Ruralite
TILLAMOOK PUD
JULY 2024

JULY 2024
It was a warm summer afternoon and my wife and I were mingling with the best of them. The occasion was a 1920s-themed party, and everyone was dressed to the nines. Parked on the manse’s circular driveway was a beautiful classic convertible. It was here that I got the idea for our new 1920s Retrograde Watch.
Never ones to miss an opportunity, we carefully steadied our glasses of bubbly and climbed into the car’s long front seat. Among the many opulent features on display was a series of dashboard dials that accentuated the car’s lavish aura. One of those dials inspired our 1920s Retrograde Watch, a genuinely unique timepiece that marries timeless style with modern technology.
With its remarkable retrograde hour and minute indicators, sunburst guilloche face and precision movement, this design is truly one of a kind. What does retrograde mean? Instead of displaying the hands rotating on an axis like most watches, the hands sweep in a semicircle, then return to their starting point and begin all over again.
Retrograde watches by the big brands can set you back thousands; one recent offering from a big French fashion house is selling for more than $150,000! But because we’ve designed the 1920s Retrograde Watch in-house, we can offer it to you for just $99!
This watch is so wildly popular with our customers that we’re actually concerned about running out; we only have 937 729 left for this ad!
Watch Specifications:
• Precision movement
• Stainless steel case, caseback and crown
• Retrograde hour and minute indicators
• Water-resistant to 5 ATM
• Brown genuine leather band
• Fits wrists up to 8"
1920s Retrograde Watch
$399 $99* + S&P Save $300
*Special price only for customers using the offer code.
“An elegant and exciting timepiece that every collector will love.”
— George omas, internationally renowned watch expert
“[A] unique and beautiful timepiece.”
— Carlos C., Los Banos, CA
July 2024 • Volume 72, No. 7
CEO Michael Shepard
SENIOR VP OF CONTENT Leon Espinoza
EDITORIAL DIRECTOR Mike Teegarden, CCC
DEPUTY EDITORIAL DIRECTOR
Noble Sprayberry
SENIOR EDITOR Jennifer Paton, CCC
ASSISTANT EDITORS Chasity Anderson, CCC; Victoria Hampton, CCC; David Herder, CCC
ASSOCIATE EDITORS
Valeri Pearon, Nina Todea
PUBLICATIONS PRODUCTION SR. MANAGER
Elizabeth Beatty
PUBLICATIONS COORDINATOR
Alyssa McDougle
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The heart and heat of summer are here.
Gardens are flourishing, and farmers markets are bursting with fresh produce. Outdoor activities are at their peak. I hope you have found ways to enjoy summer while staying cool.
If travel is part of your summer plans, you are not alone. July is one of the busiest travel months of the year, and if you love to include your pets on your vacations, you must read our story on Page 10 about pet-friendly adventures. We offer suggestions and resources to make your time on the road with your pets safe and fun.
Our Spotlight feature, beginning on Page 12, focuses on Amanda McGahen, who likes to travel fast in small circles. Amanda competes on a roller derby team in Walla Walla, Washington. Her sisterhood of athletes has been part of her healing after the death of two children. Part of her journey includes leading the group’s Care
Committee, which celebrates milestones and supports teammates in need. She is paying forward to help others.
Milkweed Update: For those following along, my latest effort to grow milkweed was shortlived and ended tragically. If you will remember, I first attempted to grow plants from seeds. Attempt No. 2 was a 6-inch store-bought start. After only a few days, something stripped all the leaves from my milkweed, and it died. I’ll try again, though—I’m stubborn. I’m going to look for a larger, more established plant. I may also put netting over the milkweed to protect it. Wish me luck.
Sincerely,
Mike Teegarden Editorial Director
Map out trips with furry friends Up Close, Page 10
By Chelsea Yarnell
In the hills of Eastern Oregon, sixth grader Baylee Tohl saw exactly what she had been scouting for: a painted desert ram.
“My hands were shaking, but I was so excited,” she says.
Accompanied by a team with Titan Outdoors Lil Titans, Baylee had her first successful hunting trip, bringing down an exotic ram.
“It was up on rocks,” Baylee says. “After I shot it, we climbed up there and took a bunch of pictures and then loaded it up in the side-by-side.”
She rode with her ram back to camp,
where she was greeted by a crowd.
“When we pulled in, everyone cheered and came up and asked questions,” Baylee says.
The moment a hunter returns with a kill is a highlight—and example—of the camaraderie found at the Titan Outdoor Lil Titans camp in Ashwood.
Titan Outdoor Lil Titans is a meshing of concepts from Tillamook County’s Chris Meyer and Jamie Dixson.
Originally hailing from Washington state, Chris began a hunting DVD company several years ago with the name “Titan Outdoors.”
“I would make little videos of hunting,
had apparel and built that over the years,” he says.
Chris learned some basic hunting skills from his father and began hunting at age 13. His hobby grew, and he produced four different hunting DVDs over the years.
“We got quite the following,” Chris says. “It ended up being a lot more successful than I thought it was going to be. It turned into something a little bit bigger— nothing huge, but big enough to have fun with. I just enjoyed sharing my hunting experiences with people.
“Any hunt that we went on, we would film and put it out there for people to enjoy. We’re not big trophy hunters. We hunt for
the experience, for the memories, for food on the table.”
After relocating to Tillamook 11 years ago, Chris met Jamie, a local educator and avid hunter. The two brainstormed the idea for a youth hunting program.
In 2014, they created the Lil Titans branch of Titan Outdoors to provide an exclusive outdoor experience for youth carrying on the tradition of conservation, proper animal harvesting and safe hunting practices.
The first year, Lil Titans selected eight hunters for a long weekend hunting camp at the Four Aces Ranch & Outfitters in Ashwood. After seeing success, the program has continued the camp annually, now taking up to 16 youth each year.
Young hunters from across the country submit videos requesting to be selected for the camp. There are typically twice as many entries received as available spots.
“We take kids that are between ages 9 to 15 years old,” Chris says. “We select kids who have either never been hunting before, kids who’ve been hunting and haven’t been successful, or kids who have maybe been successful once or twice, but are going through something really tragic in life.”
Typically, they select a handful of Tillamook-area youth. It took Baylee two submission cycles to be chosen.
“I applied two years ago and wasn’t selected,” she says. “This year, when (Chris) called, he said, ‘I’m sorry to tell you—you get to go.’ I was really excited.”
Selected hunters are encouraged to bring their families along for the experience.
“If a kid gets selected, we are all about family,” Chris says. “Bring your family, bring your friends. They can come hang out at camp. Only one family member gets to go out on the hunt, but there’s a lot of other activities going on at camp. It’s great to see 100 people sitting around camp enjoying each other’s time, not having their cellphones out.”
Prior to going on a hunt, each participant receives a custom engraved rifle and becomes certified through a firearm safety field course, including completing the online written program. They also learn how to track, use binoculars and select what type of ram they want to hunt.
“When they go out to hunt, they have a guide, as well as a (cameraperson) and one family member,” Chris says. “Their guide shows them how to track and what to look for. It’s rugged country. It’s not an easy pickand-shoot walk.”
All of the more than 150 youth hunters Lil Titans has taken on hunting trips have had a successful hunt.
Once arriving back at camp with their animal, hunters learn to harvest and prepare the meat.
“They actually learn from beginning to table on how to take care of everything at our camp,” Chris says.
Baylee processed about 16 pounds of meat from her hunt.
“I mixed in bacon with it and turned it into breakfast sausage,” she says. “I got to bring all that meat home.”
Hunters also leave camp with their own sets of binoculars, packs and hunter’s safety orange apparel. Their animals are shouldermounted by a taxidermist. By supplying the youth with gear, Titan Outdoors hopes they continue hunting.
“It’s so important to get kids outside,” Chris says. “Some of them have been hunting and didn’t get anything, and they get discouraged. We take them to the camp, and that really lights their fire. Then they leave and they’re determined to get something and want to go more. Which, in
turn, makes them want to spend more time with their family outside.”
Everything at the Lil Titans camp is provided for free to the selected youth. The only expense to families is the cost of travel to the hunting location.
“We really want to make it happen for these kids,” Chris says. “There’s a lot of parents that can’t afford to do something like this. We don’t want anyone to be excluded because they can’t afford to come.
“We all love just sitting around camp and looking at all the families, hanging out, interacting, mingling together and getting to know each other.”
Chris says they would never be able to host their camps without the support of community members and sponsors. Major supporters of Lil Titans include Black River Taxidermy, Lifetime WildLife Studios, Trapline Taxidermy, Bob’s Sporting Goods, Vortex, Pierce Arms and Moosie’s Catch & Release Camo.
The biggest fundraiser for the Titan Outdoors Lil Titans is its annual January banquet.
“It’s just gotten bigger every single year,” Chris says. “It’s humbling and overwhelming at the same time.” n
To support Titan Outdoors, attend the banquet or donate at titanoutdoorsliltitans.com.
Follow Titan Outdoors on social media for information about the 2025 camp submission guidelines.
Virtual power plants may be the keys to meeting the country’s
By Dan Catchpole
Smart thermostats, rooftop solar, battery systems, electric vehicles and other distributed energy resources are turning homes, shops, factories and other facilities into virtual power plants.
A virtual power plant bundles distributed energy resources— individual energy-generating and -stabilizing devices spread across the grid—and operates them as a single entity. For example, if thousands of homes in a utility’s service territory have rooftop solar panels, the utility can connect them to a digital platform that manages them as if they were one big solar plant sprawled across acres.
Thanks to recent technological advances and years of experimentation, virtual power plants are poised to become a major part of America’s power grid.
There are 30-60 gigawatts of VPPs already running in the country, according to a United States Department of Energy report released in September 2023. By 2030, VPPs could provide 90-180 GW, or as much as 20% of America’s projected electricity demand, the report says.
The key ingredients—private investment, public support, market demand and technological advances—appear to be aligning to make that achievable.
Rocky Mountain Power, which serves areas of Idaho, Utah
and Wyoming, has had no problem signing up customers for its Wattsmart battery program, which lets the utility use battery systems in homes and businesses as a VPP.
Thousands have enrolled since the program launched in 2020, and the company has several hundred more applications in the queue, says Bill Comeau, Rocky Mountain Power’s vice president of customer experience and innovation.
“The growth is much faster than we expected,” Bill says.
The company pays participants a few thousand dollars up front plus a small amount per year depending on the size of their batteries, which often are connected to solar panels on the customers’ homes or buildings.
The batteries typically charge during the middle of the day when solar power is generating more electricity than Rocky Mountain Power needs. The utility then uses that energy in the evening, when energy demand increases as people get home from work, start a load of laundry and turn on air conditioning or heat.
By storing energy from midday to be used when demand is higher, Rocky Mountain Power does not have to build more generation or buy power from the market when it is most expensive. The utility also uses Wattsmart batteries for frequency response, which means balancing energy demand and supply on its system from one second to the next.
All of that is done from the utility’s control room. Customers in the program do not have to do anything, Bill says.
That seamlessness and nimble control is one of the technological advances putting VPPs at a tipping point.
Puget Sound Energy in Washington worked with software provider AutoGrid to launch its first VPP that already has tens of thousands of customers participating as of late last year. The company used the program seven times this past winter to get through peak-demand events.
“What we’re trying to do is this idea of energy orchestration, where we’re working with and for our customers to make sure that we’re maximizing the potential that all these connected devices will bring,” says Aaron August, PSE senior vice president, chief customer and transformation officer.
The utility, which serves more than 1 million electric service consumers, expects to have 30 megawatts of battery capacity by the end of the year and at least 86 MW by the end of 2025.
The utility is focused on adding battery storage to the VPP but Aaron says the vision is to use energy-efficiency practices, distributed energy resources and battery storage systems. The utility also plans to use vehicle-to-grid storage, which enables energy to be pulled back to the power grid from an electric vehicle battery. The utility encourages its consumers to lower or shift their electricity use during daily peak times when energy use is highest and power is most expensive.
“Each one of those assets ... it’s like a musical instrument,” Aaron says. “If you keep adding instruments together, you can
create this orchestra.”
In the San Francisco Bay area, MCE is assembling its own orchestra in Richmond, California. The electric service provider expects to unveil the first house this summer in its inaugural VPP program, which will start with 100 homes and larger commercial and industrial sites, MCE Chief Operating Officer Vicken Kasarjian says.
The program overhauls abandoned homes and sells them at a discount to low-income, first-time homebuyers. The VPP will harness an array of clean-energy technologies in the refurbished homes, including energy storage, smart thermostats, rooftop solar, heat pump water and space heating, and electric vehicle charging.
Participants agree to connect their smart appliances to the grid. MCE will bundle the devices and operate them based on market signals, which, according to MCE, will increase grid reliability, cut consumers’ power bills and reduce emissions.
Other communities have contacted MCE about the program, and it is looking to expand, Vicken says.
VPPs could play a critical role in transforming the energy grid, but that is not a foregone outcome,
Bill says.
“There are a lot of opportunities but a lot of work that needs to be done to get these working on the grid,” he says. n
OnMay 18, 1980, the once-slumbering Mount St. Helens erupted in the Pacific Northwest. It was the most impressive display of nature’s power in North America’s recorded history. But even more impressive is what emerged from the chaos... a spectacular new creation born of ancient minerals named Helenite. Its lush, vivid color and amazing story instantly captured the attention of jewelry connoisseurs worldwide. You can now have four carats of the world’s newest stone for an absolutely unbelievable price.
Known as America’s emerald, Helenite makes it possible to give her a stone that’s brighter and has more fire than any emerald without paying the exorbitant price. In fact, this many carats of an emerald that looks this perfect and glows this green would cost you upwards of $80,000. Your more beautiful and much more affordable option features a perfect teardrop of Helenite set in gold-covered sterling silver suspended from a chain accented with even more verdant Helenite.
Helenite Earrings -a $129 valuewith purchase of Helenite Necklace
Limited Reserves. As one of the largest gemstone dealers in the world, we buy more carats of Helenite than anyone, which lets us give you a great price. However, this much gorgeous green for this price won’t last long. Don’t miss out. Helenite is only found in one section of Washington State, so call today!
Romance guaranteed or your money back. Experience the scintillating beauty of the Helenite Teardrop Necklace for 30 days and if she isn’t completely in love with it send it back for a full refund of the item price. You can even keep the stud earrings as our thank you for giving us a try.
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* Special price only for customers using the offer code versus the price on Stauer.com without your offer code.
Limited to the first 1600 orders from this ad only
4 carats of shimmering Helenite
“I love these pieces... it just glowed... so beautiful!” — S.S., Salem, OR
By Kathy Denes
Summer typically means travel, whether it’s scenic road trips or flights to vacation destinations. More than ever before, beloved pets are tagging along for the ride.
If you want to take your four-legged companion on your next vacation, here are some pet-friendly resources to make the most of your trip.
Conde Naste Traveler has an online list of nationwide hotels and Airbnbs it deems best for accommodating pets, especially dogs.
Meanwhile, on travelandleisure.com, search “pets” and you’ll unleash a wealth of helpful articles. Even financial companies are weighing in. NerdWallet compiled a list of Best Hotels for Pets in 2024, based on factors such as fees and amenities, and rated air travel options, topped by Alaska Airlines. If you don’t want to do the research yourself, there are travel agencies that specialize in taking care of the details for you.
Also, hotels, resorts, parks and campgrounds usually post their pet policies, fees and amenities, as do airlines, trains and even cruise lines that allow furry passengers. Many websites are focused entirely on pet-friendly travel. Just browse by city, state or destination at resources such as:
• bringfido.com.
• petswelcome.com.
• tripswithpets.com.
Expert Advice
“Before deciding to bring your pet along on a trip, you need to ask yourself whether or not it’s in your pet’s best interest to do so,” says Dr. Rena Carlson, president of the American Veterinary Medical Association.
What’s a fun adventure for you might be an overwhelming experience for your dog.
“If you choose to include your pet, a pre-trip veterinary visit is a good idea to make sure your pet is healthy and up to date on vaccinations and microchip registration, and to obtain a health certificate, which is required by law if you’re traveling to a different state with your pet,” Rena says.
Your veterinarian can also provide vital information about the risk of parasites and other diseases that your pet may be exposed to at your destination, as well as possible preventive steps or treatments.
“Make sure to plan for their comfort in transit, whether by land or air, with regular breaks and by choosing the least stressful travel options,” Rena says. “Confirm in advance that your destinations are pet-friendly, and try to maintain your pet’s routine as much as possible to help them feel secure. Your careful planning can ensure a safe and enjoyable trip for everyone involved.” n
Whether you plan to explore the rugged coast or hike trails through vast mountain forests, the Pacific Northwest offers plenty of options for bringing your pet along. State departments of tourism have resources for trip planning, and many pet owners post blogs sharing their own experiences. Here are a few insights:
X From the riverfront and downtown areas of Spokane, Washington, to the base of Schweitzer Mountain in Sandpoint, Idaho, the Ruby Hospitality family of hotels welcomes dogs—limit of two per room and registration required—for a daily fee of $25 each. The Ruby River Hotel location in Spokane has a dog park, and Spokane River Centennial State Park Trail is nearby. The hotel is also just a 10-minute walk from BARK, A Rescue Pub, where your pet can join in for food and refreshments. The pub partners with the local humane society to help rescue dogs and cats find new families, so you may leave there with more than just a full stomach.
X Less than an hour away, the largest state park in Washington, Mount Spokane, welcomes leashed pets at campsites and on most of its more than 100 miles of trails. As with all state recreation lands, vehicle entry requires the Discover Pass, costing $10 per day or $30 a year. AllTrails reviewers say the most pet-friendly hikes are the challenging 12.6-mile trail to the top of Spokane Mountain and Tripps Knob and Linder Ridge Loop, along with moderate Day Mountain and Mount Kit Carson trails, Shadow Mountain Loop and Trail 121/Trail 122 Loop.
X Alaska, large enough to cover 20% of the continental U.S., has immense vacation potential, but the vast wildness that draws visitors also requires travelers with pets to take extra care. Veterinary health certificates must be shown on entering the state, and most Alaska destinations and activities require that dogs be kept on a short leash—no longer than 6 feet, or 9 feet in a state park.
X The Oregon Coast is doggy heaven, with a vast amount of room for running and sniffing. Lots of shops are pet-friendly, and some even offer water dishes near their entrances. Many restaurants have outdoor dining areas where pets are welcome. A number of hotels that allow pets, just ask about their policy when you make your reservation.
By Vicki Hillhouse
Amanda McGahen’s roller derby journey started in 2023 in a parked car. The night of an open-house-style recruitment meeting for the Walla Walla Sweets Rollergirls, the 42-year-old drove from just across the state line in Milton-Freewater, Oregon, then debated whether to get out from behind the wheel.
“I actually sat in the parking lot and thought, ‘Am I going to go to this all by myself, not knowing anybody?’” she says.
It wasn’t the roller-skating that worried her. As a child in Lebanon, Oregon, she spent weekends at the skating rink, racing girls a couple of years older than her around the wooden floor.
“I skated every chance I could get, and I was fast,” she says. “I felt like I was flying. I felt invincible. I loved skating.”
She wanted that again, and the enticement of a contact sport intrigued her even more.
“I’ve always been interested in sports— boxing, martial arts,” she says. “I like anything that can challenge me, that pushes me harder.”
She’d started home workouts with lunges, squats and cardio.
But there was one condition to joining as she summoned the nerve to enter the orientation with a room full of strangers that night: “I don’t think I can make practices if we have them on Sundays,” Amanda told one of the cocaptains at the end of the session. “Every other practice day works for my schedule but Sundays. My husband has work, and I won’t leave my children with anyone else.”
Like many parents who seek out a new hobby or activity, she looked forward to the dedicated time to focus on herself. But she carried into the space a loss from 11 years before, shaping every decision she makes around the care of her children.
Amanda
joined roller derby in 2023. The sport has had such an impact on her that she commemorated it with a tattoo of a skate and her number on her foot.
the
Roller derby is contested by two 15-skater teams. There are two 30-minute periods. Each period includes multiple “jams,” which can last up to 2 minutes or end before that when the lead jammer calls it off.
Teams field one jammer and four blockers per jam. Jammers must navigate through the blockers. The first jammer to pass all skaters in the pack legally is called the “lead jammer.” This happens on the first pass. In subsequent passes, jammers earn 1 point for each opposing player they pass legally. Both jammers can score once they’ve made it through the pack.
Blockers work to prevent the jammers from passing by using their hips, rears and shoulders. Skaters may not block to the back of another skater, or trip or elbow them. Illegal actions are penalized with 30 seconds in the penalty box. During that time, the team plays short.
“They were 13½ months old when it happened,” she says of her twin girls, Kylie and Kalise.
Amanda and her husband, Darren, were living in Las Vegas at the time. She had night school and worked the graveyard shift. She left them with a family member. On the twins’ first night away from home, Amanda got the worst call of her life. Kylie had rolled off a bed in her sleep and onto a pile of pillows, lodged between the bed and a wall. She suffocated.
The scene at the hospital was like something from a movie—the frantic pace of doctors, police interviews, she says.
“Walking out of the hospital with only one daughter when you’re supposed to have two—coming home to all these memories and knowing you don’t have one of your kids with you—it was the worst pain imaginable,” she says.
The couple lumbered through the pits of grief with an older son, Evan, single twin, Kalise, and support from their community of loved ones. A happy addition came a couple of years later with
the birth of daughter Aubrey. Eventually, they left the difficult memories of Nevada and returned to Oregon.
In December 2020, they moved to Milton-Freewater. Five months later, Evan died on his 22nd birthday.
“That first year in Milton-Freewater, I had just gone through survival mode,” Amanda says.
Unknowingly, she had more in common than she imagined with other recruits that January evening. On some level, they all were looking at derby to bring something new to their lives, whether it be friendships, intensity or a daring opportunity to do something out of the box. Among them, Amanda found her people: 40-somethings, mothers, competitors and even those who had faced similar losses.
With its fast-paced, eight-wheeled action, focus on empowerment, inclusivity, fun personas and spirited competition, roller derby draws people of every size and background. Many come to the sport in search of something—a
new challenge, a community, a bold disruption—some having no skating experience when they start.
Walla Walla’s roller derby team shot up from the derby revival energy of the early 2000s. The grassroots movement of flat-track derby made skater-operated leagues more accessible in remote areas with no rinks. Started in September 2009, Walla Walla’s amateur team of recreational skaters competes against other Northwest teams. It is fed with new skaters making the roller derby discovery for themselves.
Practices are twice a week, infusing skating skills, endurance training, strategy and game play.
One year after joining, Amanda—“The Camanda”—is on the verge of her first competitive season.
“At the beginning, it was hard,” she says. “I felt like I could do a lot of the things, but there was a lot I had to do more precisely. Now, it’s just getting out of my own head. The rules are all making sense. The more we get out there, the more I understand.”
Practices have become sacred time for her.
“I’m disappointed when I miss,” she says. “There are times when I don’t want to go. Maybe I slept like crap the night before or my body hurts. But I’m always glad that I went. When it gets to the end of the night, I don’t want to leave.”
She’s also excited about her new role as secretary of the nonprofit league’s board and head of its Care Committee. The committee helps as the heart of the team, celebrating skater birthdays and stepping in to organize help for those in need.
“I’m really excited about it,” Amanda says. “When we lost Kylie, friends set up a meal train. We didn’t have to cook for almost two months. I’m hoping I can bring something to the team through the committee. That’s where my heart is. I always want to pay it forward.” n
The sport of roller derby got its start in 1935 when Chicago-based promoter Leo Seltzer first introduced it as an endurance race—capitalizing on the popularity of marathon activities of the era as well as the nation’s love of roller skating. The first Transcontinental Roller Derby pitted 25 couples in a simulated cross-country race on a banked wooden track.
Leo joined with sports reporter Damon Runyon two years later and built a more competitive framework for roller derby. It had physical contact, speed, teams and a new era of drama. As a touring act, it drew throngs of adoring fans. But it truly became a craze in late 1948 when it was first broadcast on television.
Within a few years, consumer fervor for the touring professional sport began fluctuating. In 1958, Leo’s son, Jerry Seltzer, took the reins and renewed derby’s exposure to the masses. He reportedly sent in tapes of the San Francisco Bay Bombers to the local news, which delightfully received it. Eventually, this practice grew so that derby staff members drove game tapes to stations, hitting markets throughout the country, and ultimately creating an early version of syndication.
Venues, including Madison Square Garden, had sell-out crowds, and more than 100 networks broadcast the events every week. By 1973, however, the sport disappeared. Some reports point to the economic recession and the oil crisis as having harmed the operation’s travel, as well as budgets for entertainment.
This marked a 30-year hiatus for the sport.
In 2001, resurgence came from Austin, Texas, along with a new way to operate. The Texas Rollergirls launched the modern-day framework that includes a DIY approach to the sport. With a a flat track that can be laid more easily and affordably with tape, tracks can be available anywhere space is large enough. Ownership changed, too. Rather than one company operating teams, modern derby leagues are financed and operated by the people who skate in them, as well as a community of volunteers—officials, medics, photographers and announcers.
The creation of a governing body came in 2004 with the Women’s Flat Track Derby Association, followed three years later by the Men’s Roller Derby Association. WFTDA sets international standards for rankings, rules and competitions, as well as guidance and resources for the sport.
WFTDA has 435 member leagues spanning six continents, but the sport has even more nonmember leagues that may use WFTDA rules as guidance and compete without rankings on a recreational level.
Orzo Salad With Shrimp and Lemon Dressing
1/4 cup extra-virgin olive oil
1 teaspoon lemon zest
3 tablespoons fresh lemon juice
11/2 teaspoons kosher salt
1/2 teaspoon black pepper
1 cup uncooked orzo
8 ounces fresh asparagus, trimmed and diagonally sliced into 1-inch pieces
4 ounces fresh sugar snap peas, trimmed
1 cup fresh or frozen English peas, thawed if frozen
12 ounces medium raw shrimp, peeled and deveined
1/4 cup coarsely chopped fresh chives
1/4 cup coarsely chopped fresh flat-leaf parsley
Whisk together oil, zest, juice, salt and pepper in a small bowl. Set aside. Prepare orzo according to package directions, omitting salt and fat. Drain. Transfer orzo to a bowl. Cool to room temperature, about 10 minutes.
While orzo cooks, bring a large saucepan of water to boil over high heat. Add asparagus and sugar snap peas to boiling water. Cook until bright green and tender-crisp, about 2 minutes. Add English peas. Stir until softened, about 30 seconds. Using a slotted spoon, transfer vegetables to an ice bath, reserving boiling water in saucepan. Add shrimp to boiling water. Cook until opaque, about 3 minutes. Drain. Transfer shrimp to ice bath with vegetables. Let stand until chilled, about 3 minutes. Drain. Toss together shrimp-vegetable mixture with orzo, and drizzle with dressing. Add chives and parsley. Toss to combine. Serve at room temperature or chilled.
Salad
1/4 cup slivered almonds
6 to 8 cups mixed butter
lettuce
3 small ripe peaches, sliced
Dressing
11/2 tablespoons white balsamic vinegar
1 tablespoon Dijon mustard
1 tablespoon maple syrup
1/2 red onion, thinly sliced
1/2 cup canned corn, drained
4 ounces soft goat cheese, crumbled
1/4 cup olive oil
1/4 teaspoon kosher salt
Fresh ground black pepper
Place the almonds in a dry skillet over medium heat. Heat, shaking the pan and stirring often with a wooden spoon, until the nuts are fragrant and golden brown, about 4 to 5 minutes. Remove immediately from the heat and transfer to a plate.
To make the dressing: In a small bowl, whisk together the balsamic vinegar, mustard, maple syrup, olive oil, kosher salt and several grinds of fresh ground black pepper until thick and emulsified.
To serve, top the greens with almonds, peaches, red onion, corn and goat cheese. Drizzle with dressing. Serve immediately.
Dressing
1 ripe avocado, pitted and peeled
1/4 cup red wine vinegar
2 tablespoons fresh lime juice
2 tablespoons chopped fresh cilantro
Salad
2 heads romaine lettuce, chopped
15-ounce can black beans, drained and rinsed
11/2 cups grape tomatoes, cut in half
1 orange bell pepper, seeded and chopped
1 cup frozen corn, thawed
1/2 jalapeno, seeded and coarsely chopped
1 clove garlic, coarsely chopped
1/2 teaspoon kosher salt
1/2 teaspoon ground black pepper
1/2 cup olive oil
1 cup shredded pepper jack cheese
4 green onions, sliced
1/2 cup chopped fresh cilantro
1 ripe avocado, peeled, pitted and cubed
1/2 cup crushed tortilla chips or strips
To make the dressing, add the avocado, red wine vinegar, lime juice, cilantro, jalapeno, garlic, salt and pepper to a food processor. Blend or pulse until almost smooth. There should still be bits of cilantro. Add the oil. Blend until incorporated.
To make the salad, add the lettuce, black beans, tomatoes, bell pepper, corn, cheese, green onions, cilantro, avocado and tortilla chips to a large bowl. Drizzle with the dressing, and toss to combine. Serve immediately.
24 ounces baby red potatoes, scrubbed and halved
10 cups water
1 tablespoon plus 1/2 teaspoon kosher salt, divided
4 thick-cut bacon slices, chopped
1/2 cup sour cream
1/2 cup mayonnaise
11/2 tablespoons chopped fresh chives
1 tablespoon chopped fresh flat-leaf parsley
11/2 teaspoons fresh dill
1 teaspoon fresh lemon juice
1/4 teaspoon grated garlic
1/4 teaspoon black pepper
4 ounces mild cheddar cheese, shredded
Place potatoes, water and 1 tablespoon salt in a large pot. Cover pot and bring to a boil over high heat. Uncover pot and reduce heat to medium-high to maintain a moderate boil. Cook, stirring occasionally, until potatoes are fork-tender, about 12 minutes. Drain potatoes. Cool for 20 minutes.
While potatoes boil, cook bacon in a nonstick skillet over medium, stirring often until crisp, about 9 minutes. Remove from heat. Transfer bacon to a paper towel-lined plate. Set aside until ready to use.
In a medium bowl, whisk together sour cream, mayonnaise, chives, parsley, dill, lemon juice, garlic, black pepper and 1/2 teaspoon salt.
Add sour cream mixture, bacon and cheese to cooled potatoes in bowl. Toss to combine. Serve immediately, or cover and store in the refrigerator for up to 12 hours.
1 cucumber, unpeeled, seeded and sliced 1/4-inch thick
1 red bell pepper, large-diced
1 yellow bell pepper, large-diced
1 green bell pepper, large-diced
2 cloves garlic, minced
1 teaspoon dried oregano
1/2 teaspoon Dijon mustard
1/4 cup red wine vinegar
1 pint cherry or grape tomatoes, halved
1/2 red onion, sliced in half-rounds
1/2 pound feta cheese, 1/2-inch diced
1/2 cup Kalamata olives, pitted
1 teaspoon kosher salt
1/2 teaspoon freshly ground black pepper
1/2 cup olive oil
Place the cucumber, peppers, tomatoes and red onion in a large bowl.
To make the vinaigrette, whisk together the garlic, oregano, mustard, vinegar, salt and pepper in a small bowl. Still whisking, slowly add the olive oil to make an emulsion. Pour the vinaigrette over the vegetables. Add the feta and olives. Toss lightly. Set aside for 30 minutes to allow the flavors to blend. Serve at room temperature.
I have 10 handmade porcelain and cloth dolls ready to dress along with many patterns. They are various sizes and include Tom Sawyer and Chief Crazy Horse. I will donate if shipping is paid.
Janet Dixon P.O. Box 969 Priest River, ID 83856 Jkdixon14@gmail.com
Would you be willing to part with a Christmas hanky that is tucked away just waiting for a home? Be sure it will receive tender care as it becomes part of a Christmas Tree project. Thank you.
Kathy Heitkemper
1302 Hermits Way
The Dalles, OR 97058 jandktd@gmail.com
I have scads of stamps. Most canceled and some are collectors. I’ll send them to you with the postage paid.
Judith Sather 65067 Webster Road La Grande, OR 97850
Please help us celebrate our dear mother’s birthday as she turns 90 in a couple of months. She is a social butterfly who sees the best in everyone she meets and dearly loves old-fashioned snail mail. Birthday wishes would mean so much to her. Thank you. Send cards to Kay Elmes, 25363 Arnold Lane, Elmira, OR 97437.
Mary A. Minyard Elmira, Oregon
My dad will turn 90 this month. He would thoroughly enjoy receiving birthday cards celebrating his milestone birthday. Thank you for your consideration. Please send cards to Michael Martell, 17501 Killdeer Drive #399, Bend, OR 97707.
Donna Poirier Sweet Home, OR
My sweet father is turning 100 years old this month. His career was in helping those who were disabled on the job find retraining for a new vocation. He has always enjoyed seeing those he has helped succeed. I would love to inundate him with birthday wishes from readers all over the country. Please send birthday cards to Rulon Ogden, 8131 Beaver Lake Drive, San Diego, CA 92119. Thank you so much.
Pam Anderson
West Richland, Washington
I have met a very nice lady through the Elks as we play poker together once a week in Springfied, Oregon. She doesn’t miss many nights and she really enjoys playing. Her name is Elsie Bergold and she will be 105 years old at the end of July. Please send her cards to my address and they will be delivered at our weekly poker party, and what a surprise it will be. Elsie Bergold, C/O Martha Curl, 81851 River Drive, Creswell, OR 97426.
Martha Curl Creswell, Oregon
To the lady from Fort Rock/Christmas Valley area who was interested in the Palomino painting that hung at La Pine Law. I have the painting. Please let me know if you’re still interested. Thank you.
M. Van Dyke
P.O. Box 1049 La Pine, OR 97739
Avid carp angler seeks Asian, European and American carp cooking recipes. Also interested in recipes for bait concoctions: paste/dough baits, boilies, particle baits, etc.
D. A. Blanco
P.O. Box 8805 Moscow, ID 83843
What a nice surprise to receive so many cards, notes and little gifts in the mail from thoughtful readers. I enjoyed every one of them. Thank you for making my 90th birthday in November so special. Also, thank you to all the veterans for your service to our country.
Jean Bartholomew Oakland, Oregon
Have a safe Fourth of July!
Send your request (no attachments) to readerexchange@ruralite.org or mail to Reader Exchange, 5625 NE Elam Young Parkway, Suite 100, Hillsboro, OR 97124. Fill in the subject line with Reader Exchange.
Acceptance, scheduling and editing are at the editor’s discretion. Single requests only, please. No duplicates. Submissions are handled firstcome, first-served as space allows. We cannot honor every request.
Please affirm you have authorization from all appropriate parties before submitting. By submitting, you indemnify Reader Exchange, Pioneer Utility Resources Inc., its officers, directors, employees, utility clients and insurers from all legal liability incurred by the publication of information.
We no longer accept pen pal requests. You may submit a pen pal request as a Marketplace ad (pricing applies).
When submitting a milestone request, please send it at least two months before the milestone. Phone numbers are not published. Email addresses are if they are part of the ad, but you must include a postal address.
Requests must include the name and address of the electric utility that provides your magazine.
Try the world’s most tender steaks, extra-aged 28+ days to perfection. Discover premium quality beef that’s grain-finished for exquisite flavor.
Experience the juiciest air-chilled chicken, tastiest pork, and so much more.
Butcher’s Cut Filet Mignons (5 oz.)
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Omaha Steaks Burgers (4 oz.)
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Individual Scalloped Potatoes (3.8 oz.)
Caramel Apple Tartlets (4 oz.)
Omaha Steaks Seasoning (3 oz.)
Air-Chilled Boneless Chicken Breasts (4 oz.)
Omaha Steaks Burgers (4 oz.)
See ice reshape the landcape in Alaska at
See the scouring power of nature, the deep greens of forest and the clear blue of glacier ice come together at Glacier Bay National Park and Preserve in Southeastern Alaska. Glacier Bay encompasses 3.3 million acres of fjord, coastline and forest.
Glacier Bay lets visitors see many different environments close together. Mountains and freezing glaciers show harsh, majestic environments and demonstrate how the glaciers can reshape a landscape. Forests grow nearby and are great for hiking. The waters are home to sea otters, porpoises and whales.
When visiting on land, head to Bartlett Cove and the visitor center. The Forest Trail is an easy path that leads to a beach. Consider looking into a tour to explore the bay’s water by boat. Glacier Bay Lodge runs a tour with a a park ranger naturalist on board.
Glacier Bay sits at the collision point of the North American and Pacific crustal plates, which has led to the formation of the bay’s tall, coastal mountains. The summits foster and form glaciers, which in turn carve a rugged landscape. Retreating glaciers have left room for a young temperate rainforest to grow.
The Glacier Bay visitor center is open daily from May to September. To start planning your trip, call 907-6972230 or go online to www.nps.gov/glba.
The answer: Although tremendous strides have been made in
cost reductions have not been
If
By Dave LaBelle
As a school-age child, I could hardly wait for the last day of school and the beginning of summer vacation, where freedom, sunshine, time with my dogs, fishing in the creeks, baseball games, watermelons, swimming pools and working with my grandfather on his fishing boat awaited.
As an adult, those carefree summer memories still bring me joy and serve me faithfully in storytelling, whether with words or photographs. In fact, beginning writers, unsure what to write about, are often encouraged to start with their childhood, a treasure chest rich with stories.
While childhood memories are a good source of inspiration for activities, making photographs that capture the essence of summer requires thought.
“Don’t just show me what something looks like,”
Renowned author, photographer and lecturer
Dave LaBelle has captured special moments for more than half a century. For more of his writings, visit davidlabelle.com and bridgesandangels.wordpress.com.
I often admonished my photojournalism students.
“Show me what it feels like.”
That was a common theme in all of my classes, and it remains sound advice for anybody using photography to communicate. If you want to reach people with your photographs, aim high. Those images connect us and make us smile or remember.
Consider what is in the frame when you press the shutter. Being patient and watching for storytelling moments is critical. The act of fishing might not be nearly
as storytelling as the reaction of the angler once the fish is caught.
Conversely, an overall scene of a fisherman in a beautiful stream might best evoke the serenity of the moment. Sometimes the liberal use of negative space—that which is not occupied by people or objects—helps humble us and wrap us in wonder.
Finally, consider the angle from which you photograph. A child’s perspective is different than an adult’s, and subtly helps take us back to those long, carefree summer days. n
See if you can make a photograph that captures the joy or the essence of summer. Reach into your memory bank and consider what you loved most about summers. Chances are the places and activities that brought you joy in the past—lakes, campgrounds, fishing villages or swimming pools—will lead you to where you find the best pictures today.
Email your best image (just one, please) with caption information, including an explanation of how it affects you, to GPH@pur.coop. We may share submissions on our website and social media channels.
By Walt Amacher, Oregon—Tillamook PUD
It is time to share your favorite photos for a chance to appear in our 2025 Ruralite calendar.
Up to 13 winners will be selected and receive $100. Photos must be submitted by July 15, 2024.
The contest is open to recipients of Ruralite and Currents magazines. Each person may only submit up to two photos. Each photo submission must include:
• Photographer’s name, address and electric utility.
• A short description of what is shown.
• Photographer’s email address and phone number.
• Digital JPEG photos only. Photos must be horizontal or landscape format and at least 300 dpi at 11 inches wide by 9 inches tall. Vertical photos and files larger than 30 megabytes will not be accepted. Send submissions to calendar@ruralite.org. Put “2025 Calendar Photo Contest” in the subject line.
• Use the highest resolution setting on your digital camera.
• Photograph beautiful places and wildlife.
• Capture scenes full of vivid color.
• Reflect the seasons.
• Focus on the beauty of your geography.
• Make us feel something (awe, joy).
Visit ruralite.com/2025contest for more information and an FAQ about entering the contest.
Think about the things you loved to do that are dif cult today — going for a walk or just sitting comfortably while reading a book. And remember the last time you got a great night’s sleep? As we get older, health issues or even everyday aches, pains and stress can prevent us from enjoying life.
So what’s keeping you from having a better quality of life? Check all the conditions that apply to you.
Then read on to learn how a Safe Step Walk-In Tub can help.
A Safe Step Walk-In Tub lets you indulge in a warm, relaxing bath that can help relieve life’s aches, pains and worries.
It’s got everything you should look for in a walk-in tub:
• Heated Seat – Providing soothing warmth from start to nish.
• MicroSoothe® Air Therapy System –helps oxygenate and soften skin while offering therapeutic bene ts.
• Pain-relieving therapy – Hydro massage jets target sore muscles and joints.
• Safety features – Low step-in, grab bars and more can help you bathe safely and maintain your independence.
• Free Shower Package – shower while seated or standing.
Tillamook PUD has launched an Electric Utility Drone Program Operator internship in partnership with the American Public Power Association through its Demonstration of Energy and Efficiency Development program and the Special Districts Association of Oregon’s Internship Grant program.
The DEED program offers grant funding opportunities to public power utilities for ventures that promote energy innovation and support the development of innovative technologies or techniques. SDAO’s Internship Grant program is available to help members meet or improve their loss control and best practices.
Benjamin Kowaleski and Shae Reynolds have been selected to participate in the
program this year at Tillamook PUD.
Benjamin is a U.S. Coast Guard veteran and a student at Embry-Riddle University studying unmanned aircraft systems. He graduates this year and intends to enter the unmanned aircraft industry.
Shae graduated from Tillamook High School and is a student at Brigham Young University studying mechanical engineering. She is an expert in robotics, having gained a wealth of knowledge in design and fabrication from her robotics competition experience.
Benjamin and Shea have a variety of objectives to accomplish this summer during their internships at the PUD. They are integrating several software systems that will allow TPUD’s unmanned aircraft
system to autonomously fly predefined routes and perform tasks such as electric grid inspections. The data they collect from the photos and videos captured by the drone will document the conditions of the TPUD electric grid and identify where changes or improvements need to be made.
Shae and Benjamin will operate the drone from June through early September. They will fly primarily in the rural locations of the Tillamook PUD service territory that are difficult to access by ground, first covering transmission lines and then flying distribution lines.
Tillamook PUD is excited to have Shae and Benjamin on its team. We are looking forward to seeing the results of their innovative work. n
Reinforced custom-sized pond liners (39 cents/sqft). Hay covers, greenhouse covers, any width and length. Truck tarps and more. High puncture and tear strength. Best price guaranteed. Celebrating 43 years in business. www.btlliners.com. 541-447-0712. 0425
4x5 round bales, meadow foxtail orchard grass. 4x4 timothy, small square. 208-435-4637 or 208-435-4002; nas@cpcinternet.com. 1224
Buying antiques and collectibles: advertising signs, porcelain signs, gas pumps, beer signs, antique toys, cast-iron coin banks, neon signs and more. Jason, 503-310-3321 or tjabaughman@yahoo.com. 0924
WC Collectibles. We buy comic books! Local to the Inland Northwest, willing to travel. WCCollectiblesCheney@gmail.com; 509-496-1835. 0724
Rare 1960 Chevy pickup 4x4. Shortbed. Not running now. Text or call 661-713-3377. Leave message. 0724
Idaho author Tova R. Cladouhos offers children’s books on Amazon or by email at tovarae@gmail.com. These books are perfect for elementary-aged children; factual stories based on friendship, affection, protection and farm animal adventures. Tova loves barns, pastures, dogs, cats, sheep and ponds. Her books include, “The Nine Lives of Milo the Cat,” “Saving Lily,” “Little Molly” and “Little Molly’s Secret.” 0724
Book restoration. Bibles, cookbooks, cherished family heirlooms. Beautiful work. We give renewed life, more durable than original, to last for generations. 775-537-7066; salacanstudio@gmail.com. 0724AR
Business Opportunities
Quaint hardware store in Maupin, OR, for sale. Inventory and interior store recently updated and refreshed. See ad on Bizbuysell.com or email Maupincountrystore@gmail.com. $275K. 0924
Community Events
Exhibits “My Heart” by artist Brenna Kimbro and Arboreality: Poetry Broadsides curated by Nick Neely. Art Center East in La Grande, OR. artcentereast.org. 0724
Ads 25 words or fewer are $35 a month. An extended ad of up to 35 words is $50 a month. Contact information is included in the word count. Phone numbers and emails count as one word.
Longer ads may be placed. Contact 503-357-2105 or info@pioneer.coop for pricing information.
Ads are for customers of member co-ops, public utility districts and municipals only. Subscribers and nonmembers may inquire about pricing at 503-357-2105 or info@pioneer.coop.
Ads must be direct and in first person, and are subject to approval and editing.
Closing deadlines (in our office): September issue—August 1, 2024.
If submitting ad by mail, send appropriate payment with your name, address, email, phone number and the name of the electric utility that provides your magazine to: Marketplace, P.O. Box 1306, North Plains, OR 97133. Make check or money order payable to Ruralite.
We accept credit card payments for ads submitted by email. Send ad to info@pioneer.coop.
503-357-2105 to pay by credit card.
Advertisements are accepted in good faith. Pioneer Utility Resources is not liable for interactions between buyers and sellers.
1 set Hitachi-Deere 12-131/2 ton and CAT 215 tracks. 44 links/roll. 24” HD BERCO shoes. New surplus from closure of Tacoma store. FOB, my ranch, Eugene. Ted Brown, 541-556-0517. 0724
Free materials: church, government uniting, suppressing “religious liberty,” enforcing National Sunday Law. Be informed. Need mailing address only. TBS, P.O. Box 374, Ellijay, GA 30540. tbsmads@yahoo.com; 888-211-1715. 0824AR
Help Wanted
The Cape Blanco Heritage Society needs volunteers at the Cape Blanco Lighthouse Greeting Center and Hughes House for summer 2024. Background checks are required. Free RV hookups are available to volunteers. heritage32@frontier.com; 541-332-0521. 0824
Hobbies, Gifts, Games
Selling United States postage stamp collection. Mint plate blocks and sheets dating back to the 1940s. Photo available. Bob, 541-786-6195 or brown.donna50@gmail.com. 1024
Media
Watch Channel 25 (Southern NV)—on the go— for free on your TV, phone, tablet, computer or ROKU. Visit www.kpvm.tv and stream live today. 775-727-9400. 0924
Miscellaneous
Alaskan Yellow Cedar. Great for planter boxes, herb and flower beds, fencing or decks. Various sizes available. Pete, 541-206-0727. Lisa, 541-747-5025, ext. 21. 1224
Granite cemetery markers at affordable prices. Will ship to most places. For more info: www.highdesertmemorials.com; Joe, highdesertmemorials@gmail.com or 541-815-8906. 0824
German shepherd puppies and one male shar-pei puppy left for adoption. 907-803-1005; myakdogs@gmail.com; Akceuropeangermansherpherd.com. 0724
Border collies are the world’s smartest dog breed. Purebred puppies for therapy or service dogs, sports, herding or family companions. Excellent dispositions. Longhaired, various colors. Vet check, first vaccine and deworming. Raised in our home. $800. 541-979-5759; danita@centurylink.net. 0824
Border collie/McNab puppies. The best dog you will ever have. Males and females, $450 each. Colton, OR. 503-314-0145. 0724
Idaho Shag (Border collie x Airedale). The best dog you will ever have. Farm/ranch dog. Males and females. $450 each. Colton, OR. 971-804-1706. 0724
AKC-registered Airedales. Fort Sage Kennels, Patricia Sharp, P.O. Box 246, Doyle, CA 96109; 530-827-2271. 0924
Plants, Garden Supplies
Cactus for sale. Cold/winter hardy. Good for landscaping. Sunnyside/Mabton, WA, area. Local pickup only. marybarthlow@gmail.com; 509-391-5546. 0724
Real Estate
Christmas Valley, OR. 40 acres with perimeter fence. 36x36 metal building, two carports, 370-ft. deep water well, storage container on chase. Taking only serious offers. 541-536-5776. 0724
Let me help you buy or sell ranch, farm and recreation property in Oregon. Fourthgeneration Oregonian, prior ranch owner. For sale: central OR, 2-acre parcel. $624K. John Gill, 541-480-9161; johngill@landandwildlife.com. Land And Wildlife brokerage. 0724
117 acres in central OR; very private. No neighbors. Cabin, mostly fenced. Great recreation opportunities. For more info, 541-548-6284. 0724
9.87 acres in Willard, WA. All harvestable timber. 100 ft. from Little White Salmon River. 17 miles north of Hood River, OR. $650K. 509-538-2187. 0824
Beautiful setting on 1.58 acres. Mountain views, 4x4, finished basement, large fenced yard, garage. $449.9K. Duke Warner Realty, 541-987-2363; ddwr@ortelco.net. 0724
$179.9K-fully loaded, remote, AK property for sale. Log cabin, fully equipped with all living amenities, SeaArk river boat (less than 200 hrs), 5 acres, chain saw sawmill, tractor, DR mower, tool shed full of everything you will need and much more. River and trail access. Half-hour boat ride up river from Nenana, AK, boat dock. Outside borough, so no property taxes. Only serious buyers. 907-388-7080.
Comfortable 2 bd, 1 ba, 1,200 sqft. Eagle, AK, home, on Yukon River. 4 lots. 2 cabins. $175K, OBO. Ann, 907-251-9094. Gary, 907-505-8263. See listing on Land.com. 0724
Buying or selling in Brookings, OR? Call Pat Piper at Century 21 Agate Realty first. Experience. Empathy. Education. Exceptional. 541-251-2152; patpiperbroker@gmail.com.
Off-grid homestead. Ideal for wind/solar power. NE Elko County, NV. Has equipment, quarters, shop. Year-round access. Water and power nearby. $35K. geopup58@gmail.com.
Farm for sale. Large house, shop and barn near Goldendale, WA. With 5, 10 or 25 pasture acres. 25 includes Little Klickitat River. David, 541-580-2060. 0724
Summer getaway. 2 bd, 1 ba on lot located in Mountain City, NV. Needs work. $40K. Call 775-304-2398. 0724
15 off-grid acres. At 8,400-ft., near Fort Garland, CO. Great view of CO’s 4th highest peak. On Person’s Road in Sangre de Cristo Ranches. Pinon trees, year-round access. $52.9K. 541-729-0374. 0924
Recreational Rentals
Wavecatcher: oceanfront cottage. Central Oregon Coast. Summer $175/night mid-May to mid-Oct.; $140/night mid-Oct. to mid-May. (plus cleaning/tax). 3 bd, w/double beds. Pets welcome. Wavecatcherbeachrentals.com. Reservations: 541-740-2846. 0724AR
Bend country cabin. Very clean and fully furnished cabin on private ranch. Close to recreation areas. Very nice. $95/night. 541-382-3050; bendcountrycabins@gmail.com. 0824
Recreational Vehicle
Sunseeker 24 on Mercedes Sprinter classic. 57K miles. 50% tires. Good condition. 8-ft, slide out. $53.9K. FOB. Eugene or Bend. 541-556-0517. 0724
Are you a business that provides sustainable transportation options for your employees? Get recognition and free technical assistance through the Electric Vehicle Adoption Leadership certification. To find out more, visit www.evalcertification.org. 0724
Dawn Till Dusk Masonry. Brick, block, stone and pavers. Small jobs and repairs welcome. Check out our website at dawntillduskconstructionmasonry.com. 541-388-7605; 541-410-6945. License #245760 bonded and insured. La Pine, OR. 0824
We all want delicious, fresh, nourishing food to feed our families. We’ve got pastured pork corn/soy/GMO free. Delivery to your door or drop sites. Order at rural-roots-ranch.com or text Christy at 541-589-4674. 1224
Timeshare victims? Call TimeShareBeGone, 800-214-4460. We will get your timeshare legally canceled. A+ BBB, 5-star reviews, 16 years experience. 100% money-back guarantee. 1024
Looking for: ’62-’67 Corvette, ’64-’65 GTO, ’62 Chev. 409. Prefer manual transmission, no tribute cars, as close to stock as possible. Willing to pay up for great car. No junk or projects. 503-799-3835. Text with pictures or call. 0724
Wanted: Old 501 Levi’s. Jeans, jackets with capital “E” on the red tag. Also, Carhartts with red heart. Good prices. Text photos to 208-255-8030. 0724
Wanted: 1967-72 Buick Skylark, GS, Stage 1, GSX. Cars, parts or leads. Or any ’60s or ’70s vehicles. Email billybibbett@hotmail.com. 0824
Gold, silver, coins/currency, buy, sell. Collections wanted. Fair prices paid. 44 years in retail store. Baker City, OR. 800-556-2133; garrymclin@aol.com. 1024
Old carpenter tools, planes (wood/metal), levels, chisels, slicks, adzes, axes, hatchets, handsaws, old rulers, spoke shaves, wrenches, shipwright tools, old tool chests. 503-659-0009 or 971-666-0659. 0724
Need parts for a 1998 Yamaha Grizzly 600 ATV or a nonworking for parts. Matsmaps@hotmail.com; 503-290-6755. 0724
Wanted: Early Corvette ’58-’62, any condition. Call or text Randy, 503-544-3807. 0824
Oregon Coast Children’s Theatre/Art Center has completed a flooring project at Fairview Grange with funding through the Tillamook PUD Community Support Grant program.
The new flooring was finished just in time for the 2024 State of Oregon Grange Association Convention, held last month at the grange.
The previous flooring was more than 25 years old, broken in many spots or missing completely. The new flooring turned out fantastic and is a welcome change.
Fairview Grange is a community gathering space heavily used for a variety of events: summer camps, wedding receptions, open music nights, school fundraisers, festivals and much more.
The grange is a big part of our community, and Tillamook PUD is pleased to support it.
Being prepared for an emergency is critical, especially along the rural Oregon Coast. The Cape Meares Community Association has been working for years to prepare residents and visitors for a potential disaster. Volunteers continually work to maintain readiness through educating the community and practicing preparation plans.
CMCA volunteers have been diligent in their pursuit to stock three sheds in the Cape Meares area with emergency items for community members and visitors. The sheds contain basic items such as food, water and sanitation items. With support from the Tillamook PUD Community Support Grant, the emergency sheds also have shelter tents, canopies, lighting and stoves.
Although the CMCA has well-stocked sheds and plans in place if disaster strikes, its preparedness work is not done. It is looking to add a fourth shed to meet community needs.
Tillamook PUD is pleased to support this project and the CMCA’s vision of resiliency and mission to be prepared. n
The Tillamook PUD office is closed Thursday, July 4, in observance of Independence Day.
Have a safe and happy holiday!
July 1-31
Fresh Start AA meeting, Tuesdays and Thursdays, 8:15 a.m., Wheeler City Hall, 775 Nehalem Blvd. 503-739-0293
July 1-31
Civil Air Patrol Tillamook County Composite Squadron, Thursdays, 6:15 to 9 p.m., ATV Training Center, 5995 Long Prairie Road, Tillamook. 262-308-1482
July 1-31
Tillamook Awakening Al-Anon family group, Thursdays, 7 to 8 p.m., St. Alban’s Church, Tillamook. 503-842-5094
July 1-31
Tillamook Rotary Club weekly meetings, Tuesdays, noon, Tillamook Elks Lodge. Joanna, 503-812-7079
July 1-31
Tillamook Kiwanis Club meeting, Wednesdays, noon, Tillamook Bay Community College or via Zoom. Everyone is welcome. patsykct@gmail.com for link
July 1-31
Rockaway Beach Lions Club meeting, first and third Tuesdays, 11:30 a.m., 268 S. Anchor St. Juanita, kittermanj2020@gmail.com; 503-896-0062
July 1-31
Overeaters Anonymous, Mondays, 5 p.m., held via Zoom. Everyone is welcome. Sylvia, 503-812-0838, for link
July 1-31
Nehalem senior lunches, Tuesdays and Thursdays. Seating at 11:30 a.m. with lunch served at noon, Nehalem Bay United Methodist Church, 36050 10th St. Delivery available for homebound. $5 suggested donation. Doug, nbumcnsl2020@gmail.com
July 1-31
We The People Tillamook County meetings, first and third Mondays, 6 p.m., Tillamook. wethepeopletillamookco@yahoo.com; www.wethepeopletillamookcounty.com
July 1-31
Tillamook Senior Center Meal Site, meals to go, Monday through Friday, 11:30 a.m. to 12:15 p.m.; Meals on Wheels, Wednesdays and Fridays. Greg, 503-842-9660
July 1-31
Meals for Seniors lunches, Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays. Seating at 11:30 a.m., St. Mary by the Sea, 279 S. Pacific St., Rockaway Beach. $4 suggested donation. Teri, 503-317-8967
July 1-31
Tillamook Senior Center: Mondays—coffee hour, 8:30 to 11 a.m.; first and third Monday— visiting health nurse, 9:30 to 10:30 a.m.; Tuesday—square dancing, 4 to 6 p.m.; second Wednesday—bunco, 11 a.m. to 2 p.m.; Fridays— pinochle, 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. Every Wednesday, except for the second Wednesday, all levels of sewing come together. Bring a portable sewing machine, 10 a.m. to 1 p.m. Bring a lunch for lengthy activities. Hall rental is available. 316 Stillwell Ave. Senior Center, 503-842-4511, leave a message
July 1-31
Take Off Pounds Sensibly meeting, Thursdays, 10 to 11 a.m., Bay City. Pat Neman, 503-801-2229
July 1-31
Nehalem Al-Anon Family Group virtual meeting, Mondays and Thursdays, noon, Zoom ID: 824 7120 7748, PW: 973392. Judi M., 503-368-7356
July 1-31
Nehalem Bay Al-Anon Family Group meeting, Mondays, 6 p.m., NRCD, 36225 Ninth St. Carolyn G., 503-702-0737
July 1-September 15
ROOTS temporary exhibit, Wednesdays through Sundays, 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m., Oregon Department of Forestry Tillamook Forest Center. www.tillamookforestcenter.org/events 503-815-6807
July 4
Nesko Women’s Club bake sale, 8 a.m. to noon, Neskowin Trading Co. lawn. pctyee@centurylink.net
July 5
Tillamook County Library Music Series presents “Patrice Webb: Folk & Country,” noon, Tillamook County Library.
Donald Allgeier, 503-354-1688, or donald.allgeier@ tillamookcounty.gov
July 6
2024 Friends of Tillamook County Library book sale, 10 a.m. to 3 p.m., 120 North Coral St., Rockaway Beach. 503-355-2665 or jean.scholtz@mindspring.com
July 6
Rockaway Beach Meals for Seniors French toast breakfast fundraiser, 8 a.m. to noon, St. Mary’s by the Sea Catholic Church, Rockaway Beach. Terri Bruneau, 503-317-8967
July 8
Cloverdale-Nestucca Valley Lions Club meeting, 6 p.m., second Monday of the month, 34510 Parkway Drive, Cloverdale. Fred Whittlinger, 541-418-1836
July 12
Tillamook County Library Music Series presents “Kahayla Rapolla & Richard Moore: Classical,” noon, Tillamook County Library.
Donald Allgeier, 503-354-1688, or donald.allgeier@ tillamookcounty.gov
July 13
Household hazardous waste collection, 9 a.m. to 1 p.m., Tillamook Transfer Station, 1315 Ekloff Road, Tillamook. 503-815-3975 or recycle@co.tillamook.or.us.
July 13
Tillamook Beekeepers Association meeting, 11:30 a.m. to 1 p.m., Port of Tillamook Bay office. Brad York, 719-896-0000
July 13
Heart of Cartm Repair Café, every second Saturday, 3 to 5 p.m., 395C Nehalem Blvd., Wheeler. RSVP on the Heart of Cartm Facebook page. Jessi Just, 971-389-8414.
July 15
THS Alumni Scholarship Committee meeting, noon, Elks Lodge, Tillamook. Debbi, debrakay54@charter.net
July 16
FL63 USCG Auxiliary Station Tillamook Bay meeting, 7 p.m., held virtually. Cammy Hickman, 503-961-2212, for meeting login information.
July 17
American Legion Tillamook Post 47 monthly meeting, 1 p.m., Tillamook Elks Lodge, 1907 Third St. Kevin, 360-489-7471
July 19
The Radio Riots live music to kick off Dory Days, 7 to 10 p.m., Kiawanda Community Center, Pacific City. Tickets $15. Doors open at 6 p.m. 971-212-7131 or events@kiawanda.com
July 25
Tillamook County Democrats virtual meeting, every fourth Thursday, 6 p.m. Go to tillcodems. org and click on “Join Us,” “Attend Virtual Meeting” and “Main Room.” Contact tillcodems@gmail.com
July 26
Tillamook County Library Music Series presents “John Bunzow: Acoustic Roots,” noon, Tillamook County Library.
Donald Allgeier, 503-354-1688 or donald.allgeier@ tillamookcounty.gov
Contact Joanna Stelzig at 503-815-6024 or jstelzig@tpud.org to list items in the calendar.
The readership area of this magazine is vast and beautiful, containing everything from mountains to deserts and lakes to oceans. Some of you have views from your homes that rival the views of national parks.
From time to time, we will share some of the excellent reader photos in this space. If we use your photo here, we will send you your choice of a $25 gift card to REI or Amazon.
To submit your high-resolution photo, email a JPEG file to photos@pioneer.coop. Include “Before You Go” in the subject line. Please share a bit about what inspired you to make your photo. n
Ray DeBaun says that he and his wife like to look for rainbows after rainstorms in Mitchell, Oregon. They found this one in their front yard. PHOTO BY
RAY DEBAUN
• Up to 2X the power of the competition
• Cut overgrown brush, tall field grass, and saplings up to 3" thick
• Commercial, Electric, Walk- and Tow-Behind models available, including the NEW PRO MAX60T!
1115 Pacific Ave. • P.O. Box 433
Tillamook, OR 97141
Phone: 503-842-2535
Toll free: 800-422-2535 www.tpud.org
Office hours are 7 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. Monday through Thursday.
For EMERGENCY service after business hours, call 800-842-2122.
Board of Directors
Barbara Trout, President
Valerie Folkema, Vice President
David Burt, Treasurer
Harry Hewitt, Secretary
Tamra Perman, Director
General Manager
Todd Simmons
Board meetings are in the PUD office at 6 p.m. the third Tuesday of the month.
Our Mission
Through collaboration and operational excellence, Tillamook PUD provides safe, reliable, sustainable and competitively priced power to our customers.
Our Vision
Tillamook PUD provides high value to our customers, staff and community, performing now and preparing for the future. We balance community, economic and environmental commitments.