Ruralite, Tillamook PUD, November 2024

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Wellspring guest Marilyn Gragert participates in the day’s coloring activity. PHOTO COURTESY OF ADVENTIST HEALTH TILLAMOOK

Sacred Stone of the Southwest is on the Brink of Extinction

Centuries ago, Persians, Tibetans and Mayans considered turquoise a gemstone of the heavens, believing the striking blue stones were sacred pieces of sky. Today, the rarest and most valuable turquoise is found in the American Southwest–– but the future of the blue beauty is unclear.

On a recent trip to Tucson, we spoke with fourth generation turquoise traders who explained that less than five percent of turquoise mined worldwide can be set into jewelry and only about twenty mines in the Southwest supply gem-quality turquoise. Once a thriving industry, many Southwest mines have run dry and are now closed.

We found a limited supply of turquoise from Arizona and purchased it for our Sedona Turquoise Collection . Inspired by the work of those ancient craftsmen and designed to showcase the exceptional blue stone, each stabilized vibrant cabochon features a unique, one-of-a-kind matrix surrounded in Bali metalwork. You could drop over $1,200 on a turquoise pendant, or you could secure 26 carats of genuine Arizona turquoise for just $99

Your satisfaction is 100% guaranteed. If you aren’t completely happy with your purchase, send it back within 30 days for a complete refund of the item price.

The supply of Arizona turquoise is limited, don’t miss your chance to own the Southwest’s brilliant blue treasure. Call today!

Jewelry Specifications:

• Arizona turquoise • Silver-finished settings

Sedona Turquoise Collection

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Set

* $99 +s&p Save $200

**Complete set includes pendant, chain and earrings.

A.
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Necklace enlarged to show luxurious color

Ruralite

November 2024 • Volume 72, No. 11

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

SENIOR PUBLICATIONS COORDINATOR

Alyssa McDougle

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This Is the Last One—For Me

See that young guy on the left? That is me more than 30 years ago on my first trip for this magazine. I was ambitious, energetic and excited about embarking on a new career as an assistant editor at a magazine, my dream job. Today, I am writing my last column before retiring at the end of the year. What a glorious ride it has been.

During my time, I have traveled to places I only dreamed of seeing. I spent a week on a tug-and-barge off the coast of Alaska. I traveled to Guatemala, where I spent three weeks photographing lineworkers bringing electricity to a small community for the first time. I have been in small, rural Alaskan villages only accessible by plane, boat or sled. I have covered forest fires in Oregon and a plucky young barrel racer in Arizona who is paralyzed from the waist down. I’ve been hoisted 70 feet in the air in a bucket truck and flown in a hot air balloon. And I have attended countless utility annual meetings, talking with readers like you.

In the past few years, I’ve received many calls, letters and emails from you. Some of you were grateful for a story or hopeful I would publish

For supplemental and interactive content, search @Ruralite on your favorite social media sites.

one. Others took exception to something in the magazine or found an error you thought I should know about.

A few of you sent me milkweed seeds in my quest to create a monarch butterfly habitat.

I appreciate your passion about what is printed each month. You have kept me on my toes. Thank you. My success here is due to two factors: The support of my wife and kids when I worked long hours and traveled at inopportune times; and through the support of a wonderful team of friends who do amazing work every day. I wish I had room to list each one of you, but you know who you are.

Starting next month, Chasity Anderson takes over duties as editorial director. She is a friend and someone I have great respect for. I know she will serve you well.

And now, friends, I say goodbye. I hope you continue to be faithful readers.

Farewell,

From Service to Leadership

Air Force veteran continues to lead in local and state VFW Up Close, Page 10

Sleep in Heavenly Peace

Volunteers build beds so no child has to sleep on the floor

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H eart of a Caregiver

November is National Family Caregiver Month

Three times a week, Kathy and Ruth Jensen visit the Tillamook County YMCA pool. Kathy says the steps that lead down into the pool are part of a routine that keeps her mother physically mobile.

“We do it to keep her muscles going because we have certain steps at home to go up,” Kathy says.

The pool is just one of the outings and resources Kathy uses as a full-time caregiver for her mother.

Ruth, 92, is a long-time Tillamook County resident. She moved to Tillamook as a high schooler, and married Wayne Jensen in 1951. Together they had daughter Kathy and two sons.

Throughout the years, Ruth worked as a bookkeeper, was employed with the hospital and Fairview Water District, and retired from Wells Fargo. She loved puppets and crafted many of her own. In 2002, Ruth and Wayne were named Tillamook Pioneers of the Year.

Prior to Wayne’s death in 2005, he told Kathy that Ruth was starting to forget things.

Working full time as a high school librarian with the Molalla School District, Kathy decided she would someday need to retire early to support her mother.

After Wayne’s death, Kathy relied on Ruth’s church base, check-in phone calls and weekly weekend visits.

“I lived in Woodburn, so I was bringing her back and forth between Tillamook and Woodburn because I still had obligations with the school district,” Kathy says.

At a doctor’s appointment in 2011, Kathy brought up her concerns over her mother’s memory.

“They assessed her and said she did have dementia,” Kathy says.

The diagnosis was later confirmed when Ruth received a brain scan after suffering a stroke.

By 2017, Kathy decided it was time to move back to Tillamook to provide fulltime care for Ruth.

She is the oldest of her siblings. One of her brothers lives in California, and the other provides care for his adult son. Kathy felt she was the one to take on the role as caregiver—a role she wanted to assume.

“She took care of me until I was independent,” Kathy says. “So, I’ve been caregiving for her through the experience and downhill trials of dementia. I’m glad that I was able to do it, because during COVID she wasn’t in an institution. We were together, and I felt much better about that.”

Each day, there are challenges: a declining physical body and memory, but also decisions that need to be made on the behalf of another individual.

“It’s a hard job,” Kathy says. “You think you’ve got things figured out, and then there’s another decline. Make sure you get all your legal options taken care of, because it’s a rude awakening when you can’t do

something for somebody else.”

Kathy says despite the challenges, she feels lucky. She says her mother has always been easygoing.

“She’s not an angry person,” Kathy says. “She’s not a wanderer. She’s fun. We’ve always traveled together, and she enjoys going places.”

Kathy says the duo’s accessibility to outings is one resource that helps relieve some of the caregiving stress.

“We’ve gone on a couple Alaska cruises where they have a lot of ADA services, like wheelchair rentals,” Kathy says. “We also take an occasional road trip. Many places like the Oregon Aquarium have wheelchairs available to use or rent. I take an occasional class, and Mom accompanies me to them, too. I always tell them we are a package deal. Everyone is very supportive and accommodating, which helps to be able to get out and do things.”

Kathy and Ruth also participate in Adventist Health Tillamook’s Wellspring program.

Wellspring is an adult respite day center that provides companionship and loving care by a licensed nurse and volunteers while allowing a “day away” for caregivers.

“It’s good for her, and it’s good for me,” Kathy says. “She gets the socialization, the one-on-one attention and all the activities.

CLOCKWISE FROM ABOVE: The Rotary Club of Tillamook participated in and raised money for the Walk to End Alzheimer’s on Sept. 8 in Salem. PHOTO COURTESY OF ROTARY CLUB OF TILLAMOOK Carolyn Betlinski on piano and Dick Carlson on accordion provide music during a Wellspring session hosted at Tillamook Seventh-Day Adventist Church.

PHOTO COURTESY OF ADVENTIST HEALTH

TILLAMOOK Kathy Jensen, right, provides fulltime care for her mother, Ruth, and often accompanies her on adventures. PHOTO COURTESY OF KATHY JENSEN

It’s about getting support in place and utilizing something like Wellspring. That’s really worth it. You have to take care of yourself, too.”

Mollie Reding is Adventist Health Tillamook’s volunteer services supervisor. She oversees the Wellspring program.

“Faith in Action is a program at the hospital that started in 1998,” Mollie says. “Wellspring started maybe a year or so after Faith in Action started because we wanted something in the community that showed the program. It was designed for the respite for the caregiver. As of right now, we have it once a week on Tuesdays, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m. It gives a six-hour spread of time off for the caregiver.”

Hosted at Tillamook Seventh-Day Adventist Church, Wellspring can

Continues on Page 8

PLUGGED IN

Be Storm-ready this Winter

Think like a lineworker to winterize your home and prepare emergency measures before the chill of the season sets in

When winter temperatures drop and storms hit, it can be challenging to stay warm and safe. Extremely low temperatures, high winds and heavy snowfall can lead to power outages. During a power outage, utility crews work as quickly and safely as possible to restore your power, but it still takes time.

Lineworkers, who brave the elements to keep electricity flowing, have key insights to storm readiness and how to keep their families ready come winter. Think like a lineworker, and take proactive measures now to ensure your home remains safe and prepare your family to weather any storm coming your way.

Prepare Your Home for Winter Storms

Although the extremity of winter weather varies from one region to another, no area is immune to weather-related events.

In Northern Idaho, where Foreman Cliff Miller has been a lineworker with Clearwater Power Co. for 29 years, winters are cold with significant snowfall. Cliff’s experiences as a lineworker

influence his lists of tasks inside and outside the home.

He recommends ensuring your heating system is reliable and efficient. Start with scheduling a maintenance check for your furnace or heating source. A professional can clean filters, check for potential hazards and ensure your system operates smoothly.

If you rely on electric heat, have a backup heating option in place—such as a generator, fireplace or wood-burning stove—to stay warm during prolonged outages. Remember that fuel- and woodburning heat sources should always be properly ventilated.

Insulating your home and weatherstripping around doors and windows can prevent heat loss and keep your space more comfortable, with and without power. For a more budget-friendly option, consider thermal curtains to help retain warmth.

Outside the home, Cliff recommends disconnecting all hoses from bibs and hydrants, draining them and putting them away, as well as draining and winterizing

campers and boats to store them for the winter. Installing stock tank heaters and filling propane tanks before winter weather hits is also beneficial.

When a storm hits and a power outage is likely, unplug all sensitive equipment so it isn’t damaged in a potential power surge.

Build a Winter Emergency Kit

An effective winter emergency kit is crucial for any household. Stock up on essentials: nonperishable food items, bottled water and medications. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention recommends families have at least a three-day supply of food and water per person.

“My home winter emergency kit includes water, freeze-dried meals, flashlights, a jet-boil or other backpack camping stove for heating water and food,” Cliff says. “Water and freeze-dried meals have served us best. I also always keep flashlights, blankets, a winter coat, a stocking hat and gloves in the vehicle during winter months.”

Warm clothing, such as gloves, hats and thermal layers, can protect against the

biting cold if you need to venture outdoors to tend to animals or assist neighbors.

For Cliff, layering is key. Multiple thinner layers will keep you warmer than one thick layer. Consider adding safety gear, such as helmets or high-visibility vests, to your kit.

“Good warm, waterproof boots are necessary for harsh winter conditions,” Cliff says. “I dress for the worst and hope for the best.”

Also include within reach a shovel for clearing snow and an ice scraper for your vehicle.

Navigating Icy Conditions

Braving the weather is often unavoidable. When you must venture out, tread carefully, whether on foot or in your vehicle.

If you’re shoveling snow, stay hydrated and take regular breaks to maintain alertness. Lineworkers know cold weather can be deceptive; you might not realize you’re getting fatigued or dehydrated until it’s too late.

“To stay focused and alert when out in inclement weather, especially for longer periods, it is important to keep your core temperature up, rest when you can and then caffeinate—in large quantities—when you can’t,” Cliff says.

If driving, check your tires prior to the winter season so your vehicle is in good condition and can manage icy roads. Be aware of others—including lineworkers, who might be working to restore power— drive slowly and remove potential distractions. If you encounter downed lines, always assume they are live. Steer clear of the lines, and call your utility to report the damage.

Remember that your safety, and the safety of your community, is more important than arriving early to your destination. Always check the weather forecast to know what to expect.

Winter weather can be unpredictable. By understanding the risks associated with winter storms and taking steps to mitigate those risks, you can ensure your family stays safe and warm. n

Anatomy of a Power Outage

Moments ago, a stray bolt of lightning connected a menacing cloud with a power pole about a mile east of your home. Your lights flickered briefly before going out. Things become eerily quiet as all your home’s devices equipped with motors and fans stop providing their constant symphony of background noise.

You’re experiencing a power outage, so you reach for your phone and call your electric utility. Good move. Sometimes, consumers don’t call because they assume their neighbors will. However, the more who call, the more quickly the utility is able to pinpoint the outage location.

Back at the office, the utility’s grid system operator noticed the sudden pause at the moment 300 million volts of lightning danced around a transformer, and they’re able to triangulate the location of the outage. The system estimates around 500 consumers are in the dark as a line crew tosses their dinners aside and steers their trucks in that direction.

Thirty minutes later, the lineworkers slowly drive along a stretch of road, keeping one eye on traffic while inspecting every pole, wire and transformer. In another eight minutes, they stop and step out for a closer look. The mystery is solved with one glance at the burn mark across the surface of the transformer. Readying the truck and ensuring it’s safe, they move closer.

If you watch the lineworkers, you might mistakenly assume they’re not motivated. After all, you’re dealing with a power outage you want to end as soon as possible. But there’s a good reason the lineworkers aren’t rushing or running around.

Power lines carry high-voltage electricity. It’s safe when all elements of the system are in good working order, but it’s potentially deadly when that’s not the case. Lineworkers approach what they do deliberately, efficiently and—most of all—safely. Every action is carefully planned so they can spot potential hazards. They follow standard procedures and safety requirements to ensure repair is effective and sound. The work may take a little extra time, but it means they’ll make it home safely at the end of the day (or night).

Less than an hour after finding the cause of the outage, the lineworkers load their tools and gear back onto the trucks. This time, the problem was easy to spot, the repair was fairly straightforward, and the weather cooperated. But no two outages are exactly alike. The next could be in severe weather or on a remote segment off the main road. It could involve a fallen tree that needs to be cut with chainsaws or a broken pole that needs to be replaced.

Driving back to the utility, the lineworkers watch the passing homes and smile. The warm glows coming from the windows means the power’s back on again.

Lightning isn’t the only threat to the electric system. Outages can occur from a variety of causes, including fallen trees, vehicle crashes, extreme weather and even curious critters, such as squirrels.

Electric utilities invest in technology and equipment designed to protect the power grid and prevent outages from plunging your home into darkness. But when the power does go out, lineworkers put themselves at risk to return your life to normal.

Heart of a Caregiver

Continued from Page 5

accommodate up to 12 guests each week. The program is overseen by Mollie, a registered nurse and a group of volunteers. Each session includes a devotional, chair exercises, arts and crafts time, and a vegetarian lunch followed by live music.

“We have a gentleman who comes and plays the accordion,” Mollie says. “We play songs from the ’20s, to hymns, to silly songs. It’s always a big hit with the guests. They love the music.”

The day concludes with games and a few rounds of bingo.

“What we’re doing is socially stimulating to the guests, and it gives the caregiver the day off to go shopping, take care of the yard or take a nap without having to worry about where or what their loved one is doing,” Mollie says. “We’re just like a little family. We laugh and cry together. It’s a pretty special program.”

Mollie has overseen Wellspring for 10 years. Three years ago, its purpose became even more personal.

“I moved in with my parents and began caregiving for them,” Mollie says. “My dad had physical limitations, pretty much homebound, and my mom had dementia. It really gave me an insight to how caregiving is exhausting, mentally and physically. If you don’t take care of yourself, you can’t care for your loved one. It’s a tough job, a really tough job.”

Mollie says they like to have people visit first to make sure it’s a good fit for everyone.

“We work together with the families to do the best we can to keep them going and happy,” she says.

The Rotary Club of Tillamook is also working to encourage awareness about family caregiving.

To jumpstart the conversation, the club is sponsoring a free screening of the film “Wine, Women & Dementia.”

The documentary exposes the isolation, financial stress, physical and emotional toll family caregivers shoulder for their loved ones and themselves. As a part of the movie, filmmaker Kitty Norton highlights her and her sister’s—Tillamook

County resident Lexie Fields—experience caregiving for their mother.

The community is invited to attend the free event at 1 p.m. on Saturday, Nov. 23, at Tillamook Coliseum Theater. A virtual screening is available via a link on the Rotary Club of Tillamook’s website, tillamookrotary.com. Following the screening, panel members—including Kitty—will lead a discussion and Q&A session.

Rotary Club of Tillamook member Kris Lachenmeir says bringing the film to Tillamook was a passion project for herself and Rotary Club President Brett Hurliman.

“Last spring at a Rotary meeting, a women from the Alzheimer’s Foundation came and talked to us,” she says. “She asked the question, ‘How many people have been affected in one way or another by Alzheimer’s?’ Almost every single hand went up. My brother had dementia, and it’s a really hard journey. It was pretty impactful for us as a club to know that we could reach a community need.”

The Rotary Club of Tillamook participated and raised money for the Walk to End Alzheimer’s hosted Sept. 8 in Salem.

“One of the taglines that I picked up when I did the walk was, ‘I’m not here to raise money, but awareness,’” Brett says. “I want to get it on people’s radar.”

Brett’s mother was diagnosed with dementia in 2020.

“Walking with people that are going through it and talking about it, I found a lot of relief in that,” Brett says. “You feel like you’re the only one, but you’re not, and there’s so many people that go through it. I encourage everyone to come down and see the film. It’s no-cost to learn some more information about something that is affecting somebody around you.” n

To inquire about available spots in the Wellspring program or to volunteer, call Adventist Health Tillamook at 503-8424444. Monetary donations are also accepted to support the program. To watch the trailer of “Wine, Women, & Dementia,” visit winewomenanddementia.com.

From left, Wellspring guest Ruth Jensen, volunteer Amy Gallant, guest Phyllis Colvin and guest Donald Redfern participate in a chair exercise game. PHOTO COURTESY OF ADVENTIST HEALTH TILLAMOOK

From Service

Air Force veteran continues to lead in local and state VFW

“It’s not a man’s world,” Carol Kacal says.

The Air Force veteran has been breaking glass ceilings for decades.

For 20 years, Carol served her country. Her service included a six-month stint in Turkey, where she held a leadership role. She says meeting all the different people and making lasting friends was a favorite part of her service.

the Air Force seemed like a good fit. She signed up at 18 and got her wish.

Along with assignments stateside in Missouri, Arizona and Colorado, Carol served in Guam, Germany, Korea and Turkey before her last assignment in Alaska. She liked it so much that she stayed after putting in her 20 years.

Carol says one of her most interesting stops was in Turkey, where she oversaw supplies and equipment coming in and out of the country for the Army and Air Force.

Carol Kacal, is proud of her service in the VFW.
PHOTO BY MIKE TEEGARDEN

to Leadership

in and take advantage of the different opportunities provided,” is her advice for anyone considering serving in the military.

But Carol has specific words of wisdom for women.

“Females need to work alongside others, not behind or think they are better or worse,” she says. “The big thing is learning to be a team.”

This holds true in the military and out.

Carol earned the right to join the VFW while serving in Korea. In the past, many women veterans chose to join the women’s auxiliary instead of the VFW itself, even though they had served in the military. Now, not only are more women joining, but more are serving in leadership roles.

“Joining the VFW brings camaraderie among people who have been in military situations together,” Carol says. “We pull together and are able to stand up for veterans’ rights that we’re promised when we sign the dotted line.”

Carol serves as quartermaster for VFW Post 10029 in North Pole.

“I believe in helping the veterans and their families,” she says.

One thing Carol is always proud to do is ensure there are flag lines for soldiers to walk through when they return home. She says some people at airports seem to think they are blocking servicemen and women from seeing their families when they get off their planes, but that’s not the intent. Organizers want to ensure that when service members step into the airport returning from their stations, all they see is a wall of U.S. flags.

Life isn’t all about the VFW, though. Serving in accounting and budgeting in the Air Force prepared Carol for her current job as an accounting assistant at Design Alaska.

There were a few struggles when she first left the military, though. For one thing, deciding what to wear was a hassle after 20 years of wearing a uniform almost every day. Another was keeping track of time.

“Now I work on an hourly basis, not on call 24/7,” she says.

Veterans Day is special for Carol. She and her veteran husband of 19 years, David, work with a second grade class

that holds a special program for veterans each year. They previously held the event at the VFW post, but it grew so large, they must hold it at the Moose Lodge in Fairbanks.

Last year, about 75 students performed a program for about 20 or 30 veterans, with parents and others in attendance. Recently, the students presented veterans with a flag with all their handprints on it.

Carol isn’t sure why there are so many women veterans in Alaska—it’s tied with Virginia for the greatest proportion—but she does know there are many dualenrollment couples in the state, meaning both spouses served in the military.

Regardless, Carol loves calling Alaska home and enjoys camping with David and playing with their cat and dog. The couple have three children and six grandchildren. When she’s not outside, working or helping other people, Carol enjoys doing puzzles on her computer and encouraging other women to join VFW.

“You have that right just as much as (men) do to be a comrade,” she says. “We have served side by side.” n

LEFT: Carol and David Kacal hold a flag made of students’ handprints that was presented to veterans. RIGHT: Carol and David, left, deliver toys at a local hospital. PHOTOS COURTESY OF CAROL KACAL

Sleep in Heavenly

Volunteers build beds so no child has to sleep on the floor

A joyful chorus from excited children greets the chapter members of Sleep in Heavenly Peace Nye County, Nevada, as they deliver seven beds to a Pahrump home. The number is just one shy of the organization’s record.

“When we came, they had nothing,” says Nye County Chapter President Carmen Murzyn. “Tonight, they all get to sleep in their own beds.”

Volunteers hauling headboards, railings, mattresses, bedding and tools stream in the door and up the stairs—home to children ranging in age from 6 months to 15 years old. The house is empty except for a television, a camping mattress and a few blankets.

The children’s mother said they moved from Las Vegas in search of a better job and more affordable housing. Her previous landlord wanted $3,000 a month for their apartment.

“I finally gave up and said, ‘I can’t afford it,’” she says.

Without a truck or funds for the move, the family left most of

their belongings behind and started over in Pahrump.

Chapter Delivery Manager Steve Filarowski and Chapter Build Manager Jim Murzyn—Carmen’s husband—assemble the wooden beds with power tools.

“They’re so basic, but they’re built well,” Jim says. “They’re solid. In this case, it’s the only piece of furniture in the house, but a lot of times they’re the nicest piece of furniture in the house.”

Jim and Steve say the basic components of the beds make them easy to assemble and sturdy.

“If we ever have an earthquake, I’m getting under one of these,” Jim says.

“They’re really built to last,” Steve adds.

Interested children can assist with assembly. On this day, only the oldest braves the screech of the power tools. Jim and Steve help her safely guide the screws into her bunk.

“Don’t be afraid of it! You’re doing good,” Jim says as she pushes the driver trigger. “It just makes noise.”

Once the beds are up, Carmen and volunteers Marjorie

Jeanette and Jim Prior run the Eugene, Oregon, chapter of Sleep in Heavenly Peace, building beds for kids. PHOTO COURTESY OF JIM AND JEANETTE PRIOR

Heavenly Peace

Washington and Charmayne Fazackerley help the children choose bedding. They unroll mattresses and teach them how to make their beds.

Deliveries like this tap the talents of Sleep in Heavenly Peace volunteers in more than 300 chapters in four countries united by one mantra: “No kid sleeps on the floor in our town.”

SHP founder Luke Mickelson says his first delivery in December 2012 melted his heart and left him resolved to do more. He built a set of bunks with a young men’s church group for a family in their Twin Falls, Idaho, congregation. After that, he built a bed with his family and delivered it to Haley, a 6-year-old girl who was in a new home with her mom after being homeless and sleeping in the backseat of their car.

“We went into little Haley’s bedroom, and there was a pile of clothes in the corner, and that’s what she slept on,” Luke says.

Haley’s joy and her mother’s tears of relief were eye-opening. Back then, it took hours to build a bed, but Luke realized there was nothing more worth his time.

“We ended up doing 22 beds before Christmas that year,” Luke says. “It was awesome.”

The next December, he got more people involved. In 2014, he set up a nonprofit because people wanted to donate to the cause. In 2015, Luke and his friend, now SHP Executive Director Jordan Allen, decided instead of just building at Christmas and for a few

Eagle Scout projects here and there, they should host builds all year. There were 15 build days that year.

Soon, SHP got calls from volunteers from Minnesota to Maryland who wanted to build beds in their hometowns. So, they flew people into Idaho to train them and help them form new chapters. By the end of 2017, they had chapters in five states and more on the way.

That’s when Mike Rowe of TV’s “Dirty Jobs” fame featured

Sometimes you have to be willing to challenge yourself to do more than you think you can do.
—Jim Prior, co-president of the SHP Eugene Chapter

them on his “Returning the Favor” Facebook Watch series. Mike leveraged community support for a rent-free warehouse for SHP for three years.

“But the biggest thing that came from that is we were viewed by 10 million people,” Luke says.

The episode aired Feb. 12, 2018. SHP put together an application for those wanting to start chapters.

“In the first year, we had like 2,000,” Luke says. “A crazy amount.”

SHP swiftly boomed from seven chapters to more than 120. Apart from a slowdown during the COVID-19 pandemic, SHP has consistently added 40 to 50 chapters a year.

Prospective chapter presidents must go to a build and prove they have enough community support to keep their chapters going. Then they fly to Lehi, Utah, for training.

Jim Prior, who serves as co-president of the SHP Eugene Chapter alongside his wife, Jeanette, says training is intense. They’d been involved in SHP for more than four years, so they felt like there was much they understood—but the training gave them much more to learn.

“It was still kind of like drinking from a fire hose,” Jim says. “Even though we knew the general concept of what was going on.”

The Priors took over when Eugene Chapter founders Bryce and Connie Jonas decided to step back a little over a year ago. No one had volunteered to take over, and the Priors

Jim Murzyn assembles a bunk bed during a delivery in Pahrump, Nevada. PHOTO BY GINGER MEURER

didn’t want to see the area’s needs go unmet.

“I thought, ‘Sometimes you have to be willing to challenge yourself to do more than you think you can do,’” Jim says. “Nobody was really stepping up. And it had been such a great charity. It really gives a hand up and not just a handout to families. So, I said, ‘Welp, let’s keep this going.’”

Jeanette was on board, too.

“Jim and I thought about it and did a lot of praying,” she says. “We didn’t really want to see it go away. We believe in what it does and how it helps kids, and just to see the smiles.”

Jim says raising funds isn’t hard. Once he is in front of an audience, the idea of helping children sells itself. Plus, the dollars raised stay in town. Other than 10% routed to the national headquarters for overhead such as insurance, logistics and website maintenance, every penny raised stays with each local chapter and goes directly into beds for kids.

Luke says only about 4% of the national money is labeled as management, which is “completely unheard of in the nonprofit world, especially for a nonprofit with nearly a $25 million annual budget. We’re pretty proud of that.”

While some builds invite the public to help, using donated funds to cover the $300 to $350 for a bunk, others are sponsored by organizations or businesses and frequently serve as teambuilding exercises. In Eugene, several sponsored builds occur

Volunteers fasten slats to the base of the bed frame. PHOTO BY JOHN CLAUSEN
University of Oregon football players stain wood while building beds in Eugene, Oregon. PHOTO COURTESTY OF JIM AND JEANETTE PRIOR

each year, including builds with coaches and players from the University of Oregon’s athletics programs. A July build brought in nearly 200 coaches, players and volunteers from multiple Oregon chapters who turned out 155 beds in less than four hours.

Nationally, Lowe’s—one of the organization’s biggest sponsors— hosts huge builds with multiple chapters.

The bed-building process has evolved a lot since 2012.

“I used to be on hands and knees trying to square corners,” Luke says. “It would take two hours just to build a bed, let alone sand it and stain it.”

Now, at some of the biggest builds, a bed is completed every 24 seconds.

“It’s crazy,” Luke says. “I like to say Henry Ford would be pretty proud of our assembly line.”

Everyone involved agrees that while building beds is fun, the most important part of the mission is the children.

When the beds were complete at the Pahrump home, 3-yearold Jazita was first to hug her freshly cased pillow and lie down on her new bed. She was speechless when asked what she thought of it, but her smile and expression of “Is this really for me?” were unmistakable.

Carmen isn’t surprised by Jazita’s reaction. Before the delivery, she talked about what it’s like when kids get their own beds.

“It’s like it’s their own space,” she says. “It’s their place; it’s nobody else’s. We’ve had quite a few kids get right in, and they’re already going to sleep before we’re out the door. The kids will jump in their bed no matter what time it is.”

Even though it was only 4 p.m., that’s exactly what Jazita did. n

For more information on volunteering or to apply for a bed, visit shpbeds.org.

ABOVE: Jazita can’t wait to try out her new bed. PHOTO BY GINGER MEURER TOP: Volunteers sand boards in an assembly line to build beds in Pahrump. PHOTO BY JOHN CLAUSEN

Flavors of Fall

Leftover Turkey and Dumpling Soup

Olive oil, as needed

1 large onion, sliced

2 medium carrots, peeled and diced

2 celery stalks, diced

½ cup frozen peas

2 sprigs fresh sage

2 sprigs fresh thyme

2 bay leaves

2½ quarts turkey or chicken stock

2 cups all-purpose flour

2 teaspoons baking powder

1 tablespoon sugar

1 teaspoon salt

1¾ cups heavy cream

1 pound leftover turkey, shredded

Salt and freshly cracked black pepper, to taste

Heat a large, heavy-bottom pot over medium heat. Add enough oil to just coat the bottom. When the oil is hot, add the onion slices. Let them caramelize for about 8 minutes or until golden brown, stirring often. Add the carrots and celery. Season with salt and pepper. Saute for about 8 minutes.

Add the sage, thyme, bay leaves and stock. Stir well and bring the liquid to a simmer.

Simmer for about 25 minutes, stirring often. Season the soup with salt and black pepper, to taste.

Meanwhile, combine the flour, baking powder, sugar and salt in a mixing bowl. Stir to combine. Stir in the heavy cream until just incorporated. Don’t overmix. The dough should be somewhat lumpy.

Remove the herbs from the soup, and stir in the turkey. Use two spoons to drop the dumplings into the soup in an even layer. Cover the pot, and simmer for 8 minutes. Remove the lid, add the peas, and simmer for 3 minutes.

Serve the soup in large bowls topped with black pepper and any additional herbs.

Recipes by Gertrude Treadaway
ADOBE STOCK
PHOTO BY FOMAA

Pumpkin Mac and Cheese

¼ cup plus 2 tablespoons unsalted butter, divided

3 cloves garlic, grated and divided

½ cup panko breadcrumbs

2 teaspoons kosher salt, divided, plus more for pasta water

¾ teaspoon ground black pepper, divided

1/3 cup grated Parmesan cheese

1 pound dry cavatappi pasta

6 sage leaves

½ medium yellow onion, grated

2 tablespoons flour

1 teaspoon ground mustard

¼ teaspoon ground nutmeg

¼ teaspoon cayenne pepper

2 cups whole milk

15-ounce can pumpkin puree

8 ounces fontina cheese, shredded

8 ounces smoked gouda cheese, shredded

In a small nonstick skillet, melt 2 tablespoons of butter over medium heat. Add 1 grated garlic clove. Cook until fragrant, about 30 seconds. Stir in the breadcrumbs, 1/2 teaspoon salt and ¼ teaspoon pepper. Toast, stirring frequently, until the breadcrumbs are golden brown, about 2 minutes. Remove the mixture to a small bowl. Cool for 5 minutes. Stir in the Parmesan. Bring water to a boil in a large pot. Add the pasta, and salt to taste. Cook, stirring the pasta, until just under al dente, 5 to 6 minutes. Drain the pasta, reserving 1/2 cup of the pasta water. In the same pot over medium heat, melt the remaining ¼ cup of butter. Stir in the sage leaves. Cook, stirring frequently, until the sage is lightly fried and the butter is deeply golden and smells toasty. Move the sage leaves to a paper towel-lined plate, and add the onion to the butter. Cook until the onion is soft and translucent, 3 to 4 minutes. Add the remaining two grated garlic cloves. Cook until fragrant, about 30 seconds.

Whisk in the flour, mustard, nutmeg, cayenne, the remaining 11/2 teaspoons of salt and the remaining 1/2 teaspoon pepper. Cook until the raw flour smell disappears, 3 to 4 minutes. Gradually whisk in the milk until smooth. Whisk in the pumpkin puree. Cook until thick, 5 minutes.

Remove the pot from heat. Gradually add the shredded cheeses, whisking until melted before adding more. Taste for salt.

Fold in the drained noodles, adding pasta water 1 tablespoon at a time until the sauce coats the noodles.

Serve the mac and cheese hot, sprinkled with the toasted panko bread crumbs and crumbled sage.

Apple Butter Cheese Twists

1 cup shredded sharp cheddar cheese

½ cup grated Parmesan cheese 17.3-ounce package puff pastry sheets, thawed

1 large egg, lightly beaten

1/3 cup apple butter

2 teaspoons chopped fresh thyme

Heat oven to 400 F. Line two baking sheets with parchment paper. In a medium bowl, combine the cheeses. Sprinkle a clean work surface with ¼ cup of the cheese blend. Place one puff pastry sheet over the cheese, and sprinkle with another ¼ cup of cheese blend. Use a rolling pin to press the cheese into the pastry. Roll the sheet into a 10-by-14-inch rectangle. Repeat the rolling-out process with a second sheet of puff pastry and 1/2 cup of the cheese blend.

Brush the surface of one pastry sheet with egg wash. Place the other sheet on one of the prepared baking sheets. Brush the surface with the apple butter, maintaining a 1-inch border. Sprinkle with the remaining 1/2 cup of the cheese blend and thyme. Top with the second sheet, egg wash-side down, pressing the layers gently together. Refrigerate the assembled sheet for 30 minutes.

Transfer the chilled sheet to a cutting board. Using a sharp knife, cut the pastry into ¾-inch-wide strips. Transfer the strips to the baking sheets, spacing them at least 1 inch apart. Pinch the ends to close, and twist each end in the opposite direction to create a spiral. If they start to untwist, gently press the ends into the parchment.

Refrigerate the twists for 30 minutes, then brush with more egg wash. Bake until golden brown and crisp, 20 to 25 minutes.

Cool the twists on a wire rack. Serve warm or at room temperature.

Butternut Squash Casserole

2 to 2½ pounds butternut squash

¼ cup whole milk

1 teaspoon vanilla extract

1 cup light brown sugar, packed

Topping

1 cup pecan halves

2 tablespoons unsalted butter, melted

¼ teaspoon salt

2/3 cup unsalted butter, melted

¼ teaspoon ground cinnamon

2 extra large eggs, lightly beaten

2 tablespoons light brown sugar, packed

1/8 teaspoon ground cinnamon

Heat oven to 350 F. Line a baking sheet with parchment paper or aluminum foil. Set aside. Cut the squash in half, lengthwise. Scoop out the seeds and discard. Place the squash cut-side down on the baking sheet. Bake for about 45 minutes or until the squash is tender when pierced with a fork. Allow the squash to cool enough to handle.

Spray a casserole dish with vegetable cooking spray. Set aside. While still warm, scoop out the butternut flesh and transfer to a large mixing bowl. Mash the squash with a potato masher until no chunks remain. Add the milk, vanilla, sugar, butter and cinnamon. Stir until combined. Add the eggs. Fold together until blended.

Pour the mixture into the prepared baking pan. Bake until almost set, about 30 minutes. While the casserole is baking, prepare the topping.

In a small bowl, combine the pecans, melted butter, brown sugar and cinnamon. Stir until coated. Remove the baking dish from the oven, and sprinkle the pecan mixture over the squash. Continue baking until set, about 15 minutes.

READER EXCHANGE

Books/Magazines

I would appreciate any Catherine Cookson books you may have and no longer want.

Marsha King 16637 William Foss Road La Pine, OR 97739

Crafts/Hobbies

I would love any old stamp collections or singles you would like to part with. Thanks in advance.

Rosalie Ferry 109 Raven Lane Careywood, ID 83809-9711

I’m seeking to illuminate my winter days with sparkle therapy. Living with a disability on a fixed income can be challenging, but your gift would bring sunshine. If you're willing to part with unwanted jewelry, components or treasures—for men or women—I’d be thrilled to accept them. Your thoughtfulness would give me a sense of fulfillment and happiness. Thank you in advance. I am forever grateful for your generosity.

Carly Wagner 913 Stillwell Ave. Tillamook, OR 97141

We are starting a respite care and are looking for old jewelry—broken or not— chains, beads, pearls and any items used to make jewelry or crafts for dementia patients. We would really appreciate anything you can give.

Diane Whitley

P.O. Box 1629 Eastsound, WA 98245

Milestones

My mother turns 92 this month. She is the wife of a retired Air Force man who took us all over. On base, she was a Girl Scout leader, VBS teacher and spent a lot of time at our sports events. She spends her days now reading, lunching with her greatgrandchildren and playing games online. It would be such a treat for her to receive wishes for her birthday. Send to Betty West, 1860 17th St., Springfield, OR 97477.

Laura Crowe Springfield, Oregon

My dad turns 94 in December and would be delighted to receive birthday cards. He was born in England and served in the R.A.F. as a navigator. He came to the United States in 1965 and worked in sales until he retired. Since my mom’s passing, he spends his time watching the news and all sports on TV. He does some light gardening and still reads without glasses. His favorite hobby is sampling new beers, so if any readers could make suggestions of a new beer for him to try, he would love that. Send cards to Peter Burgoyne, 5549 Our Lane, Zephyrhills, FL 33542.

Larry Burgoyne Sagle, Idaho

Recipes

I am looking for a recipe for pecan praline fudge. I have one, but it failed both times I’ve used it. Can you help? Thank you in advance.

Pat Moss

P.O. Box 61155 Fairbanks, AK 99706

Submitting Requests Is Free

Thanks

A special thank you to all who contributed to my button collection. Your response was overwhelming, and I deeply appreciate you.

Bette McCarthy Pahrump, Nevada

Thank you to all the Ruralite readers who sent my friend, Elsie Bergold, almost 500 cards for her 105th birthday. We played poker and had cake. She was completely shocked by all the cards and the gifts that were sent from complete strangers. She opened all of her cards and read every one of them. KVAL News did a story on her for the nightly news.

Martha Curl Creswell, Oregon

Thank you to all the wonderful, amazing and kind readers that sent me buttons and my grandfather’s yearbook. It was like Christmas. I received them in packages, boxes and envelopes. Thank you so very much for your time, thoughts and kindness. I am so very thankful to everyone.

Kim Koester Fairbanks, Alaska

Have a happy and safe Thanksgiving!

Send your request—no attachments, please—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 on a first-come, first-served basis and 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. Marketplace pricing applies. When submitting a milestone request, please send it at least two months before the milestone. Phone numbers will not be published. Email addresses will be published if part of the ad, but you must include a postal address. Requests also must include the name and address of the electric utility that provides your magazine.

See the strength of nature’s architecture in Arizona at

Tonto Natural Bridge State Park

What Is It?

In Central Arizona, just north of Payson, Tonto

Natural Bridge

State Park is home to one of the largest natural travertine bridges in the world. The bridge is 60 feet thick, sits 183 feet off the ground and tops a roughly 400-footlong tunnel that measures 150 feet at its widest point.

Catch Fall Leaves

When visiting, enjoy the short hike down to the bottom of the waterfalls that gently cascade over the bridge and surrounding rocks. The water flowing down from the bridge has created an ideal environment for the aspen, cottonwood and elder trees that brighten the park with magnificent fall colors. While the colors peak in later October, they continue throughout November.

How Was It Made?

The natural bridge is made of a crystalline form of limestone, known as travertine. Broadly, the rock forms when spring water rich in calcium carbonate evaporates, leaving the calcium behind. The calcium built up into a large structure, before a hole was worn through the rock, creating the bridge.

What To Do

In addition to the travertine bridge, the park has four hiking trails, a picnic area, a group use area and the historic Goodfellow Lodge. All trails are shorter than a half-mile, but they are steep and strenuous, so be sure to pack drinking water. The trails close an hour before the park closes, and no dogs are allowed on any of the trails.

More Information

The state park is open daily from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. but closed on Christmas. On Thanksgiving and Christmas Eve, the park closes at 2 p.m. Admission is $7 for adults, $4 for youth 7 to 13 and free for children 6 and under. If visiting in the winter, be prepared for reduced services. Go to azstateparks. com/tonto for detailed information.

ADOBE STOCK PHOTO BY JASON YODER

NORTH AMERICA’S

#1 Selling Walk-In

The best walk-in tub just got better with breakthrough technology! Presenting the all new Safe Step Walk-In Tub featuring MicroSoothe. ® An air system so revolutionary, it oxygenates, softens and exfoliates skin, turning your bath into a spa-like experience. Constructed and built right here in America for safety and durability from the ground up, and with more standard features than any other tub.

✓ Heated seat providing warmth from beginning to end

✓ Carefully engineered hydro-massage jets strategically placed to target sore muscles and joints

✓ High-quality tub complete with a comprehensive lifetime warranty on the entire tub

✓ Top-of-the-line installation and service, all included at one low, affordable price You’ll agree – there just isn’t a better, more affordable walk-in tub on the market.

Someone To Be Thankful For

Thanksgiving comes in different shapes and is expressed in different ways.

Herb Recker never felt he deserved to take advantage of the Honor Flights that carry veterans to Washington, D.C.

Herb died in January at the age of 71. His Iowa friend, Tom Klaren, who served with him in the Iowa National Guard, carried Herb’s encased flag in May on an Honor Flight.

When veterans gathered at the World War I Memorial in Washington, D.C., they saluted the folded flag Tom brought, which had been given to Herb’s widow, Mary, at his funeral.

“I feel so passionate at what we owe those people, so much of what they gave up,” Tom says. “What their wives gave up, what their mothers and fathers gave up. Sometimes the ultimate sacrifice.

“I am a veteran myself, but not to the point these guys are, who served overseas. I just feel I am a step down from these

writings, visit davidlabelle.com and bridgesandangels.wordpress.com.

Reader Challenge

As storytellers, we are always looking for fleeting moments that best express the pulse of a story. While I occasionally talk about photo fundamentals, my greatest interest and love is about the psychology of photography.

Perhaps you know a veteran who would agree and even enjoy the attention sitting still for a portrait would bring. Remember, when you make someone’s picture or listen to their story, you are honoring them.

Stay focused and alert. So many times, it is often those ever-fleeting gestures that reveal the most.

guys, that’s how I feel. Actually, Herb felt like I did. Since we were in the National Guard, we felt like we didn’t deserve to go like the guys who actually were in combat.”

Though Tom has made three Honor Flight trips as a guardian for four different veterans, he never made the trip as an “honored” veteran.

Herb and Tom were best friends from grade school, high school and in the National Guard. It was Tom’s honor to carry Herb’s flag to Washington, D.C.

“He was in my wedding, and I was in his wedding,” he says.

After interviewing Tom, I made several pictures with his best friend’s flag in two different places in his home before asking him to carry Herb’s flag outside on his front lawn. Nothing I shot expressed the emotion this patriotic man felt. Then, after I was finished and sitting on the lawn, Tom grew openly emotional because it had been less than a week after returning from his trip to Washington, D.C. Emotions for Tom were still raw. Looking up, I saw him

relax and drop his guard. A small window opened, and I quickly raised my camera and was able to make two frames before the fleeting moment passed.

Once again, I was reminded of the importance of anticipating the unexpected. Sometimes the best unguarded storytelling moments happen when the formal shoot is over. Deep and buried emotions often surface ever-so-briefly once the camera is off. n

Renowned author, photographer and lecturer Dave LaBelle has captured special moments for more than half a century. For more of his
An emotional Tom Klaren holds the flag of his deceased friend, Herb Recker. Tom carried the flag to Washington, D.C., in May 2024 on an Honor Flight. PHOTO BY DAVE LABELLE NIKON D810, 180mm lens ISO 100, f/5 at 1/200

Generational Wealth A future for generations to come

ea.

Minimum order of 5 coins

GENERATIONAL WEALTH is of paramount significance as it represents a beacon of financial stability. It serves as a tangible testament to the hard work, diligence, and financial acumen of previous generations, offering a solid foundation upon which future generations can build their dreams and aspirations.

American Gold Reserve is releasing Government issued $5 Gold American Eagles completely free of dealer mark-up for only $279 each. These beautiful $5 Gold American Eagles are a perfect way to enter the gold market. They are set for immediate public release and will sell out fast.

Free of dealer markup.

Protection against inflation and deflation. • Gold offers financial cover during geopolitical uncertainty.

Good portfolio diversifier.

• 24", 28", and 30" clearing widths

• Easy 180 degree turns with 6 forward speeds and 2 reverse

Ruralite reader submissions from this cook booklet features such recipes as Pollo Dorado, Southern Scalloped Chicken, Hawaiian Meatballs, Texas-Style Turkey Salad and Sweet and Sour Chicken.

• Heated hand grips, LED headlights, and rugged chute controls

Scan the code to shop our full line of Snow Blowers at DRPower.com today or to request a free catalog!

The cookbook is indexed and costs $8 (includes postage).

To order by mail, submit proper payment and include the cookbook title, your name, address and number of cookbooks wanted to Ruralite Cookbooks, P.O. Box 1306, North Plains, OR 97133.

To pay with Visa, MasterCard, Discover card or American Express, call 503-357-2105. To order online, visit www.ruralite.org.

Allow 2-3 weeks for delivery.

STATEMENT OF NON-DISCRIMINATION

Tillamook People’s Utility District is the recipient of federal financial assistance from the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA). The USDA prohibits discrimination against its customers, employees, and applicants for employment on the basis of race, color, national origin, religion, sex, gender identity (including gender expression), sexual orientation, disability, age, marital status, family/parental status, income derived from a public assistance program, political beliefs, or reprisal or retaliation for prior civil rights activity, in any program or activity conducted or funded by USDA. Not all prohibited bases will apply to all programs and/or employment activities. Remedies and compliant filing deadlines vary by program or incident.

The person responsible for coordinating Tillamook PUD’s non-discrimination compliance efforts is:

Shane Stuart, Human Resources Manager

503-815-8637

sstuart@tpud.org

Tillamook People’s Utility District is an equal opportunity provider and employer.

If you wish to file a Civil Rights program complaint of discrimination, complete the USDA Program Discrimination Complaint form, AD-3027, found online at How to File a Program Discrimination Complaint at ascr.usda.gov/ complaint_filing_cust.html or at any USDA office, or call 866-632-9992 to request the form. You may also write a letter containing all of the information requested in the form.

Send your completed complaint form or letter by mail, fax or e-mail:

Mail

U.S. Department of Agriculture

Office of the Assistant Secretary for Civil Rights 1400 Independence Avenue, S.W. Washington, D.C. 20250-9410

Fax

202-690-7442

Email program.intake@usda.gov

Persons with disabilities who require alternative means of communication for program information (e.g., Braille, large print, audiotape, American Sign Language, etc.), should contact the responsible Agency or USDA’s TARGET Center at 202-720-2600 (voice and TTY) or contact USDA through the Federal Relay Service at 800-877-8339. Additionally, program information may be made available in languages other than English.

USDA is an equal opportunity provider, employer and lender.

MARKETPLACE

Agriculture

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.

Antiques and Collectibles

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. 0325

Buying American Indian collectibles, Navajo blankets and rugs, baskets, beadwork, etc. Also, quality paintings of the early Southwest and Americas. Call 760-409-3117 or send photos to amer.ind.baskets@gmail.com. 1124

Automotive

‘66 and ‘67 Ford 2-door hardtop Fairlane 500s 289 V8, auto, straight, good glass, titles, project cars. ‘66 runs. ‘67 new upholstery. $5.5K each or $10K for both. LaGrande, OR. 541-663-9091. 1124

Business Opportunities

For sale: quaint hardware store in Maupin, OR. Inventory and interior store recently updated and refreshed. See ad on Bizbuysell.com or email Maupincountrystore@gmail.com. $239,999. 1124

Community Events

Art Center East’s 16th Annual “Handmade Holidays Makers Market” 4-8 p.m. Nov. 15 and 9 a.m.-3 p.m. Nov. 16 in La Grande, OR. artcentereast.org. 1124

Farm Equipment

Two 1937 rare co-op tractors. #2, #3 1952. $900 for both. $1.7K, 1959. 691 $2K. 208-507-1211. 1124

Free Items

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. 1224AR

Help Wanted

The Cape Blanco Heritage Society needs volunteers at the Cape Blanco Lighthouse Greeting Center and Hughes House for 2024 and 2025. Background checks are required. Free RV hookups are available to volunteers. heritage32@frontier.com; 541-332-0521. 1124

Quick, Affordable: How to Place an Ad

„ 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): January issue—Nov. 30, 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.

Call 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.

Hobbies, Gifts, Games

Santa letters and cheerful artwork for gift giving and holidays, made in Alaska. We ship high-quality gifts and custom artwork, including letter bundles, totes, jewelry, prints, cards, relief prints, tiles. GV11 saves 10%. www.PamelaSueArtandDesigns.com. 1124

Miscellaneous

Local commercial fisherman sells summer catch of preserved freshness by blast freezing at sea, gourmet canned tuna on internet. Sept.June. 100% guaranteed the best canned tuna you ever tasted. Original, jalapeno and garlic flavors available. To order: twofisherstuna.com or call 206-799-1082. 1124

Granite cemetery markers at affordable prices. Will ship to most places. For more info: Joe, highdesertmemorials@gmail.com or 541-815-8906; www.highdesertmemorials.com.

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

Real Estate

Let me help you buy or sell ranch, farm and recreation property in OR. Fourth-generation Oregonian, prior ranch owner. For sale: Sisters, OR. 40 acres. Price reduced. $1.55M. John Gill, 541-480-9161 or johngill@landandwildlife.com. Land And Wildlife brokerage. 1124

Dale store. Live or work in a recreational enthusiasts’ location, store, fuel, post office, home, game cooler. $325K. Duke Warner Realty, 541-987-2363 or ddwr@ortelco.net.

Last chance to get an undeveloped buildable lot (8,000 sqft.) in Sportsman’s Park (Wasco County, Tygh Valley, OR). Sewer to property line, water on property, power available. National forest on backside. 7 miles to Wamic. $86.6K. Eric, 971-370-0220. 1124

Become an instant Nevadan. Wells: Fully equipped, nonoperating, Bar/Grill, 479 6th St., $395K. 3/2 home, 1355 Lake Ave., $230K. 160 acres with water rights and structures, $160k. Goldfield, ruins of Catholic Church, $65K. Pahrump, Resort Membership $1.8K. kisciniello@yahoo.com; 775-550-2263. 1124

Your ad could be here in January. See instructions above for details.

Newly renovated house in 55-plus community. Peaceful, park-like setting. Great location just minutes from downtown Astoria. 1 bd, 1 ba, country kitchen and cozy living room. $1.6K/ month. 900 sqft. 503-307-7875. 1124

320 acres east of Adel, OR. Borders Hart Mountain views, Steens Mountain and Beaty Butte. Landowner tags, very rural. $263K. For maps, contact thejugglingman3@gmail.com; 541-659-1573. 1124

Recreational Rentals

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. 1124

Getaway at either of our Airbnb’s here in Lenore, ID. We are on the Clearwater River, so great fishing and hiking. See www.bearcountrygetaways.com. Hope to see you. Cindy and Rocky Wines. 1124

Bed and Birds; a guesthouse. Very private. Wet meadows, range, forest, dark sky, lakeview. Explore or ride? Near ski hill. Reasonable. 541-219-2044. 1124

Recreational Vehicles

Forest River Sunseeker 24, 2016. Good condition. 58,200 miles. 8-ft. slide out with dinette. Seats 4, sleeps 6. $53.9K. OBO. tedbcsc1948@gmail.com; 458-910-3727.

Services

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. 1124

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 www.rural-roots-ranch.com or text Christy at 541-589-4674. 1224

Want to Buy

Wanted: 1967-’72 Buick Skylark, GS, Stage 1, GSX. Cars, parts or leads. Or any ’60s or ’70s vehicles. billybibbett@hotmail.com. 1124

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. 1124

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. 1125

Buying American Indian collectibles, Navajo blankets and rugs, baskets, beadwork, etc. Also, quality paintings of the early Southwest and Americas. Call 760-409-3117 or send photos to amer.ind.baskets@gmail.com. 1124

Retired couple wants to buy older Bigfoot or Northern Lite truck camper in good condition. 406-827-3447; montanagirl@blackfoot.net.

Best Breads Cookbook

Who can resist the aroma of homemade bread baking in the oven? Try your hand at more than 400 mouth-watering recipes submitted by readers. This 8½-by-11-inc, indexed cookbook features yeast breads, quick breads, scones and specialty breads for $10 (includes postage).

TO ORDER BY MAIL:

Submit payment with cookbook title, your name, address and number of cookbooks wanted to: Ruralite Cookbooks P.O. Box 1306 North Plains, OR 97133

TO PAY BY PHONE: Call 503-357-2105 for credit card payments with Visa, MasterCard, Discover or American Express.

TO ORDER ONLINE: Visit www.ruralite.com.

Please allow two to three weeks for delivery.

360-832-4021 Home: 360-832-4562 Pastor Bernard Preston Ritchea Cell: 361-330-9666 Facebook: Eatonville United Methodist Church of Washington OPEN HEARTS OPEN MINDS OPEN DOORS OPEN TABLE WORSHIP SERVICE BEGINS AT 10:30

ADOBE STOCK IMAGE BY ANASTASIA IZOFATOVA

Tillamook PUD Customer Assistance Program

Tillamook PUD’s Customer Assistance Program lends a helping hand throughout our community. Funded through customer contributions that are matched by Tillamook PUD, these dollars help pay the electric bills of our neighbors in need. If you have a little extra to spare, please consider donating to CAP. Contributions can be made as a one-time gift or a monthly recurring donation. Every contribution made toward the program is greatly appreciated.

TPUD Board Meeting Highlights

At its September regular meeting, the Tillamook PUD Board of Directors:

X Approved the August 2024 financial workshop minutes, board meeting minutes and accounts payable.

X Approved Resolution No 24-09-02, “A Resolution of the Board of Directors of Tillamook People’s Utility District at the Local Contract Review Board to Exempt a Public Improvement Contract from Competitive Bidding.”

Departmental Reports:

X General Manager Todd Simmons talked about a recent meeting between Gov. Tina Kotek’s office and Northwest RiverPartners regarding the Columbia River System study. He emphasized the importance of Northwest RiverPartner’s role as it represents not-forprofit, public utilities such as Tillamook PUD and are actively engaged in the process.

X Customer Services and Finance Manager Marty Holm discussed the proposed 2025 budget calendar. He suggested a prebudget workshop on Oct. 15 and a budget workshop on Dec. 4.

Tillamook PUD Drive-Thru

• Thursday, Nov. 28: Thanksgiving

Tillamook PUD Awarded Top Workplace Honor

Tillamook People’s Utility District has been designated as a Top Workplace in 2024 by The Oregonian. Organizations are selected for this honor based on employee feedback gathered through a third-party survey administered by Energage LLC. This confidential survey measures the employee experience and its component themes, including employees feeling respected and supported, enabled to grow and empowered to execute. “We are honored to be selected as a Top Workplace in the region,” Tillamook PUD General Manager Todd Simmons says. “We have a deep appreciation for our employees and everything they do for our district. They are the individuals who help make our organization a fantastic place to work and a pillar in our community.”

For more information about Top Workplaces and to view the 2024 organizations with this honor, visit https://tinyurl.com/4c66wz6v.

Calendar of Events

Nov. 1-30

Fresh Start AA meeting, Tuesdays and Thursdays, 8:15 a.m., Wheeler City Hall, 775 Nehalem Blvd. 503-739-0293

Nov. 1-30

Civil Air Patrol Tillamook County Composite Squadron, Thursdays, 6:15-9 p.m., ATV Training Center, 5995 Long Prairie Road, Tillamook. 262-308-1482

Nov. 1-30

Tillamook Awakening Al-Anon family group, Thursdays, 7-8 p.m., St. Alban’s Church, Tillamook. 503-842-5094

Nov. 1-30

Tillamook Rotary Club meetings, Tuesdays, noon, Rendezvous Bar & Grill, Tillamook. Joanna, 503-812-7079

Nov. 1-30

Tillamook Kiwanis Club meeting, Wednesdays, noon, Tillamook Bay Community College or via Zoom. Everyone is welcome. patsykct@gmail.com for link

Nov. 1-30

Rockaway Beach Lions Club meeting, first and third Tuesdays, 11:30 a.m., 268 S. Anchor St. Juanita, kittermanj2020@gmail.com; 503-896-0062

Nov. 1-30

Overeaters Anonymous, Mondays, 5 p.m., held via Zoom. Everyone is welcome. Sylvia, 503-812-0838, for link

Nov. 1-30

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

Nov. 1-30

We The People Tillamook County meetings, first and third Mondays, 6 p.m., Tillamook. wethepeopletillamookco@yahoo.com; www.wethepeopletillamookcounty.com

Nov. 1-30

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

Nov. 1-30

Senior meals, Tuesdays and Wednesdays, 11:30 a.m., Kiawanda Community Center, Pacific City. $3 suggested donation for seniors, $6 for others. 971-212-7131, www.kiawanda.com

Contact Joanna Stelzig at 503-815-6024 or jstelzig@tpud.org to list items in the calendar.

Nov. 1-30

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

Nov. 1-30

Tillamook Senior Center: Mondays—coffee hour, 8:30-11 a.m.; Mondays and Fridays— pinochle, 11 a.m. to 2 p.m.; Tuesday—square dancing, 4-6 p.m.; second Wednesday—bunco, 11 a.m. to 2 p.m. Bring a lunch for lengthy activities. Reasonable hall rental is available, 316 Stillwell Ave. Senior Center, 503-842-4511, leave a message

Nov. 1-30

Take Off Pounds Sensibly meeting, Thursdays, 10-11 a.m., Bay City.

Pat Neman, 503-801-2229

Nov. 1-30

Nehalem Al-Anon Family Group virtual meeting, Mondays and Thursdays, noon, Zoom ID: 824 7120 7748, PW: 973392. Judi M., 503-368-7356

Nov. 1-30

Nehalem Bay Al-Anon Family Group meeting, Mondays, 6 p.m., NRCD, 36225 Ninth St. Carolyn G., 503-702-0737

Nov. 1-30

Sisters in Sobriety women’s Alcoholics Anonymous Zoom meeting, Tuesdays, noon to 1 p.m., ID: 86989656049, PW: 263508. Cecile, 503-338-8936

Nov. 1-30

Tillamook County Library events and regular activities for children, teens and adults. Library branch locations are in Tillamook, Bay City, Garibaldi, Pacific City, Manzanita and Rockaway Beach. For a list of all activities and events, visit the Tillamook County Library Facebook page at www.facebook.com/TillamookCountyLibrary or its website at www.tillabook.org/library. 503-842-4792

Nov. 1-2

Rummage sale, 9 a.m. to 3 p.m., Tillamook Senior Center, 316 Stillwell Ave. Donations welcome. 503-842-4511

Nov. 5

North Tillamook County Women’s Association, 11:30 a.m. to 2 p.m., Pine Grove, Manzanita. Bring lunch.

Jan, 503-812-2107

Nov. 9

Heart of Cartm Repair Café, 3-5 p.m., 395C Nehalem Blvd., Wheeler. RSVP on the Heart of Cartm Facebook page. Jessi Just, 971-389-8414.

Nov. 9

Tillamook Beekeepers Association meeting, 11:30 a.m. to 1 p.m., Port of Tillamook Bay office. Brad York, 719-896-0000

Nov. 11

Cloverdale-Nestucca Valley Lions Club meeting, 6 p.m., 34510 Parkway Drive, Cloverdale. Fred Whittlinger, 541-418-1836

Nov. 12

FL63 USCG Auxiliary Station Tillamook Bay meeting, 7 p.m., held virtually. Cammy Hickman, 503-961-2212, for meeting login.

Nov. 15

Nesko Women’s Club meeting, 11:30 a.m., Kiawanda Community Center, 34600 Cape Kiwanda Drive, Pacific City.

Nov. 16-17

Rain Fest, Tillamook Forest Center, 45500 Wilson River Hwy., Tillamook. 866-930-4646, tillamookforestcenter.org

Nov. 18

THS Alumni Scholarship Committee meeting, noon, Elks Lodge, Tillamook. Debbi, debrakay54@charter.net

Nov. 18

Monday Musical Club presents, “Thankful & Blessed,” music of Thanksgiving and faith. First Christian Church, 2203 4th St., Tillamook. Ron, 503-992-3575

Nov. 25

American Legion Tillamook Post 47 meeting, 6:30 p.m., Tillamook Elks Lodge, 1907 Third St. Kevin, 360-489-7471

Nov. 28

Tillamook County Democrats virtual meeting, 6 p.m. Go to tillcodems.org and click on “Join Us,” “Attend Virtual Meeting” and “Main Room.” Contact tillcodems@gmail.com

Nov. 29-Dec. 1

Holiday wreath-making, 11 a.m., Tillamook Forest Center, 45500 Wilson River Hwy., Tillamook. Registration required. 866-930-4646, tillamookforestcenter.org

Nov. 30

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

Dec. 5

Tillamook PUD Drive-Thru Customer Holiday Party, 4-6:30 p.m., TPUD Office. Enter through 11th Street truck yard gate, 1115 Pacific Ave. Joanna, 503-815-6024

Dec. 7

Old-Fashioned Christmas Bazaar, 9 a.m. to 3 p.m., St. Joseph’s Catholic Church, Cloverdale. Sandy, sandra_dust40@yahoo.com

Dec. 7

Nehalem Bay United Methodist Church annual holiday bazaar, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m., Nehalem Bay United Methodist Church. Patti, 503-812-1155

Help Us Help Your Neighbors

#SleevesUp to donate blood for your community

At Pioneer Utility Resources, the publisher of Ruralite magazine, we are always working to put the right letters together to tell a story. The American Red Cross story can’t be told without three letters: A, B and O, which represent the main blood types. When those important letters are missing from blood bank shelves, lives are at stake.

With the recent hurricanes in Florida adding to the need for blood nationwide, we encourage each of you to consider

Donate between Nov. 18 and Dec. 8, and you could receive two pairs of socks.

Facts About Blood Needs

X Every 2 seconds someone in the U.S. needs blood and or platelets.

X Approximately 29,000 units of red blood cells are needed every day in the U.S.

X Nearly 5,000 units of platelets and 6,500 units of plasma are needed daily in the U.S.

X Sickle cell disease affects 90,000 to 100,000 people in the U.S. About 1,000 babies are born with the disease each year. Sickle cell patients can require blood transfusions throughout their lives.

X According to the American Cancer Society, more than 1.9 million

donating blood by rolling up your sleeves and visiting a local Red Cross donation center between Oct. 25 and Dec. 25. Your gift of blood can save more than one life.

Visit this link—https://rcblood.org/3zJ1rxU—or scan the QR code below. Sign up to help us reach our goal and fill in the missing blood types so patients can receive the lifesaving care they need. Make and keep an appointment to give blood to the American Red Cross. n

https://rcblood.org/3zJ1rxU

people are expected to be diagnosed with cancer in 2025. Many of them will need blood, sometimes daily, during their chemotherapy treatments.

X Nearly 16 million blood components are transfused each year in the U.S.

X The average red blood cell transfusion is approximately 3 units.

X A single-car accident victim can require as many as 100 units of blood.

X Blood and platelets cannot be manufactured; they can only come from volunteer donors.

X The blood type most often requested by hospitals is type O.

X One donation can help save more than one life.

With more than 200 recipes, this cookbook from our 2007 contest offers options for potlucks, family reunions or picnics. As a bonus, additional pages feature previously unpublished barbecue recipes from a 2006 contest. The 8½-by-11-inch spiral-bound, indexed book is $10 (includes postage).

TO ORDER BY MAIL:

Submit payment with cookbook title, your name, address and number of cookbooks wanted to:

Ruralite Cookbooks

P.O. Box 1306

North Plains, OR 97133

TO PAY BY PHONE: Call 503-357-2105 for credit card payments with Visa, MasterCard, Discover or American Express.

TO ORDER ONLINE: Visit www.ruralite.com.

Please allow two to three weeks for delivery.

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.

OR-35

Rivers Are a Powerful Resource

The Pacific Northwest has an abundance of impressive rivers. In Oregon alone, there are approximately 2,424 miles of river, which accounts for more than 30% of the national river system. Flowing nearly 1,253 miles from British Columbia to the Pacific Ocean, the Columbia River is the largest— and one of the most valuable rivers—in the Pacific Northwest.

The Columbia River Basin provides fisheries, flood control, irrigation, navigation, recreational opportunities and hydroelectricity. Hydroelectric dams represent more than 50% of the energy capacity in the region and 84% of Tillamook PUD’s power.

Hydropower is an affordable, renewable, carbon-free and clean energy source. By using the energy of falling water, we have some of the cleanest electricity on the planet and have avoided millions of tons of air emissions.

Hydropower also helps ensure reliability. The amount of energy needed at our homes and businesses has to be in perfect balance with generation, or we risk brownouts or blackouts. Hydroelectric dams can store and release water to generate more or less electricity depending on demand. This reliability factor helps keep our electric grid stable and our communities safe.

Additionally, hydropower helps ensure affordable customer rates. Hydropower has low operating costs, a long lifespan and is immune to erratic price fluctuations of energy fuel commodities because it uses the force of self-renewing rivers as fuel to create electricity.

Earlier this year, I had the opportunity to tour the John Day Lock and Dam facility with other utility leaders. Construction of the John Day Dam facility began in 1968

and ended in 1972. The dam is one of the top five largest hydropower dams in the United States, with a total generating capacity of 2,480 megawatts.

While on the tour, we viewed the dam powerhouse. The pressure from falling water turns turbines, which turn a rotor in each of the 16 generator units to generate electricity. We also looked at the state-ofthe-art and effective fish passage facilities and watched the navigation lock in action as it helped a cruise ship pass from one side of the dam to the other safely—a process that takes about 30 minutes.

For centuries, civilization has relied on river water for multiple uses. The same is true today but on an even larger scale. Rivers are highly productive ecosystems that feed communities, support the economy and provide the fuel to deliver millions of people with electricity. Rivers are a powerful resource.

Sincerely,

A look inside the powerhouse at John Day Lock and Dam. PHOTO BY TODD SIMMONS

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