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Archive for May, 2013

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Robyn (left) and Julia Myers. (Rob Myers photos)

Dirty Divas -- post-race. (Robyn Myers photo)

Dirty Divas — post-race.

You can't outrun the mud.

You can’t outrun the mud.

That moment when we were still clean.

That moment when we were still clean.

Some people get covered in color, others get covered in mud.

While runners in Coupeville got splashed Saturday morning, a group of local women — Whidbey’s Dirty Divas — went off-Island and participated in the Dirty Girl Mud Run.

Not so much a race as an experience — where the competitors wear wild uniforms and get slightly, well, dirty — it highlights team fun and personal accomplishment over winning a medal.

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David A. Johnston

David A. Johnston

sthelensMay 18, 1980 the world exploded.

Literally.

Living in Kelso, Washington as a nine-year old, the Sunday morning when Mt. St. Helens erupted remains one of the two events scarred into my young mind.

The other came when I was a freshman at Tumwater High School and the Challenger exploded in front of a national audience of schoolchildren as the first teacher and her brave crew-mates tried to break Earth’s hold and touch the bold beyond.

I remember ash raining down on Kelso for days. Wearing face masks when we went outside.

My dad — a window washer and carpet cleaner — getting a new lucrative side business of removing ash from roofs and gutters, and bag upon bag upon bag of the gray, glassy stuff piling up out behind his huge work shed.

I remember the Cowlitz River overflowing and being evacuated at 3 AM in the morning and going to a hotel and watching Humphrey Bogart in “The Treasure of the Sierra Madre” on the TV because no one could go back to sleep.

I remember that summer, when everyone went to the end of our road and hung out in front of the quickie mart, kids on beat-up bikes (with no helmets — we weren’t wusses back then), guzzling Mountain Dew all day as they brought huge pieces of equipment in, inch by inch, moving every telephone wire, to dredge the river and restore it to normal.

I remember flying over Mt. St. Helens weeks later, with my parents, on a sight-seeing flight and looking at total freakin’ destruction.

Later, when they started to let people back on to the mountain, a friend of the family, the kind of guy who always had 324 businesses going at the same time, bought a chunk of the trees which had been flattened by the explosion sight-unseen.

Too late, it turned out the trees were worthless and couldn’t be sold for fire wood, but not before me and my sister, Sarah, got to go with Shyster McShyster and his kids into a truly alien environment.

There was not a sound, not a single sound in that area. Everything was fused and glassy as far as you could see, with no life anywhere. But the overwhelming thing was the complete, and I mean complete, lack of sound.

I remember going back many years later with my sister, her husband Kirk and my oldest nephew, Ford, and seeing how life had come back, yet many of the scars remained.

One of the eeriest moments I have ever experienced is sitting in the observatory, watching the film about the eruption.

There is a moment when you hear David A. Johnston, the volcanologist who alerted the world to what was happening, scream five words into his microphone.

“Vancouver! Vancouver! This is it!!”

And then he was gone, one of 57 men and women to die that day.

Gone, but never forgotten.

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Mckenzie and Caleb Meyer embrace after the race. (Photos courtesy Mckenzie Meyer)

Mckenzie and lil’ brother Caleb Meyer embrace after the race. (Photos courtesy Mckenzie Meyer)

Left to right, Aiden Crimmins, Mckenzie Meyer, Lauren Bayne, Hayley Dauphinais and Maggie Crimmins.

  Left to right, CMS athletic stars Aiden Crimmins, Mckenzie Meyer, Lauren Bayne, Hayley Dauphinais and Maggie Crimmins.

"We are the champions ... of the world!!"

“We are the champions … of the world!!”

Maggie Crimmins gets up close and personal. (Jodi Crimmins photos)

Maggie Crimmins gets up close and personal. (Jodi Crimmins photos)

Kristi Etzell (in glasses) and the adults got into the fun, too.

Kristi Etzell (in glasses) and the adults got into the fun, too.

Nathan Kircher, king of the 5K. (Dawn Kircher photo)

Nathan Kircher, king of the 5K. (Dawn Kircher photo)

Different year, same messy result.

33 years to the day Mt. St. Helen’s blew, dust was flying everywhere again.

This time, instead of ash, it was colored corn starch and water, however, as runners in the CES Color Splash Run/Walk were pelted Saturday morning.

In the end, it was just as messy as May 18, 1980, but a lot more pleasant for all involved — many of whom weren’t born when the mountain blew.

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Embrace the Wolf and be set free.

Embrace the Wolf and be set free.

The time has come, for Falcons to think about becoming Wolves.

I have nothing against South Whidbey High School, which has a long and rich athletic tradition, and Langley is a beautiful town.

But reality is reality — if you are a high school or middle school athlete and you want proper press coverage, you need to think about life in the middle part of the Island.

This is not coming from any of the Wolf coaches or the CHS administrators. As my blog states right from the outset, I don’t work for them, and they have no control over what I write and only sometimes endorse it (and then usually with a glass of Maalox in hand).

This is strictly me, opinionated idiot, saying to you, Falcon athletes, I can offer you more than what you currently have.

The South Whidbey Record, like all of the Canadian-owned papers on Whidbey, is glacially slow in reporting, prone to skipping huge chunks of your season and limited to only covering the top 5% or so of your athletes.

I give more coverage (photos and stories) to Wolf JV players than your media outlet gives to the best Falcon athletes, whether they be Angelina Berger, Lillianna Stelling, Madi Boyd or Nick French.

I cover EVERYTHING — varsity, JV, middle school, community sports. They  DON’T.

You have an amazing girls’ tennis team down there in Langley, from the Newman sisters down to the last girl on the JV squad. Unfortunately, none of those very talented JV netters ever see their names in print.

Up here, every single girl who played tennis this season saw every single one of their match results reported, whether they were Amanda d’Almeida or the last doubles team to exit the court. And their names are always in bold print, for easy ID’ing.

Plus, I made a concentrated effort to write feature stories about as many Wolf athletes — from every sport and every skill level — as possible this season. My ultimate goal — to make sure EVERY athlete that comes through CHS gets a chance to see themselves recognized.

The Canadian papers? Not so much. That would take time away from their siestas.

But see for yourself. Go through my blog, all 1,006 articles that I’ve produced in the last nine months. I’ll be over here, waiting.

When you’re done, ask yourself, wouldn’t it be nice to be a part of that? Wouldn’t it be nice to get the kind of coverage you deserve? To be more than an afterthought?

All you have to do is come to the middle of the Island and reap the benefits.

Something to think about.

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cwsocc16cwsocc10cwsocc15cwsocc9cwsocc12cwsocc13cwsocc17cwsocc22The next generation is coming.

Wearing a variety of eye-popping uniform choices, the young booters of Central Whidbey are taking to the soccer pitch in epic numbers, and who knows what they will produce.

Is one of them the next Jeremy Copenhaver or Amanda d’Almeida, or something even bigger?

Even if none of them ever end up making the big time in their chosen sport, they’ll be able to look back at some point and remember those early days when they played for orange slices and watermelon wedges.

And, thanks to the many photos reeled off by Pat Kelley and others, they’ll be able to see those moments in time, forever captured on film.

The photos above are but a miniscule amount of what can be found at the Central Whidbey Soccer Club’s Facebook page. For thousands (OK, maybe hundreds) more, head over to https://www.facebook.com/CentralWhidbeySoccerClub?fref=ts.

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