Fields & The Killeen Group

Joyce and Ingram Family

SPECIAL THANKS TO OUR SPONSORS

A Special Thanks to Our Sponsors Proud Media Sponsor

PROUD MEDIA SPONSOR PROUD MEDIA SPONSOR PROUD MEDIA SPONSOR PROUD MEDIA SPONSOR

Oletha Carter-James

Oletha Carter-James

Oletha Carter-James PROUD MEDIA SPONSOR

arrell Fields & The Killeen ields & Group lleen up

Joyce and Ingram Family Darrell Fields & Joyce and Ingram TheFamily Killeen Group

KITSAP CONFERENCE KITSAP CENTER CONFERENCE CENTER

The Marvin Williams The Family Marvin Williams Family

KITSAP CONFERENCE CENTER

yWca

Joyce and Ingram Family Darrell Fields & of kitsap county The Killeen Group www.ywcakitsap.org Phone: (360) 470-0522

KITSAP CONFERENCE CENTER

Oletha Carter-James

Darrell Fields & Darrell Fields & Darrell Fields Darrell Fields &&

Carter-James 905 Pacific Avenue ~ Bremerton, Oletha WA 98337 Oletha Carter-James Oletha Carter-James Oletha Carter-James The Line: 1 (800) 500-5513 24 Hour Crisis Marvin Williams Family

KITSAP Joyce and Ingram CONFERENCE Joyce and Ingram

Joyceand andIngram Ingram Joyce

The Marvin Williams Family Oletha Carter-James

Joyce and Ingram

Family Harrison Medical Center

The Marvin Williams Family


Friday, April 18, 2014

Martins

centers on closely watched bluebird boxes along bluebird trails, where unwelcome intruders are rigorously evicted. But that’s another story. — Gene Bullock is editor of the Kitsap Audubon Society newsletter, The Kingfisher. Contact him at genebullock@comcast.net

Continued from page 10 people for their continued survival. Bluebirds suffered a similar decline when introduced species such as starlings and house sparrows took over their natural cavities. Bluebird recovery now

Guthrie

minor acting roles and even writing a children’s book, “Mooses Come Walking” (illustrated by Alice Brock of “Alice’s Restaurant.” Guthrie’s own children have taken up the musical trade and perform with him at times. Guthrie will perform at Bremerton’s Admiral Theatre on April 19. The

What: Arlo Guthrie in concert When: April 19, 6 p.m. dinner, 7:30 p.m. concert Where: Admiral Theatre, 515 Pacific Ave., Bremerton Tickets: Reserved seating from $20-80 Info: The theater box office, 360-373-6743, www. admiraltheatre.org

Sudoku

Generated by http://www.opensky.ca/~jdhil

Kitsap Week Sudoku

Sudoku is a number-placing puzzle based on a 9x9 grid with several given numbers. The object is to place the numbers 1 to 9 in the empty squares so that each row, each The object is todifficulty place the numbers 1 tosame 9 in the emptyonly squares Puzzle 1 (Hard, rating 0.75) column and each 3x3 box contains the number once.so that each row, each column and each 3x3 box contains the same number only once.

Sudoku is a number-placing puzzle based on a 9x9 grid with several given numbers. Puzzle 16 (Easy, difficulty rating 0.36)

4

3

2

5

88

9

2

7

9

8

5

4

8

7

3

6

6

64

1

1 8

2

5 3

6

4

9

7

6

7 5

9

9

8

4

7 1

2

3 5

3

4

2

8 6

1

8

4

3

2

6

5

1

7

1

9

2

6

4

5

9

8

3

7

7

1

4

3

8

2

5

9

6

Puzzle 22 (Medium, difficulty rating 0.59)

1

9

2

7

96

41

6

76

2

7

8

4

5

9

1

8

5

9 7

6

3

5

4

9

3

6

2 8

8

3

6 2

9

4

5

7 1

6

3

5

8

7

9 8

5

7

6

2

7

1

4

1

9

6

2

2 4

1 3

7

3

1

1

9

1

2

2 1

4

9 3

6

4

2

4

6

6

9

5

5

6

1

2

1

9

5

3

6

7

Puzz

3

4

6

2

5

7

8

9

1

5

4

3

5

2

7 8

9

8

8

25

9

1

4

4

7

89

1

2

1

1

1

6

7

8

2

8

3

8

4

43

7

9

6

6

7

7

3

4

5

9

8

3

2

7

4

Puzzle 19 (Hard, difficulty rating 0.65)

1

8

7

9

Puzz

ANSWERS ANSWERS

Crosswords

6

3

3

2 53

24. Arid

5. Court ploy

25. Cleave

6. A-list

26. Jagged, as a leaf’s edge

7. Yield

28. 40 winks

8. Catch

30. Bulrush, e.g.

9. Naval base?

31. Walk nonchalantly

10. Dresden’s river

33. Small knotlike protuberance

11. Athletic supporter?

35. Opening through abdominal wall to small intestines

12. Sink

37. Broken down by hard use

14. Straphanger

40. “Stop right there!” 44. Earthy pigment

21. Inquiry to determine public aid eligibility (2 wds)

45. Chair part

24. Undercoat

47. Boredom

25. Trust (2 wds)

48. Denials

27. British counties

49. Brand, in a way

29. Ale holder

51. After expenses

30. Crater on moon’s far side

52. “___ Ng” (They Might Be Giants song)

32. “Sure”

53. Sensationalistic newspaper (hyphenated)

36. Black gold

56. Fly, e.g.

ANSWERS

Arlo Guthrie at the Admiral Theatre

Generated by http://www.opensky.ca/~jdhildeb/software/sudokugen/ on Thu Jun 25 18:51:23 2009 GMT. Enjoy!

26 98 11 37 89 93 52 71 46 68 15 24

1 7 9 9 4 3 5 3 2 1 6 7 84 26 58 49 34 67 73 52 85

75 3 9 6 7 8 2 5 3 4 4 22 6 6 4 8 5 4 1 1 7 5 19 8 4 3 5 9 3 2 7 6 8 93 7 7 5 1 3 6 4 2 8 9

46 9 1 1 4 6 9 3 8 2 7

4 3 6 8 6 1 8 2 7 8 9 1 5 2 9 4 31 4 5 7 2 1 7 88 5 2 2 3 7 5

69 93 96 11 8

7

4 5

3

5

Puzzle 16 (Easy, difficulty rating 0.36) Puzzle 1 (Hard, difficulty rating 0.75)

6 2

7

8

6

2

4

5

2 3

5

9

8 1

3

6

9

7

4

5

2

8

7

3

9

1

6

Puzz

Generated by http://www.opensky.ca/~jdhildeb/software/sudokugen Generated by http://www.opensky.ca/~jdhildeb/software/sudokugen

34. ___-eyed 37. Contributes 38. Careful management of resources

59. Football play

39. Reduce

61. Boston college

41. Dismay

62. One who mourns

42. Conjectures

8. Densely populated slum areas

63. Junction across which a nerve impulse passes

43. Baseball players at bat, hopefully

15. Halo

64. Blind

46. One-spot

Across 1. Office desk accessory

16. Preclude (2 wds) 17. Melted cheese with ale over toast

50. Mimicry 53. Coarse file Down

18. Canadian province

54. “Aeneid” figure 55. Fraction of a newton

19. Above

1. Colorful Mexican shawls

20. Spill

2. Lizard-like reptile in New Zealand

22. A.T.M. need

58. Bank offering, for short

3. Dry gulches

23. Be worthwhile

60. Compete

4. Chick’s sound

56. Leave in a hurry, with “out”

United Way of Kitsap County

Our Vision is to grow a stronger Community Give. Advocate. Volunteer Please help us to United Way of Kitsap Cultivate the Giver in County You OurCultivate Vision is to the growAdvocate a stronger Community in You Give. Advocate. Volunteer Cultivate the Volunteer in You Please help us to Cultivate the Giver in You WE CAN DO MORE UNITED THAN WE EVER CAN ALO Cultivate the Advocate in You the Volunteersafety in You net grow str Join hands and helpCultivate the community

CANofDOKitsap MORE County United WE Way

27

13. Pleasure trips

57. Shrubs clipped into shapes

THAN WE EVERCommunity Our VisionUNITED is to grow a stronger Give. Advocate. Volunteer CAN ALONE 8 15 Please help us to Easy, diffi difficulty Easy, culty rating 0.622 0.36 Join hands Cultivate the and Giverhelp in You Cultivate Advocate in You thethe community Sponsored by Cultivate safety the Volunteer net in You 509-476-3602 grow stronger! WE CAN DO MORE UNITED THAN WE EVER CAN ALONE www.unitedwaykitsap.org Join hands and help the community safety net grow stronger! 8

page 15

Kitsap Week Crossword

dinner and a concert will begin at 6 p.m.; Guthrie will take the stage at 7:30 p.m. Tickets range from $20-80 and can be purchased online at www. admiraltheatre.org, or by calling 360-373-6743. The theater’s ticket office hours are 11 a.m. to 5 p.m., Monday through Friday. Guthrie will be joined on stage by his son Abe, as well as Bobby Sweet and Terry Hall.

Continued from page 1

kitsapweek

1

4

3

2


page 16 kitsapweek Friday, April 18, 2014 $ $$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ $ (With or Without Title) some restrictions apply $ $ Belfair $ $ $ $ $ $$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$$ $

CASH FOR CARS 1-866-428-0696

call toll free: 1-800.388.2527

MOTORS, INC.

2008 Acura MDX

AWD, 67k Miles, Leather, Multi CD, Moonroof, 3rd Seat, Heated Seats, Backup Camera

click:

NW-Ads.com LittleNickel.com

We offer WHOLESALE PRICING on all of our jewelry!

CA$H FOR GOLD SILVER COINS DIAMONDS GUITARS ANTIQUES CAMERAS LAPTOPS TOOLS

BAINBRIDGE ISLAND

Anything Of Value!

WING POINT NEIGHBORHOOD! $399,000 Come see this charming open floor plan 3br/2ba rambler surrounded by mature gardens. Dreamy, spacious kitchen! Unfinished lwr level w/private entrance! Caron Anderson 206-842-5636 View at www.johnlscott.com/13439

We buy gift cards We now buy cell phones Open Mon-Sat 9-7 & Sun 10-5

4911 ST Hwy 303 • Bremerton, WA Call Toll Free

1-888-436-0659

www.tradermagees.com

NORTH KITSAP

OPEN HOUSE SAT 1-4:30 $369,000 1401 NE Watland St DD: From Hwy 305, go E on Forest Rock Ln up hill to R @ 12th Ave to Caldart, L on Watland. Spacious New hm, 2 stry w/bsmnt, prvt bkyrd & more Villa MacNealy 360-265-6556 View at www.johnlscott.com/64001 POULSBO $499,000 Wonderful View Home on acreage! Custom touches throughout this spacious home that features 4320 sqft, 4 bdrms & lower guest quarters w/ a huge bonus room. Gary Stewart 360-509-5161 View at www.johnlscott.com/79158

CENTRAL KITSAP OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK! $279,000 10594 Buccaneer Place NW. Our Pineridge model on lot 13 at $279K. DD: Silverdale Way to Anderson Hill Rd to Apex to Rt. on Buccaneer Silverdale Office 360-692-9777 View at www.johnlscott.com/85188 OPEN HOUSE SAT 1-4 $304,000 6811 NW Ioka. DD: Hwy 3 to W. on Anderson Hill Rd. to N. ( Rt) on Willamette Meridian, to W. (Lft) on Ioka to address on lft. Pristine Log home on beautiful lot Jenny Geister 360-630-6037 View at www.johnlscott.com/40137

www.dickvlistmotors.com 876-4428 • 1-888-600-4428

email: ENCUUKĆ‚ GFU"UQWPFRWDNKUJKPI EQO Come See Us First!

EXCEPTIONAL VIEWS! $335,000 Views from Indianola to Seattle w/this versatile Suquamish hm. Dbl lot. View decks! Designer remodel! Lwr level w/separate entrance perfect for mom in law apt. Tim Wilkins 206-780-3309 View at www.johnlscott.com/96693

23,995

ONLY $ 514 BAY STREET, PORT ORCHARD

powered by...

Trader MaGee’s

KINGSTON $189,000 Adorable 2-story hm featuring 3bd,1.75ba,light/ bright liv rm w/bay window & wood FP,pellet stove lower level,updated kitch w/SS appliances,mstr w/ private bath. Wendy Wardlow 360-710-4184 View at www.johnlscott.com/45477

VOTED BEST USED AUTO DEALER IN SOUTH KITSAP 2012

Dick VLIST

PIERCE COUNTY GIG HARBOR $579,000 House beautiful! Open bright vaulted entry w/grand staircase, 5 bd w/1 on main floor. 3 full ba, 3-car gar w/wrkshp, 3700+ Sq Ft, full sprink sys lg bonus rm Tommy Jones 360-731-9685 View at www.johnlscott.com/38550

LAND & LOTS PORT ORCHARD $79,000 Very private 3.25 acres with well & 3BR septic design! Level lot with stream on one side. Perfect for your dream home either rambler or two story, come see!! Terry Taylor 360-731-3369 View at www.johnlscott.com/74050 POULSBO $90,000 Build your dream with panoramic view of Miller Bay, the Sound & the Cascade Mountain Range w/marina access close by for your boating/marine pleasure. Gary Stewart 360-509-5161 View at www.johnlscott.com/64515 POULSBO $179,500 Industrial Site centrally btwn Poulsbo/Kng Ferry. 60’paved turnout to 36’access road. HV3 phase power close by, public water in street, septic design complete. Jan Zufelt 360-297-0325 View at www.johnlscott.com/41690

JOHN L. SCOTT KITSAP COUNTY OFFICE LOCATIONS Bainbridge Island | Kevin Pearson, Managing Broker.............. (206) 842-5636 Kingston | Tom Heckly, Managing Broker.......................................... (360) 297-7500 Port Orchard | Jacqui Curtiss, Managing Broker .......................... (360) 876-7600 Poulsbo | Frank Wilson, Managing Broker ........................................ (360) 779-7555 Silverdale | Lee Avery, Managing Broker .................................. (360) 692-9777 John L. Scott Real Estate has 122 offices, some offices are independently owned and operated.

Kitsap Fixer, Por t Orchard 3bdrm 2bath 1855sqft on Big Lot. $65,000. 360-895-9026; Realty West 206-6503908 Seabeck Special 3bdrm 2bath on 1/2 Acre. 2003 Construction. $150,000. FHA Ter ms 360-8959026; Realty West 206510-7672 West Bremerton Bargain 1836sqft 4 Bedroom 2 bath $119,232. FHA Ter ms 360-895-9026; Realty West 206-5107672

www.Ferguson ColeHomes.com

SOUTH KITSAP PORT ORCHARD $160,950 Beautiful, heavily wooded waterfront lot on Wye Lake! 140 X 141, Seller has had a BSA done. No motors but other boats allowed. Trout stocked lake, dock too! Linda Esposito-Depee 360-876-7600 View at www.johnlscott.com/76330

Real Estate for Sale Kitsap County

real estate for sale - WA Real Estate for Sale Kitsap County

360-434-2104

www.FergusonColeHomes.com

Real Estate for Sale Pierce County

Call now for Free List! HUD-owned Pierce C o u n t y, 2 7 H o m e s $58,500-$325,000. Many with Low Down payment FHA Financing. 800-599-7741; 206-6503908; 253-655-7327 D u p o n t L i k e N e w ! 5 R E A LT Y W E S T, t h e B e d r o o m s , 3 B a t h s , HUD Experts! www.real2 2 5 2 s q f t . $ 2 8 3 , 0 0 0 tywest.com FHA Terms Boyd: 425766-7370; Realty West Get the ball rolling... Call 800-388-2527 today. 206-650-3908 Bremerton Buy! 1008sqft 2 Bedroom Rambler w/Garage + Car por t. Only $82,800. FHA Ter ms 360-895-9026; Realty West 206-6503908

Fr e e L i s t 9 K i t s a p County Homes from $65,000 to $195,000. M a n y w i t h Fa b u l o u s FHA Financing. Realty West Diane 360-8959 0 2 6 w w w. r e a l t y w est.com

Real Estate for Sale Thurston County

Lacey Buy! Like New 3bdrm 2bath Manufactured Home on Corner Lot, New Kitchen & Baths. $125,950 FHA Terms. Realty West 206Kingston Wow! 3bdr m 650-3908 2bath 1248sqft $76,500. 360-895-9026; Realty West 206-650-3908 Find what you need 24 hours a day. HYDROPONICS | LIGHTING | ORGANICS

20All

% off

Advanced Nutrients Garden all winter indoors! 8912 Key Peninsula Hwy N • Lakebay, WA 98349 (253) 88 4SURE (7873) | KPIndoorGardenStore.com

875003-01

Open Mon-Sat 11-7 * Not valid with with any other otheroffers, offers,while whilesupplies supplieslast. last.Expires Expires3-31-14. 2-28-14.

Real Estate for Sale Lots/Acreage

real estate for sale Real Estate for Sale Lots/Acreage

Their Loss Your Gain! Hunting Cabin on 30 Timbered Acres Year Round Creek Minutes to Lake Roosevelt. County Road Frontage. $69,900 $500 Down $750 Month Also, 3 Bdrm 2 Bath Farmhouse on 10 Timbered Acres close to Spokane, WA. $173,000. $3000 Down $1480 Month

3 Adjacent level building lots, nice neat homes, pit set in, utilities in, very good water, room for shop, clean classic mining town. Train rides, low crime, 2 courses, fishing 1 block to Pend Oreille River with 60 miles of Frontier b o a t i n g , 2 s k i a r e a s, ATV area, Salmo Wilder509-468-0483 n e s s a r e a , ex c e l l e n t frontiernorthwest.com hunting, very last building lots Metaline Falls, www.nw-ads.com WA $17,500 each/OBO, c a s h . B e n ( 5 0 9 ) 4 4 6 - We’ll leave the site on for you. 3014 ClassiďŹ eds. We’ve got you covered. 800-388-2527 SECLUDED 5 acre 3BR, 2.5 bath, 2300 sqft home with bonus craft room. Vaulted ceilings in great room and large master bedroom. 3 car garage, hickory wood cabinets throughout & birch doors & trim. All appliances including, fridge, stove, washer & dryer. Backup wood heat & generator paneI. Built in 2006 and still in immaculate condition. Large 18X33 raised deck. Outbuildings including: 1.) large 12X16 garden shed, 2.) wood shed, 3.) 24X33 covered RV p a r k i n g , a n d 4 . ) 56X40 bar n/shop with heated 10X16 tackroom/office, 2 stalls and 200amp service. Fenced pasture, and lots of trails fo r h o r s e s o r q u a d s. N e w 1 6 i Tr a n e h e a t p u m p, a n d n ew l ow sound dishwasher (both within the last 2 years). Large garden area and several fr uit trees. $375,000. Located near Belfair. Won’t last long at this price!! Give us a call at 360-271-2195.

Real Estate for Sale Other Areas

20 Acres. $0 Down, Only $119/mo. Owner Financing, NO CREDIT CHECKS! Near El Paso, Texas. Beautiful Mountain Views! Money Back Guarantee Call 866-8825263Â Ext. 81 www.sunsetranches.net

Real Estate for Rent Kitsap County BREMERTON, WA 98311

3 BR, 2.5 BA, 1300 SF Duplex with garage. Located near Silverdale at 1325 NW Silver Street. Stove, refrigerator, microwave, washer & drye r. $ 1 , 0 9 5 m o n t h , $1,100 deposit. 360895-9655. POULSBO

2 BR, 1 BA, $750 HOME with washer, dryer, large yard & plenty of parking. Great location, easy commute to ferry, Bangor & Keypor t. $1,000 d e p. N o s m o k i n g . N o pets. 94 NE State Hwy 308. Call 206-972-1874. WEST BREMERTON

$950/Mo 2 BR, 1 BA Close to Ferry & Shipyard. New Paint & Carpet. No Pets, No Smoking. View of The Sound & Olympics. First Month & $600 Deposit.

Call 360-990-0268 Real Estate for Rent Thurston County

real estate for rent - WA Real Estate for Rent Kitsap County BAINBRIDGE ISLAND

1500 SQ FT, 2 Bedroom apar tment with Sound View. All utilities included less phone. Dish TV, Internet and off street 3ELLĂĽITĂĽFORĂĽFREEĂĽINĂĽTHEĂĽ&,%! par king. No Smoking/ Pets. $1000 per month THEFLEA SOUNDPUBLISHING COM with 1st month and damage deposit of $300. Viewing after April 1st. Find what you need 24 hours a day. Phone 206-842-2599. Email windgp@aol.com Get the ball rolling... Call 800-388-2527 today. (tell subject)

&INDĂĽIT ĂĽ"UYĂĽIT ĂĽ3ELLĂĽIT NW ADS COM

Like New in Lacey 3bdrm 2bath, Carpor t, Fenced Cor ner Lot $1175/mo. See at: 532 Glenalda Ct. Good Credit & Steady employment required. 800-682-1738 Apartments for Rent Kitsap County BAINBRIDGE ISLAND

550 Madison Ave Apartments Now Accepting Applications for Wait List

1 & 2 BR, 1 BA Apts Income Limits Apply

206-842-8144 BAINBRIDGE ISLAND

Island Terrace Apartments

Rent Starts at $682 1 BR, 2 BA Apts Avail Income Limits Apply

821 NE High School Rd Bainbridge Is, 98110

206-842-1280 TDD: 711

&INDĂĽITĂĽFASTĂĽANDĂĽEASY WWW NW ADS COM

So easy you can do it standing on your head

www.nw-ads.com


Friday, April 18, 2014 kitsapweek page 17

QUALITY BUILDINGS AT AFFORDABLE PRICES! 24x24x8 Two Car Garage

$12,259+tax

$12,770

28x36x10 Hobby Shop

$18,359+tax

24x36x10 Garage/Hobby Shop

$15,999+tax

24x36x9 Garage / Hobby Shop

$16,666

28x36x14 Two Car Garage/Shop

$19,124

32x48x10 Four Car Garage

$19,695+tax

$15,514+tax

24x40x15 RV Garage

$16,160

30x36x18 & 9 2-Story, 3-Stall Garage

$20,516

30x48x15 Big Boy Toy Garage

$32,547+tax

$33,903 36x36x16 & 9 Two Car & RV Garage

$20,439+tax

$21,291

30x38x10 Garage & Hobby Shop w/Covered Storage

$18,579+tax

$19,353 30x50x18 & 9 Two Story Garage & RV

Thorndike © 2000

$27,259+tax

$28,395

36x36x14 Two Car Garage Shop & RV

$26,719+tax

$27,832 30x50 2 Story RV Garage w/ Covered Deck

$26,698+tax

$27,811

36x48 2 Story Three Car Garage

$40,195+tax

$41,869 36x36x18 &12 Monitor Barn

$46,652 $27,379+tax $23,878+tax $24,873 $52,934+tax $55,139 $45,659+tax SERVING KITSAP, MASON, JEFFERSON, CLALLAM Co’s.

$28,520

All Prices Include Plans, Labor, Materials and Concrete Floors

S B S

SOUN D BUILDING SY STEM S

Post Frame Building Professionals

Unsurpassed in Customer 1(888)948-7467 Satisfaction or (360)437-1219 35 Years of Professional Experience! Call Us Before You Buy

Fax (360)437-1218

www.soundbuildingsystemsinc.com

PRICES MAY VARY ACCORDING TO DISTANCE & CITY OR COUNTY CODES & RESTRICTIONS. Contractor’s License #SOUNDBS027NM


page 18 kitsapweek Friday, April 18, 2014 Apartments for Rent Kitsap County

Announcements

BAINBRIDGE ISLAND

Rhododendron Apts 235 High School Road

BREMERTON

BAINBRIDGE ISLAND

1154 Jacobsen Blvd, Bremerton (Manette) $429,000 SAT 1-4 Spectacular 180 Panoramic Eastern View of the Dynamic Manette Waterways to View Ferries, Navy Ships, Pleasure Craft & Marine Life. 3 BR, 2 BA, 2752 SF. Stunning, Spacious Remodeled Home on a Large, Gorgeous View Lot which feels like Waterfront! Features Light, Bright, Open Concept, Slab Granite, Stainless Steel Appliances, Alder Cabinets, Quartz, Hardwood Floors, Fireplace, Tons of Windows & So Much More! Two Large Decks for Waterside Entertaining. Perfect Year Around Vacation Spot! Great Manette Neighborhood. See Photos at MLS #604621. John Becker 360-373-5570 www. mysecretagent.com

8317 NE Hidden Cove Road $698,000 SAT 1-4 New Listing! Private, sunny and gorgeous acreage featuring mature gardens and rolling lawn. Timeless Mid-Century design with great bones, 3-bedrooms, newer roof, deck and fantastic shop. MLS #620306. Jackie Syvertsen, 206/790-3600, BainbridgeIslandLiving.com. Windermere Real Estate/BI, Inc.

NORTH KITSAP 20974 Virginia Avenue NE, Kingston $320,000 SAT 1-4 Charming Kingston home has 3BR/2.75BA, sunny gardens, decks and patio with a hot tub. Built with fine details, quality materials and detailed craftsmanship. Oversized garage with fully-finished above garage bonus room. MLS #602296. Terry Klein, 206/949-3360, TerryKlein.withwre.com. Windermere Real Estate/BI, Inc.

BAINBRIDGE ISLAND 181 Winslow Way W $259,900 SAT 1:30-3:30 Great location in the heart of downtown Winslow. Neat, tidy, and efficient. New paint, new carpet, young appliances. Lotsa light, lotsa view with lotsa activity. Most conveniences and services nearby. MLS #619487. Coldwell Banker McKenzie / Barrow-Miller Team 206-842-1733 x 105. 11702 NE Sunset Loop $649,000 OPEN SUN 1-4 Exceptional, spacious stylish NW Contemporary home close to Grand Forest. 3477 sq ft completely remodeled, very versatile floor plan. 3 beds on main plus lower guest suite or additional living space (bedroom, office & family room). Outstanding quality finishing; hardwood, slate floors, chefs kitchen, stainless appliances, gas range, cherry cabinets, live-edge maple counter. Baths with radiant heated floors. New systems throughout. Large sunny yard: lawn, perennials, mature trees,fenced dog run. MLS #611270, Listed by Joanna Paterson, Realogics Sotheby’s International Realty 206.612.1976.

494 Cosgrove Street NW $759,000 SAT 1-4 Location, Location, Location-Charming home with a gated entry to lovely professionally landscaped gardens with fruit trees, lawn and fire pit. Easy stroll to town, attention to detail w/ white wainscoting and columns, light filled living room with soaring ceilings and cozy fireplace, separate dining room opens to well-appointed kitchen w/ large center island, walk-in pantry and home office space. Family room opens to covered porch, large bonus room above garage, Master bedroom with walk-in closet and en-suite Master bathroom. Two additional bedrooms and full bath, powder room, utility room and large attached garage. MLS# 610406 Broker: Listed by Kimberly McLaughlin 206 948 7135 7035 Berganio Rd $920,000 SUN 1-3 This beautiful Raven Construction quality home is on a sprawling 2.58 acre lot. It includes remarkable landscaping with water features, a huge gourmet kitchen, and a master suite of grand proportions. All in 3888 square feet, with 4 bedrooms, 3 1/2 baths, Great Room, study, 3 car garage, and much, much, more. MLS #615887. Coldwell Banker McKenzie / BarrowMiller Team 206-842-1733 x 124. 10429 NE Brackenwood Lane $950,000 SAT 1-4 New Listing! Architect-designed home offers classic NW design—open plan, vaulted ceilings, stone entry, fireplace, and floor-toceiling windows that capture panoramic views of the Sound, shipping lanes & Mountains. Private community beach. MLS #619495. Carl Sussman, 206/714-6233, BeautifulBainbridge. com. Windermere Real Estate/BI, Inc. 4923 NE Tolo Road $1,595,000 SAT 1-4 Coastal Magic! Fabulous opportunity for a waterfront retreat offering 130 feet of prime no-bank beachfront, sparkling Puget Sound and Olympic Mountain views, gorgeous gardens, expansive main house, plus charming guest cottage. MLS #508019. Terry Klein, 206/949-3360, TerryKlein.withwre. com. Windermere Real Estate/BI, Inc.

Taking Applications for waiting list for 1 & 2 BR units. Handicap and disablitiy eligible, rent 30% of income. Income limits apply

206-842-8144 TDD: 711

BAINBRIDGE ISLAND

Virginia Villa Apartments

$620 per month, utilities included. Income limits apply. Must be 62+ and/or disabled. 200 High School Rd NE 206-842-5482 TDD: 711

HRB – Housing Non-Profit Need Assistance Finding Affordable Housing in Kitsap Cty? Free Info & Referrals w/ HomeShare/HomeFinder Program

Call Penny Lamping

(206) 842-1909

Give someone the opportunity to stop and smell the roses‌ Reach thousands of subscribers by advertising your landscaping business in the Classifieds. Get 4 weeks of advertising in your local community newspaper and on the WEB for one low price!

C D L - A T RU C K D R I VERS - Solo & Team. Up to $5,000 Sign-On-Bonus & $.54 CPM. Excellent Hometime. Consistent Miles, Benefits, 401k, EOE. Call 7 days/week 866-2209175 GordonTrucking.com DRIVERS- Whether you have experience or need training, We offer unbeatable career opportunities. Trainee. Company Dr iver. LEASE O P E R AT O R . L E A S E TRAINERS. (877)-369-7105 w w w. c e n t r a l d r i v i n g jobs.com

Lost

LOST BLACK LEATHER JACKET Old James Dean Want-To-Be will pay $100 for it’s return. No Questions Asked gezzer@earthlink.net

L O C A L P R I VAT E I N VESTOR loans money on real estate equity. I l o a n o n h o u s e s, r aw land, commercial properDANWOOD APTS Is now offering 1, 2 & 3 ty and property development. Call Eric at BRs, starting at $496/mo. (425) 803-9061. LOST: Male Neutered * Income Limits Apply www.fossmortgage.com Golden Retriever from Call 360-662-1100 Bond & Pugh Rd area. TDD 711 8 years old. Buster is General Financial This Institution is an Equal very friendly. 85 pounds, Opportunity Provider and G o l d c o l o r, m i c r o G E T C A S H N OW fo r chipped. Reward. 360Employer your Annuity or Struc- 5 0 9 - 9 0 8 5 M i s s i n g 3 Apartments for Rent tured Settlement. Top months. Has eye condiMason County Dollars Paid. Fast, No tion that needs to be SHELTON Hassle Ser vice! Â 877- medicated. Saratoga Springs Apts 693-0934 (M-F 9:35am7pm ET) 1100 N. 12th Street Rents start at $580/mo Guaranteed Income For including Water, Sewer, Your Retirement Avoid Garbage & Electric. market risk & get guarA No Smoking Community anteed income in retireElderly and/or Disabled ment! CALL for FREE Income Limits Apply copy of our SAFE MON(360)427-7033 EY GUIDE Plus Annuity or TDD 711 Quotes from A-Rated companies! 800-669WA Misc. Rentals 5471 Parking/RV Spaces LOOKING FOR AFFORDABLE RENT?

legals

COVERED AND Secure Pa r k i n g S p a c e, L e s s Than a Block from The Bainbridge Island Ferry. Always Have a Parking S p a c e ; Ke e p Ve h i c l e Safe and Clean While You Work or Play. $160 month. May be negotiable with full 1 year payment. 206-300-1803

PRIVATE RV Rental site in Belfair. Canal, Olympic Mountain View. $400 month, utilities paid. Call: 360-801-9843 or 360-275-6888

3ELLĂĽITĂĽFORĂĽFREEĂĽINĂĽTHEĂĽ&,%! THEFLEA SOUNDPUBLISHING COM P RO B L E M S w i t h t h e I R S o r S t a t e Ta xe s ? Settle for a fraction of w h a t yo u owe ! Fr e e face to face consultations with offices in your area. Call 855-970-2032

announcements Announcements

real estate rentals Commercial Rentals Office/Commercial

OFFICE & WAREHOUSE SPACE FOR RENT Twelve Trees Business Park

Varying sizes and configurations available. North Poulsbo area. Call Mark, Crista or Christine at: 360-779-7266 Vashon

Call: (800) 388-2527 Go online: www.nw-ads.com or e-mail: classified@soundpublishing.com

Money to Loan/Borrow

SILVERDALE

Call one of your Sound Publishing newspapers to submit your Open House Listing: BAINBRIDGE REVIEW 206 842-6613 • NORTH KITSAP HERALD 360 779-4464 CENTRAL KITSAP REPORTER 360 308-9161 • BREMERTON PATRIOT 360 308-9161 PORT ORCHARD INDEPENDENT 360 876-4414 • KITSAP CLASSIFIEDS 1-800-388-2527

financing

HOMES NEEDED Host a top notch high school Exchange Student for 2014- 15 school year. Great experience for entire family. Contact Kristi 206 790 8171, kyork@spu.edu PROMOTE YOUR FESTIVAL for only pennies. Reach 2.7 million readers in newspapers statewide for $1,350. Call this newspaper or 1 (206) 634-3838 for details.

Prime Retail/ Office Space available on Main H w y, Va s h o n I s l a n d . Competitive rates 1,148 sq/ft. Call 206-463-2100

ADOPTION- A Loving Alternative to unplanned pregnancy. You choose the family for your child. Receive pictures/info of waiting/approved couples. Living expense assistance. 1-866-2367638 Advertise your product or service nationwide or by region in over 7 million households in North America’s best suburbs! Place your classified ad in over 570 suburban newspapers just like this one. Call Classified Avenue at 888-486-2466

HOBBY FARM FOR KIDS~Free OPEN HOUSE at Camp Sundown Farm~all of April Call for appointment 360-801-6919 West Bremerton

http://www.washingtonshelties.com/campsundown_farm_for_kids.html

Legal Notices

To: UNKNOWN HEIRS AND DEVISEES OF KENNETH KNUPP; BETTY KNUPP; NICHOLAS C. KNUPP; LELANI KNUPP; NAVY FEDERAL CREDIT UNION; DOCKSIDE HOMEOWNERS ASSOCIATION; WASHI N G T O N S TAT E D E PARTMENT OF SOCIAL AND HEALTH SERVICES; Occupants of the Premises; and any persons or parties claiming to have any right, title, estate, lien or interest in the real property described in the complaint - JUDGMENT DEBTORS SUPERIOR COURT OF WASHINGTON IN AND FOR THE COUNTY OF KITSAP PNC BANK, NATIONAL ASSOCIATION SBM NATIONAL CITY MORTGAGE, A DIVISION OF NATIONAL CITY BANK, its successors in interest and/or assigns, Plaintiff, v. UNKNOWN HEIRS AND DEVISEES OF KENNETH KNUPP; BETTY KNUPP; NICHOLAS C. KNUPP; LELANI KNUPP; NAVY FEDERAL CREDIT UNION; DOCKSIDE HOMEOWNERS ASSOCIAT I O N ; WA S H I N G T O N STATE DEPARTMENT OF SOCIAL AND HEALTH SERVICES; Occupants of the Premis-

Legal Notices

es; and any persons or parties claiming to have any right, title, estate, lien or interest in the real property described in the complaint, Defendants. No. 12-2-01741-9 WRIT FOR ORDER OF SALE (ZERO MONTH REDEMPTION PERIOD) A WRIT FOR ORDER OF SALE HAS BEEN ISSUED IN THE ABOVE CAPTIONED CASE, DIRECTED TO THE SHERIFF OF KITSAP COUNTY, COMMANDING THE SHERIFF AS FOLLOWS, WHEREAS, FROM: THE KITSAP COUNTY SUPERIOR COURT CLERK’S OFFICE TO: THE SHERIFF OF K I T S A P C O U N T Y, WASHINGTON On December 3, 2013, a Judgment and Decree of Foreclosure (“Judgment�) was entered in favor of (“Plaintiff�) against the Unknown Heirs and Devisees of Kenneth Knupp; Betty Knupp; Nicholas C. Knupp; Lelani Knupp; Navy Federal Credit Union; Dockside Homeowners Association; Washington State Department of Social and Health Services; Occupants of the Premises; and any persons or parties claiming to have any right, title, estate, lien or interest in the real property described in the complaint (“Defendants�). The Judgment forecloses the interests of all the Defendants in and to the following described property (“Property�) commonly known as 7007 Osprey Circle, Bremerton, WA 98312 for the total sum of $463,595.86 with interest thereon at the rate of 6.375% per annum beginning on December 3, 2013, until satisfied. The Property situated in KITSAP County, State of Washington, is legally described as: LOT(S) 73, DOCKSIDE ON KITSAP LAKE, ACCORDING TO THE PLAT THEREOF, RECORDED IN VOLUME 25 OF PLATS, PAGE(S) 137 THROUGH 142, INCLUSIVE, RECORDS OF KITSAP COUNTY, WASHINGTON. M O R E A C C U R AT E LY DESCRIBED AS FOLLOWS: LOT 73, DOCKSIDE ON KITSAP LAKE, ACCORDING TO THE PLAT RECORDED IN VOLUME 25 OF PLATS, PAGES 137 THROUGH 142, INCLUSIVE, RECORDS OF KITSAP COUNTY, WASHINGTON. THEREFORE, pursuant to RCW 61.12.060, and in the name of the State of Washington, you are hereby commanded to sell the Property, or so much thereof as may be necessary, in order to satisfy the Judgment, including post-judgment

Continued on next page.....


Friday, April 18, 2014 kitsapweek page 19 Continued from previous page..... Legal Notices

interest and costs. MAKE RETURN HEREOF within sixty days of the date indicated below, showing you have executed the same. Pursuant to RCW 6.21.050(2), the Sheriff may adjourn the foreclosure sale from time to time, not exceeding thirty days beyond the last date at which this Writ is made returnable, with the consent of the plaintiff endorsed upon this Writ or by a contemporaneous writing. WITNESS, the Honorable KEVIN D. HULL Judge of the Superior Court and the seal of said Court, affixed this 4TH day of March, 2014, at Port Orchard, Washington. By: DAVID W. PETERSON Superior Court Clerk By: ALISON H. SONNTAG Deputy Clerk Presented by: RCO LEGAL, P.S. By: BABAK SHAMSI Babak Shamsi, WSBA #43839 Laura Coughlin, WSBA #46124 Attorneys for Plaintiff THIS WRIT SHALL BE AUTOMATICALLY EXTENDED FOR 30 DAYS FOR THE PURPOSES OF SALE. THE SALE HAS BEEN SET FOR FRIDAY, MAY 16, 2014 AT 10:00 A.M. AT T H E M A I N E N TRANCE, KITSAP COUNTY COURTHOUSE, PORT ORCHARD, WASHINGTON. Y O U M AY H AV E A RIGHT TO EXCEPT PROPERTY FROM THE S A L E U N D E R S TAT-

Legal Notices

UTES OF THIS STATE, INCLUDING SECTIONS 6.13.010, 6.13.030, 6.13.040, 6.15.010 AND 6.15.060 OF THE REVISED CODE OF WASHINGTON, IN THE MANNER DESCRIBED IN THOSE STATUTES. STEVE BOYER, SHERIFF K I T S A P C O U N T Y, WASHINGTON BY: DAVID WHITE CHIEF OF INVESTIGATIONS AND SUPPORT SERVICES Date of first publication: 03/21/14 Date of last publication: 04/25/14 (PW1010989)

Employment General

Employment General

Employment General

Employment General

Business Opportunities

Business Opportunities

Advanced Bodywork Therapy Inc located In Poulsbo Wa is looking for confident

Carriers The North Kitsap Herald has openings for Carrier Routes. No collecting, no selling. Friday mornings. If interested call Christy 360-779-4464

CHILD CARE PROVIDER NEEDED

INCOME OPPORTUNITY!

ABSOLUTE GOLD MINE! Â Absentee ownership! Â Candy vending route. Â 6 new machines placed into 6 new busy stores! Â $2500 investment, not employment! Â Call after noon only! 951-763-4828

Make Up To $2,000.00+ Per Week! New Credit Card Ready Drink-Snack Vending Machines. Minimum $4K to $40K+ Investment Required. Locations Available. BBB A c c r e d i t e d B u s i n e s s. (800) 962-9189

Massage Therapists

as Independent contractors for expanding business! Must have Active State License, up to date Liability Insurance! Credentialed with Healthways for insurance purposes! Please have strong based injury treatment massage techniques, and continuing education cer tificates with resume! Taking resumes to mid April, please send to kystouch@yahoo.com with resume!

Find your perfect pet in the ClassiďŹ eds. www.nw-ads.com

jobs Building Inspector/ Plans Examiner

Employment General

Please see the City’s website for more information. Position closes April 24th. www.bainbridgewa.gov

Massage Envy Spa Silverdale is seeking Massage Therapists fo r bu s y m e m b e r s h i p clinic. Full employee status with Taxes, Social Security, withholding as well as Unemployment and L&I coverage. Join our enthusiastic team and provide the healing touch you trained to provide. Must be licensed and obtain liability insurance. You will be busy from the start. Send resume to: massageenvy 0668@gmail.com or call 360-698-0311 massageenvy0668@gmail.com

Capital Projects Coordinator Please see the City’s website for more information. Position closes April 24th. www.bainbridgewa.gov

Director of Choral Music Central Kitsap Presbyterian Church (CKPC) This is a 10-hour a week, $20-hour position. Email lee.riley@ckpc.org. Phone (360) 692-5000. For more information see website www.ckpc.org Publisher/Advertising Manager The Journal of the San Juans, located in Friday Harbor, on beautiful San Juan Island in Washington State, is seeking an experienced, self-starting Publisher/Advertising M a n a g e r. T h r e e - p l u s years of newspaper/media sales exper ience, along with leadership experience required. Responsibilities include: print and digital ad sales; helping local businesses create mar keting and business plans; supervision of a small staff and involvement in the local community. The Journal of the San Juan’s is part of Sound Publishing, the largest community newspaper publisher in Washington State. We offer an excellent salar y plus a bonus/commission plan, a great work environment, medical, dental and vis i o n i n s u ra n c e, 4 0 1 k with company match, paid holidays, vacation a n d s i ck t i m e. E O E . Visit our website at www.soundpublishing.com to learn more about us! For immediate consideration, send resume and cover letter to: hr@soundpublishing.com or mail to: HR/SJJPUBSM, Sound Publishing, Inc., 11323 Commando, Road, Main Unit, Everett, WA 98204.

Full & Part Time, FUN, BUSY CENTER on Bainbridge. ECE a plus. Pay DOE. First Years. 206-842-6363 or email firstyearsbi@aol.com

The Bainbridge Island Review newspaper seeking quality motor route carriers. Thursday night delivery. No collections. Must be at least 18 years of age. Reliable people with reliable vehi- Advertise your service cle please call Brian. 800-388-2527 or nw-ads.com 206-842-6613 www.nw-ads.com

We’ll leave the site on for you.

&INDĂĽIT ĂĽ"UYĂĽIT ĂĽ3ELLĂĽIT NW ADS COM

AVIATION INSTRUCTORS

Intrepid Learning is now hiring experienced Aviation Instructors with a background in: Senior Police Clerk Please see the City’s website for more information.

Full Time Temporary (Seasonal) Employment

Position closes April 18th.

The Port of Bremerton is www.bainbridgewa.gov accepting applications for a team player looking &INDĂĽITĂĽFASTĂĽANDĂĽEASY for customer serWWW NW ADS COM vice/grounds keeping/ light janitorial seasonal full time employment, at ClassiďŹ eds. We’ve got you our airport and marinas. covered. 800-388-2527 Applicants must be at least 18 years of age, have a valid Washington State driver’s license, and capable of performing manual labor. The successful applicant will be subject to background checks and the Port’s drug testing policy. The wage is $9.50 per hour. Applications are available between the hours of 8:00 am – 4:30 pm, Monday-Friday at the Port’s Administrative 00 Offices at Bremerton National 00 00 00 Airport, 8850 SW State Hwy 3, Bremerton, WA 98312 or online at Our garages are

™ 6^gXgV[i BZX]Vc^XVa H`^aah ™ 6^gXgV[i :aZXig^XVa ™ EgdYjXi^dc HnhiZbh HZVa ™ 7dcY VcY <gdjcY Military experience in any technical field and Master Training Specialist (or equivalent) qualification is a plus! This is a part-time, hourly position. Puget Sound region travel required. Includes competitive pay and benefits.

6eean Vi/ lll#^cigZe^YaZVgc^c\#Xdb$XVgZZgh Dg XVaa '%+#(-&#(,,.

GARAGES GARAGES GARAGES GARAGES 24’ x 24’

24’ 24’ x 24’ 24’ x2 -24’ x 24’ Car 2 - Car 2 $11,495 - Car 2 - Car $11,495 $11,495 $11,495

24’ x 36’

24’ x 32’

24’ 24’ x336’ xCar 36’x0036’ 24’ x 32’ 24’ x 0032’x 32’ -24’ 224’ - Car/Shop 3 -$14,795 Car 3 - Car 3 - Car 2 - Car/Shop 2$13,695 - Car/Shop 2 - Car/Shop 00 00 00 00 00 00 $14,795 $14,795 $14,795 $13,695 $13,695 $13,695

WHITE MOUNTAIN CONSTRUCTION

www.portof bremerton.org.

WW HITE W HITE HITE MM OUNTAIN M OUNTAIN OUNTAIN CONSTRUCTION CONSTRUCTION CONSTRUCTION

www.portofbremerton.org

Closing date for applying is 2:00 pm, Friday, April 25, 2014.

built on permanent concrete foundations.

We build any size or style garage. Our Our garages Our garages garages are are builtare built onbuilt permanent on permanent on permanent concrete concrete concrete foundations. foundations. foundations.

We We build We build any build any size any size orsize style or style orgarage. style garage. garage. (360) 871-1665 Cont.#WHITEMC091B8

(360) (360) (360) 871-1665 871-1665 871-1665Cont.#WHITEMC091B8 Cont.#WHITEMC091B8 Cont.#WHITEMC091B8

We are community & daily newspapers in these Western Washington Locations:

Sales Positions

• King County • Kitsap County • Clallam County • Jefferson County • Okanogan County • Pierce County • Island County • San Juan County • Snohomish County • Whatcom County

Non-Sales Positions

Sound Publishing is an Equal Opportunity Employer (EOE) and strongly supports diversity in the workplace. We offer a great work environment with opportunity for advancement along with a competitive benefits package including health insurance, paid time off (vacation, sick, and holidays), and 401k.

Accepting resumes at: hr@soundpublishing.com or by mail to: HR, Sound Publishing, Inc. 11323 Commando Rd. W Suite 1 Everett, WA 98204 Please state which position and geographic area you are applying for.

• Multi Media Advertising Sales Consultants - Everett - Issaquah/Sammamish - Bellevue - Friday Harbor • Market Development Coordinator - Bellevue • Creative Services Manager - Seattle

Reporters & Editorial • Reporters - Everett - San Juan

Production

• Insert Machine Operator - Everett • General Worker - Everett

Featured Position

Current Employment Opportunities at www.soundpublishing.com

Market Development Coordinator Sound Publishing, Inc. is seeking a Marketing Development Coordinator to research, plan and implement market programs throughout the organization. This position acts as a consultant and resource to Sound Publishing’s National/Regional Advertising Sales team and senior-level management; and is responsible for developing and implementing brand, market, and account specific sales and marketing presentations. The successful candidate will bring extensive marketing/advertising experience in the print and/or digital media industry. Must be proficient in InDesign, Photoshop, Illustrator, Acrobat Pro, Microsoft Word, Excel, PowerPoint and html5; have the ability to communicate effectively; possess excellent presentation skills as well as basic math and English skills. Candidate will also be a problem solver who thrives in a fast-paced, deadline-driven environment with the ability to think ahead of the curve. Position requires a Bachelor’s degree in Marketing or related field and three to five years of marketing/ brand experience. We offer a competitive salary and benefits package including health insurance, paid time off (vacation, sick, and holidays), and 401K (currently with an employer match.) If you meet the above qualifications and are seeking an opportunity to be part of a venerable media company, email us your resume and cover letter tohreast@soundpublishing.com. No phone calls please. Sound Publishing is an Equal Opportunity Employer (EOE) and strongly supports diversity in the workplace. Check out our website to find out more about us! www.soundpublishing.com

For a list of our most current job openings and to learn more about us visit our website:

www.soundpublishing.com


page 20 kitsapweek Friday, April 18, 2014

KITSAP SERVICES

Professional Services Attorney, Legal Services

Notice to Contractors Washington State Law (RCW 18.27.100) requires that all advertisements for construction related services include the contractor’s current depar tment of Labor and Industries registration number in the advertisement. Failure to obtain a certificate of registration from L&I or show the registration number in all advertising will result in a fine up to $5000 against the unregistered contractor. For more infor mation, call Labor and Industries Specialty Compliance Services Division at 1-800-647-0982 or check L&Is internet site at www.lni.wa.gov Professional Services Consultants

PHONE NOT RINGING? Tired Of Someone Else Getting YOUR Customers?

Have a service to offer? Contact Jennie today: 866-296-0380 jmorello@soundpublishing.com

Home Services Landscape Services

Home Services Painting

HOME REPAIRS “Done Right... the First Time�

Rolando Landscaping

Home is Where the Heart is! Leaking Roofs Can Break it!

Christopher and Company 206-494-3339 www.christopher-company.com

Contractor License #CHRISC*878Q7 2EACHĂĽTHOUSANDSĂĽOFĂĽ READERSĂĽWITHĂĽONEĂĽCALLĂĽ ĂĽ

PROFESSIONAL HANDYMAN SERVICE, INC. (Kitsap County +)

A Licensed, Bonded & Insured General Contractor. 1 Yr. Warranty on All Work. You Don’t Pay Until I’m Done and You’re Happy! No Job too Big or Small. For a FREE Estimate Call;

Mark Jeffries 360-377-1625 Cell - 360-649-4419 Lic & Bonded #PROFEHS981CF

Home Services Hauling & Cleanup

...AFFORDABLE... DON’S HAULING

ODD JOBS & YARD WORK 25 Years Experience Great Rates! Quality Work! Lawn Mowing, Tree Work, Rototilling

360-895-3273

We do all yard services. Mowing, Weeding, Roof Cleaning, Gutters, Pressure Washing, Rocks & Walls, Pipes, Junk Removal & Hauling We do excellent work. CALL FOR YOUR FREE ESTIMATE 10 years experience Lic.#603342815 & Ins.

360-801-2707

Find your perfect pet in the ClassiďŹ eds. www.nw-ads.com Home Services Lawn/Garden Service

AA YARD SERVICES

Special Offer! * Pruning * Weeding * Beauty Bark * Gravel * Hauling * Planting * Blowing * Clean Up & Much More! Call About Specials!!

To Place Your Ad, Call

360-394-8728

And Ask For Debra.

You’ll Be Glad You Did! Professional Services Legal Services

DIVORCE $155. $175 with children. No court appearances. Complete p r e p a ra t i o n . I n c l u d e s custody, support, proper ty division and bills. BBB member. (503) 772-5295. www.paralegalalter natives.com legalalt@msn.com Find your perfect pet in the ClassiďŹ eds. www.nw-ads.com Home Services Appliance Repair

Appliance Repair - We fix It no matter who you bought it from! 800-9345107 Home Services Electrical Contractors

One call, does it all! Fast and Reliable Electrical Repairs and Installations. Call 1-800-9088502

GOT CLUTTER?

WE TAKE IT ALL! Junk, Appliances, Yard Debris, etc. Serving Kitsap Co. Since 1997

360-377-7990 206-842-2924 Home Services Property Maintenance

All Things Basementy! Basement Systems Inc. Call us for all of your basement needs! Waterproofing ? Finishing ? Structural Repairs ? Humidity and Mold Control F R E E E S T I M AT E S ! Call 1-888-698-8150

Dangerous, Rotted, Leaning Trees?? Safe Removal Avail.

360.297.7524

www.scottshomeandroof.com SCOTTHR933QG Bonded ~ Insured

Need to sell old exercise equipment? Call 800-388-2527 to place your ad today.

Home Services Plumbing

One call, does it all! Fast and Reliable Plumbing Repairs. Call 1- 800796-9218

All Grounds Care

The opportunity to make a difference is right in front of you. RECYCLE THIS PAPER

Free Estimates

360-698-7222 SOLD IT? FOUND IT? Let us know by calling 1-800-388-2527 so we can cancel your ad.

Domestic Services

Spring Has Sprung! Has Your Phone Rung?

I’ll Help You To Reach Over 64,000 Households in Kitsap County Who Need Your Services!

360-394-8728

And Ask For Debra.

SUNFLOWER CLEANING Commercial Office ∙ Medical Cleaning Licensed ∙ Insured

Free Estimates Please call Maria 360-302-0213

Dangerous, Rotted, Leaning Trees?? Safe Removal Avail.

360.297.7524

www.scottshomeandroof.com SCOTTHR933QG Bonded ~ Insured

4REASUREĂĽ(UNTING #HECKĂĽOUTĂĽOURĂĽ2ECYCLERĂĽ ADSĂĽBEFOREĂĽSOMEONEĂĽ ELSEĂĽlNDSĂĽYOURĂĽRICHES

CNA

$14.00 - $18.00 per hour starting CNA base rate

New Hire BONUS

We provide Ferry Tickets for more information call 206-567-4421

www.vashoncommunitycare.org

Established Profitable Family Toy Store in Poulsbo Village. Owner Retiring $185,000. 360-779-8797 Schools & Training

Leapforce At Home Independent Agent - English (US)restr icted to residents of the United States only.This is an opportunity to evaluate and improve search engine results for one of the world’s largest internet search engine companies.Ideal Search Engine Evaluators will possess:In depth/up-to-date familiarity with American culture, Excellent comprehension &written communication skills in English,Possess a high speed internet connection.Search Engine Evaluators provide feedback on search engine results by measuring the relevance and usefulness of web pages in correlation to predefined queries.All candidates are required to take and pass a qualification exam before becoming a Search Engine Evaluator.Please Note: One Search Engine Evaluator position per IP Address. To learn more email: ashley@leapforce.com

Electronics

Get a complete Satellite System installed at NO COST! FREE HD/DVR Upgrade. As low as $19.99/mo. Call for details 877-388-8575

“CEDAR FENCINGâ€? 31x6x6’..........$1.79 ea 35/4x4x6’’.........96¢ ea “CEDAR SIDINGâ€? 1x8 Cedar Bevel 42¢ LF 31x4x8’ T&G.......25¢ LF

“CEDAR DECKING�

5/4x4 Decking 5/4x4 8’ & 10’ Lengths....24¢ LF 5/4x6 Decking 8’ & 10’ Lengths....59¢LF

Complete Line: Western Red Cedar Building Materials

Affordable Prices OPEN MON - SAT

360-377-9943

GET DISH AND SAVE! C a l l t o d ay, l o ck i n 2 years of savings. 1-866220-6954 *FREE Hopper Upgrade *FREE Premium Channels *Internet $14.95 *See dish-systems.com for details M y C o m p u t e r Wo r k s. Computer problems? Viruses, spyware, email, printer issues, bad internet connections - FIX IT NOW! Professional, U.S.-based technicians. $25 off service. Call for immediate help. 1-800681-3250

Find your perfect pet in the ClassiďŹ eds. www.nw-ads.com

P r o t e c t Yo u r H o m e ADT Authorized Dealer: B u r g l a r y, F i r e , a n d Emergency Aler ts 24 Electronics hours a day, 7 days a week! CALL TODAY, INAT&T U-Verse for just S TA L L E D T O M O R Advertise your service $ 2 9 / m o ! B U N D L E & ROW! 888-858-9457 (M800-388-2527 or nw-ads.com SAVE with AT&T Inter- F 9am-9pm ET) net+Phone+TV and get a FREE pre-paid Visa SOLD IT? FOUND IT? C a r d ! ( s e l e c t p l a n s ) . Let us know by calling HURRY, CALL NOW! 1- 1-800-388-2527 so we can cancel your ad. 800-256-5149

stuff Appliances

AIRLINES ARE HIRING – Tra i n fo r h a n d s o n Av i a t i o n C a r e e r. FA A MATCHING Washer and approved program. Fi- Dryer set, $355. Guarannancial aid if qualified - teed! 360-405-1925 Job placement assistance. CALL Aviation In- 2EACHüTHOUSANDSüOFü stitute of Maintenance READERSüWITHüONEüCALLü 877-818-0783 ü

www.cedarproductsco.com

DirectTV - 2 Year Savings Event! Over 140 channels only $29.99 a month. Only DirecTV gives you 2 YEARS of savings and a FREE Genie upgrade! Call 1-800279-3018

Farm Fencing & Equipment

Hard to find tractor. 1954 TO30 Ferguson. Runs and looks good. Has f r o n t bl a d e a n d f r o n t bu cke t . $ 4 , 0 0 0 O B O. 360-426-5492

DISH TV Retailer. Start- &INDĂĽ)T ĂĽ"UYĂĽ)T ĂĽ3ELLĂĽ)T ing at $19.99/month (for ,OOKINGĂĽFORĂĽTHEĂĽRIDE OFĂĽYOURĂĽLIFE 12 mos.) & High Speed I n t e r n e t s t a r t i n g a t WWW NW ADS COM ĂĽHOURSĂĽAĂĽDAY $14.95/month (where available.) SAVE! Ask About SAME DAY Instal- Find your perfect pet lation! CALL Now! 800- in the ClassiďŹ eds. www.nw-ads.com 278-1401

Become an NAC. Free nursing assistant certification class

To Place Your Ad, Call

Home Services

House/Cleaning Service

Part Time

Building Materials & Supplies

Work From Home

Household Service Offered

Home Services Painting

Home is Where the Heart is! Leaking Roofs Can Break it!

RN or LPN

4REASUREĂĽ(UNTING #HECKĂĽOUTĂĽOURĂĽ2ECYCLERĂĽ ADSĂĽBEFOREĂĽSOMEONEĂĽ ELSEĂĽlNDSĂĽYOURĂĽRICHES

* SILVER BAY *

Clean-Up, Pruning, Full Maint., Hedge, Haul, Bark/Rock, Roof/Gutter

Openings for:

Full Time & Part Time

Need to sell some furniture? Call 800-388-2527 to place your ad today.

360-434-6375

Free Estimate

I’ll Help You To Reach Over 64,000 Households in Kitsap County Who Need Your Services!

General

Every moment is an opportunity for an extraordinary experience

Home Services Handyperson

Dry Rot, Drywall, Decks, Painting, Carpentry Repairs, and much more...

Health Care Employment

You’ll Be Glad You Did! The opportunity to make a difference is right in front of you. Recycle this paper.

Become an NAC for free. Classes start May 12. Employment opportunities may be available upon course completion. Space is limited! Come by our facility and apply by May 1 to be considered.

&INDĂĽ)T ĂĽ"UYĂĽ)T ĂĽ3ELLĂĽ)T ,OOKINGĂĽFORĂĽTHEĂĽRIDE OFĂĽYOURĂĽLIFE WWW NW ADS COM ĂĽHOURSĂĽAĂĽDAY

We Do It All! Commercial & Residential “Divorce For GrownupsTM� www.CordialDivorce.com

206-842-8363

Law Offices of Lynda H. McMaken, P.S.

Lawn Maintenance, New Lawns, Weeding, Sprinkler Systems, Fencing, Brick & Rock Walls Engineered & Installed

360-377-2698 Licensed & Bonded ~ Lic# MARTIHL876RC

303-876-8035 2031 Pottery Ave. Port Orchard, WA 98366 LCCA.com

46521 | EOE/M/F/V/D

Martinez and Horton Landscaping


Friday, April 18, 2014 kitsapweek page 21 Antiques & Collectibles

OLD YELLOW HOUSE ANTIQUES & COLLECTIBLES “Belfair’s Only Antique and Quality Used Furniture Stores” Antiques Kitchenware China Jewelry Glassware 2200 Sq. Ft. of Furniture and Collectables New Arrivals Weekly! Delivery Available. Hours; Wed.,Thurs. & Sat. 11am-6pm. Fri.& Sun. 11am-4pm Quality furniture and antiques considered for consignment. Call with Questions:

360-552-2305 NE 23491 Hwy 3 Belfair, WA “Like Us on Facebook” Old Yellow House & Revisited Antique and Furniture Stores

Get Your Valuable Coupon At:

Call Today!

FACEBOOK.COM/PERMABILT

1-800-824-9552 UTILITY BARN 24’x36’x9’

Firearms & Ammunition

DELUXE GARAGE 24’x36’x16’

TOY BOX 32’x48’x14’

4” Concrete floor w/fibermix reinforcement & zip-strip crack control, (1) 10’x14’ & (2) 10’x7’ raised panel steel overhead doors, 3’x6’8” PermaBilt door w/ self-closing hinges & stainless steel lockset, (4) 4’x3’ white double glazed vinyl windows w/screens, 24’x12’ 50# loft w/L-Shaped staircase, 3’ steel wainscoting, 18” eave & gable overhangs, 10’ continuous flow ridge vent. $ $ $

4” Concrete floor w/fibermix reinforcement & zip-strip crack control, 12’x13’ metal framed sliding door w/cam-latch closers, (2) 10’x12’ raised panel steel overhead doors, 3’x6’8” PermaBilt door w/selfclosing hinges & stainless steel lockset, 10’ continuous flow ridge vent. $ $ $

Concrete Included!

Concrete Included!

Gun & Knife

Lynden

Northwest WA Fairgrounds 1775 Front St, Lynden, WA th

Apr. 26 & 27

Decorative steel cross latched wall, 10’ continuous flow ridge vent, 2” fiberglass vapor barrier and insulation. $

th

Sat. 9-5 Sun. 9:30-3 $6 General Admission $1 OFF with this ad

10,913

Concrete Included!

$

10,740

$

155/mo.

DAYLIGHT GARAGE 24’x36’x10’

info 360-202-7336 Firewood, Fuel & Stoves

NOTICE Washington State law requires wood sellers to provide an invoice (receipt) that shows the s e l l e r ’s a n d b u y e r ’s name and address and the date delivered. The invoice should also state the price, the quantity delivered and the quantity upon which the price is based. There should be a statement on the type and quality of the wood. When you buy firewood write the seller’s phone number and the license plate number of the delivery vehicle. The legal measure for firewood in Washington is the cord or a fraction of a cord. Estimate a c o r d by v i s u a l i z i n g a four-foot by eight-foot space filled with wood to a height of four feet. Most long bed pickup trucks have beds that are close to the four-foot by 8-foot dimension. To m a k e a f i r e w o o d complaint, call 360-9021857. agr.wa.gov/inspection/ WeightsMeasures/Fire woodinformation.aspx agr.wa.gov/inspection/WeightsMeasures/Firewoodinformation.aspx

4” Concrete floor w/fibermix reinforcement & zip-strip crack control, (2) 10’x9’ raised panel steel overhead doors, 3’x6’8” PermaBilt door w/self-closing hinges & stainless steel lockset, 18” eave and gable overhangs, 2’ poly eavelight along one eave, (2) 12’x12’ gable vents. $ $ $

18,570

16,999

28,976

• 2” Fiberglass Vapor Barrier Roof Insulation • 18 Sidewall & Trim Colors w/45 Year Warranty (Denim Series Excluded) • Free In-Home Consultation • Plans • Engineering • Permit Service • Erection • Guaranteed Craftsmanship • Engineered For 85 MPH Wind Exposure B & 25# Snow Load* *If your jurisdiction requires higher wind exposures or snow loads, building prices will be affected.

L-SHAPED 2 CAR GARAGE & SHOP 20’x30’x9’ w/20’x10’x9’

4” Concrete floor w/fibermix reinforcement & zip-strip crack control, 16’x8’ raised panel steel overhead door w/lites, 3’x6’8” PermaBilt door w/self-closing hinges & stainless steel lockset, 3’ steel wainscoting, 18” eave & gable overhangs, (2) 18” octagon gable vents. $ $ $

4” Concrete floor w/fibermix reinforcement & zip-strip crack control, 16’x8’ raised panel steel overhead door, 3’x6’8” PermaBilt door w/self-closing hinges & stainless steel lockset, (2) 4’x3’ double glazed vinyl windows w/ screens, 18” eave and gable overhangs, 10’ continuous flow ridge vent. $ $ $

DELUXE 2 CAR GARAGE & HOBBY SHOP 24’x36’x9’

MODIFIED GRID BARN 30’x30’x10’

14,677

13,398

193/mo.

19,063

18,998

28,494

273/mo.

26,177

rete Included!

4” Concrete floor w/fibermix reinforcement & zip-strip crack control, (2) 10’x7’ raised panel steel overhead doors, 3’x6’8” PermaBilt door w/self-closing hinges & stainless steel lockset, 10’ continuous flow ridge vent. $ $ $

22,399

322/mo.

RV GARAGE & SHOP 24’x34’x9’ & 12’x36’x14’ Concrete Included!

4” Concrete floor w/fibermix reinforcement & zip-strip crack control, (1) 10’x12’ & (2) 10’x8’ raised panel steel overhead doors, 3’x6’8” PermaBilt door w/self-closing hinges & stainless steel lockset, 10’ continuous flow ridge vent. $ $ $

25,888

23,642

340/mo.

OVERSIZED 1 GARAGE 20’x20’x8’

Concrete Included!

Concrete Included!

4” Concrete floor w/fibermix reinforcement & zip-strip crack control, (2) 10’x8’ raised panel steel overhead doors, 3’x6’8” PermaBilt door w/selfclosing hinges & stainless steel lockset, 3’x3’ double glazed vinyl window w/screen, 18” eave & gable overhangs, 10’ continuous flow ridge vent. $

19,336

$

10’x9’ Metal framed split sliding door w/cam-latch closers, 3’x6’8” PermaBilt door w/self-closing hinges & stainless steel lockset, 2’ poly eavelight, 10’ continuous flow ridge vent.

4” Concrete floor w/fibermix reinforcement & zip-strip crack control, 16’x7’ raised panel steel overhead door, 3’x6’8” PermaBilt door w/self-closing hinges & stainless steel lockset, 2’ poly eavelight along one eave, 10’ continuous flow ridge vent.

$ $ $ $ $ $ 17,146 15,658 225/mo. 14,074 10,898 17,658 254/mo. PERMABILT.com facebook.com/PermaBilt BUILDINGS BUILT

19,406

45 year warranty

Washington #TOWNCPF099LT

flea market

376/mo.

DUTCH GAMBREL 24’x36’x16’ Conc

24,527

Hundreds of Designs Available!

Concrete Included!

Concrete Included!

382/mo.

ALL BUILDINGS INCLUDE:

245/mo.

DELUXE WAINSCOTED 2 CAR GARAGE 20’x24’x9’

26,612

$

157/mo.

SQUARE FEET

20,666,729

As of 3/22/14

800-824-9552

1031281

Show

Financing based on 12% interest, all payments based on 10 years (unless otherwise noted), O.A.C.. Actual rate may vary. Prices do not include permit costs or sales tax & are based on a flat, level, accessible building site w/less than 1’ of fill, w/85 MPH Wind Exposure “B”, 25# snow load, for non commercial usage & do not include prior sales & may be affected by county codes and/or travel considerations. Drawings for illustration purposes only. Ad prices expire 5/19/14.

Flea Market

DINNING TABLE. Black & gold, mirror topped, 6 person $100. Wooded bunk bed frames $50. Call 360-240-8271.

The opportunity to make a Recycle this newspaper. difference is right in front of you.


page 22 kitsapweek Friday, April 18, 2014 Miscellaneous

Dogs

7 PC CHEF KNIFE SET. 4 Henckel’s & 3 misc in almost new condition! All for $45. 35 PORCELAIN MINI figur ines, handcrafted from England. Glazed animals & miscellnious art objects. All for $35. 253.857.0539

K I L L ROAC H E S ! B u y Harr is Roach Tablets. Eliminate Bugs- Guaranteed. No Mess, Odorless, Long Lasting. Available at Ace Hardware & The Home Depot.

ADORABLE TOY Poodles, 2 Males left. $1,500 each. Parents are AKC Registered, Companions Only. Vet Health Checked, All Shots and Dewor med. D ew C l aw s R e m ove d a n d Ta i l s H ave B e e n Docked, Also By The Vet. Family Raised, Kennel Trained. 360-6742437. For Pictures and More Info: washcarey1@yahoo.com

HOME BAR Can deliver. Executive Mahogany top home bar will seat 4 people at the bar comfortably. Excellent! Great Gift or as an addition for your home. 48� long, 20� wide, 41� high. $125. Call 253.857.0539

Yard Sale

Saturday May 3rd Open to Close

Please come by & Check Out what’s for Sale!

Small wood table and four padded chairs. Nice shape. $150. Call 360-692-5103

Tractor seats & hoods, Rims & Tires, Attachments, Misc., Parts & Accessories for all brands of tractors, old tractors, riding mowers, etc. Golf/Utility parts(s) Carts, Rims & Tires, Misc. Parts & Accessories for all makes & models of carts.

Twin bed with frame and headboard. Mattress l i ke n ew. $ 1 0 0 . C a l l 360-471-1386

Check out our website for more info: BoulderEquip.com

Free Items Recycler

Boulder Equipment 160 W. Old Olympic Hwy Olympia 360-866-8491.

Lawnmower, $50. 360698-1547 Kitsap LEE Mini Bullet Mold, diameter .540, weight 415 grams, $10. 1994 Honda Civic fuel pump, used but in good condition, $15. 360-876-3986

Free firewood. You cut and haul. Call (360) 697-1816 Heavy Equipment

1985 International Tractor, gas, 85 HP, 4x4, front end loader, heavy duty winch, $9,800. Flat bed trailer, 18’, deck above wheels $1,250 (360)420-4338 Jewelry & Fur

I BUY: Gold, Silver, Diamonds, Wrist & Pocket Watches, Gold & Silver Coins, Silverware, Gold & Platinum Antique Jewelry Call Michael Anthony’s at (206)254-2575 Mail Order

CASH for unexpired DIABETIC TEST STRIPS! Free Shipping, Friendly Service, BEST p r i c e s a n d 2 4 h r p ay ment! Call today 1- 877588 8500 or visit www.TestStripSearch.com Espanol 888-440-4001 C A S H PA I D - U P TO $ 2 5 / B OX fo r u n ex pired,sealed DIABETIC TEST STRIPS! 1 DAY PAYMENT & PREPAID shipping. BEST PRICES! Call 1-888-389-0695 TOP CA$H PAID FOR O L D R O L E X , PAT E K PHILIPPE & CARTIER WATCHES! DAYTONA, S U B M A R I N E R , G M TMASTER, EXPLORER, MILGAUSS, DAY DATE, etc. 1-800-401-0440 TOP CASH PAID FOR OLD GUITARS! 1920’s t h r u 1 9 8 0 ’s . G i b s o n , Martin, Fender, Gretsch, Epiphone, Guild, Mosrite, Rickenbacker, Prair ie State, D’Angelico, Stromberg, and Gibson Mandolins/Banjos. 1-800-401-0440

WANT CHOICES? *AUSSIE *BEAGLE *MIN PIN *PEKE *DOXIE *SHIH-POO *GOLDENDOODLE *MORKIE *POOCHIN Photos at:

FARMLANDPETS.COM

*Current vaccination *Current Deworming *VET EXAMINED

Farmland Pets & Feed

9000 Silverdale Way

360-692-0415 NOW OPEN! NEW OWNERSHIP!

Central Valley Animal Hospital Personalized, AFFORDABLE medical care for your furry family members! State-of-the-art medical, dental, laboratory and surgical center. Hrs;Mon-Fri 8am-6pm Sat 8-12 10310 Central Valley Rd NW Poulsbo, WA 98370

360-930-5142 www.centralvalleyanimal.com

pets/animals

MULTI FAMILY GARAGE YARD SALE Too much to list! Lots of great stuff!

April 18th & 19th 9am-4pm, 4130 Eastwood Ave SE

HOBBY FARM FOR KIDS~Free OPEN HOUSE at Camp Sundown Farm~all of April Call for appointment 360-801-6919 West Bremerton

http://www.washingtonshelties.com/campsundown_farm_for_kids.html

garage sales - WA Garage/Moving Sales Kitsap County KINGSTON

(3) FAMILY Moving and Downsizing Sale. Furniture, Clothing, Household Items, a Saddle and Much More! April 18th and 19th from 9am to 4pm at 10617 NE West Kingston Road. Look for signs!

wheels Marine Miscellaneous

Trader Magee’s

POULSBO

Selling Something? Picture This! Schedule your ad for two or more weeks and we will add a photo in print and online for FREE!*

1995 Lexus SC 400 Base Ride in Style!! Stock# H14046A Only asking $7,999 Call 1-888-334-8142

NEED CASH?

Producer of custom fine leather products & leather repair service.

BELFAIR 23270 NE State Route 3 Belfair, WA 98528

360-275-2257

www.belfairselfstorage.com

Automobiles Scion

USED 2011 Scion xB 5dr Wgn Man Get Ready For Spring!! stockV13291B Only $16,999 Call 1-888-334-8142 Automobiles Toyota

2003 AVALON, 6 cylinder, black, excellent condition, 66,650 miles, 4 door, auto with leather. $8,500/OBO (360)8954020 Automobiles Volkswagen

2012 Volkswagen Golf 4dr HB Auto PZEV Very Clean car!! stock# V13267D Only $16,999 Call 1-888-334-8142

JAPANESE IMPORTS

LOW MILEAGE Ask About Our Engine Installation Special

ENGINES TRANSMISSIONS AVAILABLE

Head Gasket Specialist

REMANUFACTURED ENGINES AVAILABLE TOYOTA • MAZDA • NISSAN • ISUZU • HONDA 7505 Portland Ave E, Tacoma WA Tacoma 253-539-5030 Toll Free 1-877-956-1100

Japanese Engines & Transmissions

• 1000’s In Stock • 1 Year Warranty • Low Mileage Used • Low Prices Now Available:

estern & English E PEICHOT Wriding equipm ent O RG O E G and apparel.

876-5620

Whether you’re buying or selling, the ClassiďŹ eds has it all. From automobiles and employment to real estate and household goods, you’ll ďŹ nd everything you need 24 hours a day at www.nw-ads.com.

2008 Ford Mustang 2dr Conv Deluxe Nice Ride!! Stock# H13337D Only asking $14,999 Call 1-888-334-8142

250 hp Merc engine. Microwave, 2 burner alcoAutomobiles hol/ electric range, refrigHyundai erator. Sleeps 4. Garmin GPS with local chips. 2012 Hyundai Elantra F i s h f i n d e r. E l e c t r i c 4dr Sdn Auto GLS downrigger. Mercury 9.9 Nice Car!! 4 stroke outboard. Instock# H14022A flatable dingy with NisOnly $15,999 s a n o u t b o a r d . Ye a r l y Call 1-888-334-8142 bottom paint, zincs and e n g i n e t u n e u p. L i fe Automobiles jackets, fenders, 2 anJeep chors. Stern line roller. Orcas Island. 360-376- JEEP WRANGLER Sell5818 ing the farm. Great Buy ! 1997 Jeep TJ Wrangler Auto Events/ 4X4, 4.0L Sport, 6 cylinAuctions der, excellent condition, hard doors with soft top. 82,000 or iginal miles. $6,000. 360-426-5492

CUSTOM TACK & REPAIR

ESTATE SALE! Full House Contents. Power Tools, Bedroom and Dining Room Fur niture, Hide-a-bed Couch, Kitchen Access o r i e s, M u c h M o r e ! Even a 1981 Chevy pickup with Camper! Free Coffee & Doughnuts. Checks and Cash Only. Fr iday S u n d ay, A p r i l 2 5 t h , 26th, 27th; 10am 5pm Daily. 16445 Tukwilla Road NE, Poulsbo, 98370.

Automobiles Lexus

Need to sell old exercise equipment? 2 4 ’ C I E R A B a y l i n e r Call 800-388-2527 to (2452), 1997. $15,000. place your ad today.

12.6’ SEA EAGLE Inflatable Transom Fishing/ Sport Boat with All Accessories. Includes: Anchor, Oars, Seats with Flotation Cushions, Inflation and Repair Devices. Also included are a Collapsible Sun Canopy, Rigid Floorboard System, Full Length Cover, and Custom Trailer. Motor (included) is a Honda 9.9HP Four-Stroke (Leg a l o n Fr e s h W a t e r L a ke s i n WA ) . L o w Hours -- Only Used Twice, and Only in Fresh Top Dollar Paid for Wa t e r. M o t o r h a s i t ’s Gold, Silver, Diamonds, own Dolly and Cover. $1000 cost $149 Coins & Pawn Tickets! Boat is Actually Rated APR 105.89% Now Buying Cell for a 30HP Motor, and Phones and Gift Cards! for 3 months has 6 Person Capacity. CDs $1; DVDs $2 Pawn your Car, Boat, As an Inflatable, is RealTools, Furniture, RV, Motorcycle or ATV ly Light, Comfor table Anitques, Electronics, Airport Auto & RV Pawn and Capable of Large Sporting Goods, 8500 Old Hwy 99 SE, OLY Capacity Storage Under Collectibles. 1-800-973-7296 Seats. Near New CondiCall Toll Free Today! (360) 956-9300 tion -- Kept Garaged All www.airportautorvpawn.com 1-888-436-0659 Its Life. No Damage. Ap4911 St Hwy 303 propriate for Towing by Bremerton, WA Automobiles Anything from Truck to www.tradermagees.com SUV to Regular Auto. Classics & Collectibles Sale Necessitated by CASH FOR CARS Garage/Moving Sales Medical Stuff. Asking $5,500. Call Br ian at Junk Car Removal General 360-876-0424. with or without Titles Locally Owned Moving Sale ONE day only, ever ything must Need to sell some 1-866-428-0696 go. Saturday, April 26th furniture? Call from 8:00 a.m. to 4:00 800-388-2527 to Automobiles p.m. Electronics, tools, place your ad today. Fiat clothing, amphibian tanks, fur niture, dar k 2012 FIAT 500 Sport The opportunity to room equipment, campGreat On Gas!! ing and more. make a difference is Stock#H13394A right in front of you. Call for Price! Recycle this paper. Call 1-888-334-8142 Estate Sales A MUST SEE! Now Open! Huge Sale! Mon.-Sat. 9-7 Sun. 10-5 Buy/Sell/Trade COME SEE US FIRST FOR YOUR Wedding Rings Engagement Rings Promise Rings & Jewelry. WE OFFER WHOLESALE PRICING ON ALL OF OUR JEWELRY!

Farm Animals & Livestock

KILL BED BUGS & THEIR EGGS! Buy Harris Bed Bug Killer Comp l e t e Tr e a t m e n t P r o gram or Kit. Available: Hardware Stores, Buy Online: homedepot.com Medical Guardian - Toprated medical alarm and 24/7 medical alert monitoring. For a limited time, get free equipment, no activation fees, no commitment, a 2nd waterDogs proof alert button for free and more - only $29.95 B a s s e t t h o u n d s , 3 p e r m o n t h . 8 0 0 - 6 1 7 - males. $400.00 each. 2809 Tr icolored, Mar ysville V I AG R A a n d C I A L I S area. text 9283580404. USERS! 50 Pills SPE- The opportunity to make CIAL - $99.00. FREE a difference is right in Shipping! 100% guaranteed. CALL NOW! 855- front of you. 409-4132 RECYCLE THIS PAPER

PORT ORCHARD, 98366.

Automobiles Ford

Domestic & European Engines & Transmissions

FREE Next Day Delivery

(Most Areas)

Se Habla EspaĂąol

(877)307-9889

910425

Canada Drug Center is your choice for safe and affordable medications. Our licensed Canadian mail order pharmacy will provide you with savings of up to 90% on all your medication needs. Call today 1-800-418-8975, for $10.00 off your first prescription and free shipping.

Wanted/Trade

NEED A PUPPY?

Marine Power

Garage/Moving Sales Kitsap County

953834

Flea Market

foreignengines.com

910425

Stokes Consignment AUCTION 9HKLFOHV 59¡V %RDWV Tools & Shop Equipment (VWDWH ,WHPV -HZHOU\ Antiques & Collectibles

6DW $SULO D P 7R %H +HOG DW 6WRNHV $XFWLRQ $FUHV

8398 Spring Creek Road SE Port Orchard, WA Viewing: Fri, April 18- 10:00 am until 4:00 pm and Sat 8:00 a.m. until auction. Buyer’s Premiums in effect See our website for full details www.stokesauction.com

Call Today!

(800) 388-2527 *Private party only. No commercial advertising.

%RDUGPDQ 2UZLOHU ,QF ‡ :$ /LF


Friday, April 18, 2014 kitsapweek page 23

WHY BUY FROM

QUALITY CERTIFIED USED VEHICLES:Â

Our entire used car inventory (excluding economy vehicles) are covered by our 3 month/3000 mile warranty. This will take the worry out of purchasing a used vehicle. This special warranty also covers seals and gaskets, which is very unusual in automotive dealer warranties. Drive off our lot knowing you are covered!

2008 VOLKSWAGEN NEW BEETLE

2003 MITSUBISHI OUTLANDER H13278A

$14,999

$6,999

2012 FIAT 500 SPORT

2001 HONDA PASSPORT

V14140D

2003 Mitsubishi Outlander 4dr AWD Room for Everyone!! Stock# H13278A Only asking $6,999 Call 1-888-334-8142

V13201D

$14,999

$6,999

2012 HYUNDAI ACCENT

$7,999

2008 FORD ECONOLINE

2012 HYUNDAI ELANTRA

WAGON E-350 SUPER DUTY XL

Searched everywhere?

H14022A

V14004A

$14,999

$15,999

2008 FORD MUSTANG 2DR

2013 NISSAN VERSA

H13337D

V12170A

CONV DELUXE

4DR SDN AUTO 1.6 S

$16,999

$14,999 888-334-8142

4949 Auto Center Blvd in Bremerton Auto Center Next to “Coca Cola�

KITSAPVW.COM

Try

Ad expires 1 week from publication date. Subject to prior sale. All prices + Tax, License & $150 negotiable documentary fee paid at signing.

Sell your item in The Flea for FREE and tell people ALL ABOUT IT! Call the Flea Line today!

800-388-2527

or email: theflea@soundpublishing.com

The opportunity to make a difference is right in front of you. Recycle this newspaper.

1 9 9 9 P LY M O U T H Grand Voyager. White, dual sliding doors. 178,400 miles. Seats 7 comfortably. AM/FM/CD. Recent oil change, new tires, runs great. $3,500. 360-627-7706 Lv msg Motorcycles

Running or Not! Any Condition!

CALL US!

We’ll Come Get It!

360-710-5310

Be the icing on their cake... Advertise in the Service Directory in The Classifieds.

Vehicles Wanted

CASH FOR CARS! Any CARS/TRUCKS WANTED! Top $$$$$ PAID! Running or Not, All Makes!. Free Towing! We’re Local! 7 Days/Week. Call 1-800959-8518 CASH FOR CARS! Any Make, Model or Year. We Pay MORE! Running or Not. Sell Your Car or Tr u c k T O D AY. F r e e Towing! Instant Offer: 1-888-545-8647

Call: (800) 388-2527 e-mail: classified@soundpublishing.com

or go online 24 hours a day: www.nw-ads.com to get your business in the

SPRING SAVINGS!

All Of Our Used Come With A Warranty!

FROM CLEAR CREEK RV CENTER

If you want to sell one or more items and the total price is $150 or less, you can advertise in The Flea for FREE with NO LIMIT on the amount of words used in your ad. Each item must contain a price. No living items.

I BUY CARS

Vans & Minivans Plymouth

1996 KAWASAKI GPZ Motorcycle. Summer is coming, this bike is fast and reliable. Ready to run! Low mileage. Runs great. All original. Health &INDĂĽIT ĂĽ"UYĂĽIT ĂĽ3ELLĂĽIT forces sale and I am sad WWW NW ADS COM t o s e e m y t o y g o . $ 2 , 0 0 0 . O a k H a r b o r. /PENĂĽ ĂĽHOURSĂĽAĂĽDAYĂĽ Text only please, photos ĂĽDAYSĂĽAĂĽYEAR available 360-914-2073.

H14046A

$14,999

Extra auto parts bring in extra cash when you place an ad in the ClassiďŹ eds. Open 24 hours a day www.nw-ads.com.

1985 International Tractor, gas, 85 HP, 4x4, front end loader, heavy duty winch, $9,800. Flat bed trailer, 18’, deck above wheels $1,250 (360)420-4338

PV4201

Vehicles Wanted

2008 Ford Econoline Wagon E-350 Super Duty XL Load up your toys!! Stock#V14004A Only asking $14,999 Call 1-888-334-8142

Utility Trailers

1995 LEXUS SC 400 BASE

4DR SDN AUTO GLS

Sport Utility Vehicles Hyundai

Sport Utility Vehicles Mitsubishi

4WD LX MANUAL

H13394A

2008 Volkswagen New Beetle Convertible 2dr Auto SE Convertible Get Ready For Spring!! stock# V14140D Only $14,999 Call 1-888-334-8142

 2012 Hyundai Accent 4dr Sdn Auto Gs Great family car!! Stock# PV4201 Only asking $13,999 Call 1-888-334-8142

4DR AWD LS

CONVERTIBLE 2DR AUTO SE

Vans & Mini Vans Ford

Automobiles Volkswagen

BECAUSE WE HAVE

Fifth Wheels 04 KOMFORT 23FSG Stk#3698..................Now $11,710 08 KOMFORT 339 Stk#3901 .....................Now $27,625

Motorhome Class C

04 LEPRECHAUN Stk #3615 ......................... Now $36,975 04 FOURWINDS CHATEAUS 23W Stk L #3905D . Now $28,593 O

Tent Trailers

LD Now $3,125 95 DUTCHMAN 801 Stk#3804 ........................ SO DNow $5,875 03 COLMAN SANTA FE 10’ ............. OL SStk#3674

Truck Campers 05 S&S 8.5 Stk#3670.................................Now $13,995 10 EAGLE CAP 950 Stk#3809 .....................Now $25,050 06 EAGLE CAP 1050 Stk #3806 ..................Now $19,800 07 ADVENTURE Stk#3903 ..........................Now $18,300 Locally Owned & Operated

Call us Toll Free Today!

Travel Trailers 12 JAYFLIGHT 26BH Stk#3854 .............Now $14,125 06 TAB 16’ Stk #3900............................Now $6,995 14 MESA RIDGE 320RES Stk#3852 .......Now $37,125 11 SURVEYOR SP230 Stk#3839 ...........Now $16,225 03 SPLASH 18A Stk #3906 ................... Now $7,175 14 JF SWIFT 185RB Stk#3671 .............. Now $11846 13 HIDEOUT 19FLB Stk#3704 ............Now $17,474 D $12,875 L........... 11 JAYFLIGHT 19BH Stk #3838 ...........Now SO 12 PASSPORT 195RB Stk#3705..........Now $18,500 DNow $18940 OL 12 JAYFEATHER 254 .............. SStk#3833 DNow $15,175 L 13 JAYFLIGHT 19RD Stk #3907 .......... ..........Now SO 07 STARLIGHT 8263 Stk#3564...........Now $16,262 12 CROSSOVER 189QB Stk#3802 .........Now $15,354 D $21,840 L........... SO 13 JAYFLIGHT 25BHS Stk#3702 ...........Now D $25,863 L 09 KOMFORT 283TS Stk #3801 .......... ..........Now SO 13 CROSSOVER 189QB Stk#3687 ......Now $16,995 10 JAYFEATHER 23K Stk #3855 ..........Now $14,150

www.clearcreekrvcenter.com

1.888.424.0635

Ad Expires One Week From Publication Date

Designated Drivers Save Lives This ad is placed in this newspaper as a courtesy for M.A.D.D.


page 24 kitsapweek Friday, April 18, 2014

We’re Celebrating at Peninsula Subaru

LOWER TAXES IN KITSAP! FREE OIL CHANGES FOR LIFE CLOSED SUNDAYS FOR FAMILY DAY

2014 SUBARU

2014 SUBARU

• All Wheel Drive • Alloy Wheels

OUTBACK 2.5i LIMITED As Low As

0%*

1.9%*

As Low As

for 36 mo.

PENINSULA SUBARU

• 170 HP Engine • All Wheel Drive

FORESTER 2.5i LIMITED

for 48 mo.

3888 W St Hwy 16-Bremerton

1-855-361-2622

Located between Bremerton & Port Orchard

www.peninsulasubaru.com

All vehicles subject to prior sale. All vehicles plus tax, license and up to $150 negotiable doc fees. Expires 04-30-14. 0% subject to change due to Subaru April incentivies.

Grand Opening!

Peninsula Mitsubishi 2014 MITSUBISHI

2014 MITSUBISHI

LANCER

MIRAGE STK: M1173

32 MPG HWY

5 PASSENGER

PRICE DEALER DISCOUNT OWNER LOYALTY REGULAR REBATE MILITARY REBATE

0 $16,104

STK: M1059

$22,385 -$3,780.27 -$500 -$1,500 -$500

$

DOWN INTEREST

ON APPROVAL OF CREDIT

$11,912

44 MPG HWY

5 PASSENGER

PRICE $16,970.00 DEALER DISCOUNT -$3,307.73 MILITARY REBATE -$500 OWNER LOYALTY -$250 REGULAR REBATE -$1,000

3550 SW St Hwy 16, Port Orchard Located between Bremerton and Port Orchard

1.800.758.2912

Closed Sundays for Family Day

www.peninsulamitsubishi.com All vehicles subject to prior sale. All vehicles plus tax, license and $150 doc fee. Sale ends 4-30-14.


Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.