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Archive for the ‘Navy pride’ Category

Coupeville High School senior Peyton Caveness announces his career choice. (Photo property Richard De Castro)

Peyton Caveness doesn’t play basketball for Coupeville High School, so he needed something to fill his winter hours.

The Wolf senior, who is a captain, team leader, and key player for both CHS football and baseball, is spending his “down” time preparing for his future.

Caveness recently signed on the dotted line with the United State Navy, with plans of becoming a Naval Firefighter.

Coral’s lil’ brother has followed in his sister’s big athletic footsteps and done so impressively.

With a diamond season left to play, Peyton has already made it to state twice.

A heavy hitter on the gridiron, where he terrorized any rivals foolish enough to enter his part of the field, he was part of a Wolf football team which won its first league title in three decades plus.

As a baseball jack-of-all-trades, he carries a big bat while manning multiple positions.

When Coupeville upset Toledo 3-0 last spring, earning its first win at the state baseball championships since 1987, it was Caveness who delivered the game-busting hit, blasting a two-run shot to center in the top of the seventh.

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Some of the women who made news in 2013.

  Some of the women who made news in 2013. (Enlarge the photo to get the total poster-worthy collage experience.)

Women ruled in 2013.

Nine of the 15 most-viewed articles I produced this year were about female athletes (or non-athletes).

From South Whidbey’s exiled hoops star Hayley Newman at #3 (https://coupevillesports.com/2013/02/01/exclusive-south-whidbeys-best-player-walks-talks/) to Wolf grad turned competitive bodybuilder Cavan Simonson at #9 (https://coupevillesports.com/2013/11/03/cav-cav-kicks-some-well-toned-tushie/), it was a woman’s world.

Tragedy made an impact, in stories a person would prefer not to write.

The unexpected death of South Whidbey High School boys’ basketball coach Henry Pope (https://coupevillesports.com/2013/07/25/whidbey-loses-a-basketball-giant/) was the #1 most-read story of the year, while former CHS volleyball coach Kim Meche, and her battle with the cancer that eventually claimed her, nabbed slots #6 (https://coupevillesports.com/2013/04/11/night-coach/), #10, and #13.

You didn’t need to be an athlete, as proved by appearances from a mysterious Navy wife at #2 (https://coupevillesports.com/2013/07/28/exclusive-the-navy-wife-behind-i-support-the-olf-tells-all/) rock goddess Savanna Dohner at #11 (https://coupevillesports.com/2013/11/18/music-has-my-heart-and-it-always-will/ and all-around goddess Zoie Tingstad at #15 (https://coupevillesports.com/2013/10/18/say-a-prayer-for-zoie-please/).

And it wasn’t just the stories, as the feminine businesswomen ruled as well, with Kelsey Simmons Design having the most-viewed ad (by a large margin) among my 46 sponsors.

Helping her cause — a birthday article on Kelsey that topped out at #51 (https://coupevillesports.com/2013/11/18/awesome-just-turned-30/), a feature story on her business (https://coupevillesports.com/2013/06/22/kelsey-simmons-is-awesome-by-design/) that ended up at #33 (Larry Bird’s number, which always bodes well), and a story on her wonder dog, Sitka, (https://coupevillesports.com/2013/09/26/worlds-most-talented-dog-missing-find-her-and-get-a-free-dinner/) that trumped mama by ten slots.

Dogs. Fluffy, fluffy doggies. They’re popular.

While stories about women were the most-read, the best way to get comments (lots and lots of comments) was to write about the always-popular topic of Coupeville vs. South Whidbey, especially if you were prone to pokin’ the Falcons, as I was.

The five most-commented-on articles I wrote all concerned South Whidbey, with the ensuing brouhaha launched on the Hayley Newman article providing the only time I have had to ever shut down a talk-back. The Falcon faithful and their crayons…

I mellowed (a bit) as the year went on, however, and tried to send a (small) olive branch or two South Whidbey way, with a feature on personable, graceful Falcon soccer star Maia Sparkman (https://coupevillesports.com/2013/06/30/the-falcons-are-alright-maia-sparkman-sparkles/) getting big hits.

Small steps.

As we move into 2014, what have we learned?

McKayla Bailey, aka The Photo Bomb Queen, always gets big page hits for her photos. Always.

Belgium is my go-to country (thanks to Iris Ryckaert), second only to the USA in terms of readership. Suck on that, Canada and Britain.

No one knows anything. Several times I watched stories I expected to be big die a hard death, while stories I had no hopes for turned into blockbusters.

And last, but not least. Always, always write about women. Always.

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A supporter (NOT the creator of the Facebook page) of NAS Whidbey's OLF.

A supporter (NOT the creator of the Facebook page) of NAS Whidbey’s OLF.

The movement begins.

The movement begins.

It’s the story the Canadian-funded papers tried to get, but couldn’t. So I did.

I know people. People who know people. People who know people who know … OK, you get it.

When a small group of big money gadabouts went after NAS Whidbey’s OLF, trying to shut down flights that had been going on for decades, many in the Navy community were ticked off. A few have done something about it.

One of the more prominent is a Navy wife who kick-started the “I Support the NASWI OLF” facebook page (https://www.facebook.com/ISUPPORTTHENASWIOLF?hc_location=stream), which has already picked up more than 2,400 “likes” in a matter of days.

A focal point in the drive to fight back against a group that threatens their jobs, and, in many people’s perspectives, national security, the page drives the resistance.

Now, in an exclusive (suck it, Canada), we present her story.

And while she prefers to keep her name out of the spotlight, believing she is just one of countless who are fighting the good fight, we can tell you this — she is obsessed with Christmas, is one of the most genuinely sweet people I know (but with a biting sense of humor) and is not going to back down. Ever.

In her own words:

If you had told me two months ago that I would create a Facebook page that would help in a very important crusade I would have laughed at you. Yet, here I am, and here you are, and I’m not laughing.

My love of planes and the military started when I was a little girl. I was raised an Army brat.

I spent several years in Germany where my mom worked for “Donutland”. She would take me to Rhein-main Air Force Base where we would go onto the flight line to sell donuts.

I would hear the planes closer than most civilians or dependents my age ever would.  I remember getting goosebumps seeing the planes up close and personal.

I remember the guys coming out in their uniforms to buy out all of our donuts (even the cake donuts, which were always the last to go).

They LOVED that my mom would bring her kids with her. They always said it reminded them of home. It was at that point that I fell in love with the military.

Didn’t matter the branch. They were my heroes.

That is the basis for why the military means so much to me. It’s my history and my future.

Personally, I try to stay current by reading the news daily. I even have the Whidbey New-Times app.

When I started reading what people had to say about the Navy’s presence on Whidbey Island I didn’t really understand what all of the fuss was about. In my world everyone appreciated the military.

Boy, was I wrong!

When I started following the OLF situation I would read the comments after each story and think one of two things: 1) good point, or 2) what an idiot.

I read comments like “I was here first”, “health and public safety”, “we are forced to live in a war zone”‘ or “my family has lived here since dirt was created”. What are we, four years old?

There are comments from those who moved by the OLF before the Noise Disclosures were required. They act like they didn’t know there was a HUGE landing strip in the middle of a field. Are you blind? Did nothing in your head register “uh, what’s that for and why does it look used”?

Of course, on a whole different playing field are those that signed the Noise Disclosure who apparently thought to themselves “self, the planes won’t be that bad”.

Did they not realize that the military is an ever-evolving machine? They must have thought that the government would come up with a whisper-quiet plane.

The government isn’t going to install a Prius engine in their planes. Those planes need oomph to get in the air (and if you’ve ever been behind a Prius on Snoqualmie Pass you know they ain’t got oomph). That’s just logical thinking.

Now they want to have the OLF closed because THEY made a bad decision. So, their bad decision is something they expect the rest of us to pay for.

If they think for one moment that we all won’t pay for it they are highly mistaken.

To me, those people are selfish and irresponsible. We are all adults here. When we make mistakes we should take responsibility for them.

When we buy property we should do our research and check out the neighborhood. As my husband and I were looking for a home we did our research.

We wanted a certain side of town. We wanted to be nearer to some things and further from others. We saw our house twice before buying it. We were familiar to the neighborhood. We made an INFORMED decision.

When we signed the documents I read every page so I would understand what I was getting myself into.

So, when these people spout off about the sound of the planes making their eyes pop out/eardrums burst, being here before this plane or that plane, or “our quality of life is greatly diminished” it reeks of ignorance and poor decision-making skills on their part.

If they aren’t willing to take the blame for their ignorance, then they need to focus their anger on the county for allowing the area around the OLF to be developed.

Just because you can build a house at the end of a landing strip doesn’t mean you should. It definitely doesn’t mean that you should buy said house.

The fact of the matter is that the Navy is part of keeping this country safe. The pilots need their training and they get that training at the OLF.

The Ault Field Base has its own operations to manage, so throwing into the mix the OLF traffic is ludicrous, unsafe, unsustainable, and selfish.

As for Pickard and his sheeple … our Facebook page has gone from 400 members to 2,400+ in ONE WEEK! Your page is holding steady at 51.

So, if you think for one moment that we will go quietly into the night you are mistaken. Honey, we are just getting started!

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