On the first day of model rocket class every year, Leonard Good writes on the blackboard: “I am the famous Leonard.”
Good is famous, indeed, as the man responsible for helping kids to launch hundreds of homemade rockets for seven years.
On the first day of model rocket class every year, Leonard Good writes on the blackboard: “I am the famous Leonard.”
Good is famous, indeed, as the man responsible for helping kids to launch hundreds of homemade rockets for seven years.
It’s high summer and time for the Price is Right Sale at the Baby Island Saratoga Club.
From 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. on Saturday, July 21, friends and neighbors will gather to enjoy the 32nd annual open-air marketplace of arts and crafts, plants, second-hand treasures and eatable goodies. Located on Saratoga Road just south of the Amble Road intersection, the sale draws residents and summer folks from all over South Whidbey every year.
The best pyrotechnicians have the power to elicit the most heartfelt “oohs” or “ahhs” from Fourth of July crowds all across our 231-year-old nation.
If your intentions are noble, your purpose honorable, then you have paved your way to your mission.
The M-Bar-C Ranch in Freeland has a clear mission statement, beginning with “helping kids.” The Forgotten Children Foundation purchased M-Bar-C in 2003, and Bill O’Brien took over the helm.
They are your neighbors, your friends.
They look like they couldn’t hurt a fly, but behind the innocent facades of the small-town business owner, politician, real estate agent and, yes, even a former judge, hide some serious criminal minds.
Let them eat organic cake.
The chime that rings in the 25th birthday of South Whidbey Tilth this morning at 10 a.m. will signify sustenance, and you can bet their cake will taste good.
Quinn Ianniciello has filled his life with helping others, often stepping in when others have stepped out.
And this month’s Hometown Hero sees no reason to stop now.
There is a weather god and his name is “Huey.”
According to Australian Maori culture, Huey will protect your plans for Mother’s Day.
At least, that’s what the hardworking caretakers of Greenbank’s Meerkerk Gardens have said, as Huey has given them countless Mom’s Days of perfect weather.
Hometown Hero Jeanne Lepisto got a glimpse of greatness early in life, and it has guided her heart and spirit ever since.
“Our family spent a lot of time with my cousin Ronnie, a wonderfully loving boy with Down syndrome. He was always a bringer of love and life and laughter.
Margaret Scehovic says she was awed seeing her mother be the hands and feet for her father, stricken with Lou Gehrig’s disease.
“My dad lived for 10 years with the debilitating disease, and yet was able to retain his position at work for most of that time because of one reason — my mother,” Scehovic recalls.
Walking into creative art therapist Lisa Fladager’s Langley home studio is like entering a sanctuary with toys.
There are two low tables on either side of two cozy, overstuffed chairs where she welcomes clients.
Wilma O’Nan lay in a mainland hospital bed propped up by pillows unable to move due to a stroke, yet her heart and mind’s real essence breathes vibrancy into her immobile body.
When she was told by friend Linda Good of Island Strings that O’Nan was to be featured as a Hometown Hero, O’Nan was in her Brookhaven Langley apartment, feeling just fine on her way out the door to volunteer at the Methodist Church.
The greatest calling is to love one another, believe Karl Olsen and Deb Lund. Their goal in life is to treat all with love.
This talented couple has all the earthly talents of being respected teachers, admired publishers and recognized musicians and writers. Lund has published several children’s books; Olsen has cut CDs.
Yet for those who know this couple, what stands out most is their conviction to love others.