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Mindy Horr

Mindy Horr

Mindy and part of her extensive fan club.

Mindy and part of her extensive fan club.

Makin' magic in Korea.

Makin’ magic in Korea.

They don’t come much more talented than Mindy Horr.

A truly standout athlete at Coupeville High School, the 2005 grad was a four-year star in volleyball and tennis, claiming second at state in doubles with Taniel (Lamb) Proctor as a senior.

But it’s been the eight years since that moment in which she has shone at her brightest, taking a message of hope and love literally around the world.

Always on the move, her mega-watt smile and graceful heart lighting up the world around her, Horr is changing the world, one student at a time.

After graduating from Biola University in Southern California with a BA in English and a minor in Biblical studies (appropriate since her father, Cliff Horr, is a pastor), she has traveled the world.

Along the way, she found her calling, teaching English in South Korea.

Recently she made the jump to Director of Marketing and Admissions Supervisor with the company which brought her to Korea — Adventure Teaching — but, regardless of what position she holds, her joy in helping others spills out on a daily basis.

“I love what I do, and I still think teaching English in Korea is one of the coolest opportunities around!,” Horr said.

“As my life has turned out very different from what I imagined back at graduation in 2005, I don’t tend to make extensive future plans,” she added. “I never would’ve guessed where I am today, and I like the unpredictability of it.

“Loving Jesus and loving people. That’s what my future looks like.”

She still finds time to stay active, enjoying the sports she dominated in as a high school athlete.

“I still get out and play tennis and volleyball whenever I get the chance,” Horr said. “Shortly after moving to Portland in January with my sister Bethany, we made sure to find the nearest tennis courts, and hope for sunny days.

“My volleyball has changed from hard court to sand, which presents a whole new set of skills to learn,” she added. “But I play whenever I get the chance!”

As a Wolf, she learned her tennis game from her father, who guided the CHS  team for many years.

“Tennis has been a life-long love of mine, and getting to play for Coupeville with my dad as coach seemed pretty natural, seeing as he’d been my coach my whole life,” Horr said. “I learned a lot about the importance of consistency and attitude – though I have to say, some of the lessons weren’t that fun to learn. You can definitely beat yourself in tennis.

“I think the final game where Taniel and I won at Quad-Districts to make it to state was a really incredible feeling,” she added. “We had worked so hard over the last four years to get to that point. It was definitely worth it.”

As a setter for Toni Crebbin’s Wolf volleyball squads, Horr was part of a golden era for female athletes in Coupeville. One which included the young woman who is replacing Crebbin at the helm of the program this year.

“That final year of volleyball was a highlight – we had a great team and a lot of fun,” Horr said. “Coach Crebbin pushed us, but made sure we still enjoyed playing. Losing at state was disappointing, but I look back on my time playing volleyball for Coupeville as some of the best memories of high school.

“Super proud (and also slightly jealous) of Kirsty Croghan, who is joining the long line of amazing Coupeville volleyball coaches – up there with Crebbin and (Kim) Meche.”

Wherever her life takes her, and for Horr, that can change at a moment’s notice, the lessons and skills learned while wearing the red and black help guide her through adult life.

“Lessons from sports have shaped the way I look at life, for sure,” Horr said. “In high school, each game was everything – we put our hearts into those seasons. That’s what life should look like – you leave it all on the court.

“My advice for current athletes at Coupeville is to enjoy it,” she added. “It will end, and you’ll move on to other fun adventures. But this time at Coupeville, being a part of something small but great – you’ll never have a time quite like this again.”

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Kelsey Simmons

Kelsey Simmons

The magic.

The magic.

Simple, yet elegant.

Simple, yet elegant.

Kelsey and younger brother Jake.

Kelsey and younger brother Jake.

Kelsey Simmons glows.

When the former South Whidbey High School tennis and soccer star talks about her passion for interior design, the room lights up.

Well, the room always lights up when Simmons unleashes her transcendent smile, but talk of pillow cases and window coverings brings out something extra in her.

From the days when she used to throw away Barbie and keep the Dream House so she could decorate the rooms, to now, when she can get downright giddy at the thought of spending an afternoon frolicking through the lumber section at Home Depot — the smell of fresh wood takes her back to childhood memories of watching her father build things — she’s hooked on the world of design.

Which is why it’s a great thing she has an outlet through which she can pass on her boundless ideas and sleek fashion sense to the world.

Her business, Kelsey Simmons Design, caters to customers big and small, with an emphasis on mid-to-high end jobs.

The University of Washington grad, a world traveler with a degree in Art History and a background in architecture, who refined her subtle mixture of culture and style while studying abroad in Italy, is a star on the cusp of breaking into the big time.

When she gets there — and it’s a question of when, not if — it will be because of boundless hard work, genuine talent and, above all, a deep, abiding love for the joy she is able to bring to others.

“I have a passion for people’s homes,” Simmons said. “I’m very interested in creating functional homes where people can enjoy themselves, where they can come home and relax, yet run a busy life from it.

“I’m not big on sterile houses,” she added. “You have to be able to enjoy your home and be comfortable, no matter how beautiful it looks.”

A big devotee of design giants Kelly Hoppen and Holly Hunt, Simmons, a Clinton native who started her business in California before returning to the Island, has strong opinions on design, yet is able to merge those with her clients’ wishes.

“I enjoy being able to listen to their ideas and then bring out what they want, keeping it personal and letting them guide where we go,” Simmons said.

She describes her customary style as “Northwest Contemporary,” but has worked with clients around the country. If you have a house waiting to be brightened up, softened and enhanced, she is the woman with the magic in her brain.

And she can do it all, whether it be a small fix or a complete job. Paint, fixtures, window treatments, furniture — she has designed and created brand new pieces while also putting on her Sherlock Holmes hat and tracking down elusive gems for clients — there is no design issue too big or too small for the detail-orientated maestro to master.

Simmons, who worked at her family’s restaurant as a teen, before spending time overseas, in Seattle and Laguna Beach (and one year in Portland that, if nothing else, convinced her not to live in Portland), combines classy intelligence with a warm laugh that puts her clients at ease.

The ability to work with each new person is a family trait she shares with her younger brother, Jake.

Born completely deaf, he has not only adapted, but flourished, and she is quietly, fiercely proud when she describes how he adapts his sign language skills to match the person he’s talking to, so as not to put them ill at ease over their ability to match him.

“He’ll talk to different people — me, my parents, our grandparents or his friends — and go slower or faster, use different styles of signing, choosing how he responds, based on what that person can handle,” Simmons said.

Eighteen months apart, the duo are close and their joy for being around each other is captured in a photo in which they’re together on a ski lift, making faces at the camera as they rise into the sky.

More than anything else, more than the undeniable talent, the impeccable taste, the wealth of experience cultivated by a young woman clearly on the rise, it is that trait — joy — that defines Simmons.

In good times and bad, it is that which makes her truly special, that which makes her stand out in a crowd. The dazzling smile reaches you first — how could it not? — but then you find there are layers upon layers, skills and talents bubbling in a brain always doing 100 MPH.

She will change the world, one window covering at a time.

Whether she stays completely with design work, or one day opens the little hardware store/espresso stand of her dreams on the side, there will be a moment when someone asks Kelly Hoppen, “Who do you like?” and the South African-born design guru will nod, smile and say, “There’s this young woman in the Pacific Northwest…”

And the world will be a happier place for it.

To see Kelsey’s work, head over to http://kelseysimmonsdesign.com/Kelsey_Simmons_Design/Home.html

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Becker and best friend Jai'Lysa Hoskins.

Nicole Becker (right) and best friend Jai’Lysa Hoskins.

Nicole Becker (center, rear), her parents and her sister at Nicole's graduation.

Becker, her parents and her sister at Nicole’s graduation.

We are all one.

There are good things and bad things about small towns, but one thing defines a town like Coupeville, and that is that we all pretty much know one another.

Our paths cross at work, in the grocery store, at games, on the street. We know people even when we don’t know them.

As a community, as a town, as Wolf Nation, we pick each other up in our lowest moments. There is no other way.

Nicole Becker needs our help right now, our prayers (if that’s how you roll), our thoughts, our support.

Whether you know her personally and can reach out to her, whether you know her in passing, as a Wolf cheer captain and track runner, or as an eternally upbeat veteran of the dish pit at Christopher’s on Whidbey, whether you have never met her, we need to be there for her in whatever way we can.

Losing your older sister to death, as Nicole did Sunday, can be shattering.

But the darkness can be eased, a bit, by the knowledge you are loved, others think of you and want to take some of that pain away. That you are not alone as you head down this path.

Nicole is one of the most genuinely sweet people I have met in my time covering sports in Coupeville. Working with her at the restaurant has reinforced that belief.

In one of the many track photos from her senior year, she’s with her relay teammates, and, having spotted the camera, she’s grinning and waving the baton at the photographer, while her partners remain basically oblivious to what’s going on.

During basketball season, when the little elementary school cheerleaders came in for a halftime performance, there is Nicole, front and center, smiling down at one of the little girls, making her feel like she’s the star of the evening.

She is a wonderful young woman, one who seems to have a deep faith in God, and I hope that helps her through this time.

Her sister will live on through her, through her memories.

But we can not forget about Nicole herself. Let her know, in whatever way you can, that we are here for her, today and forever.

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Heni Barnes and her faithful assistant, farmer-in-training Henry Purdue.

    Heni Barnes and her faithful assistant, farmer-in-training Henry Purdue. (Julieanna Purdue photo)

Barnes and coach Wilbur Purdue. (Mark Vessey photo)

Barnes and coach Wilbur Purdue. (Mark Vessey photo)

Heni Barnes is rollin’ in the deep. The deep, deep cash.

The Coupeville High School track and field star, who also happens to a brilliant student, won a gold medal and $5,000 from the History Channel Thursday after trouncing the field in Senior Individual Documentary at the Kenneth E. Behring National History Day contest.

Barnes wowed the judges with “Striking a Turning Point: The 1917 Pacific Northwest Lumber Strike.”

Dena Royal, who coaches the Oak Harbor High School History Day team, judged the doc at regionals and said it was the best work Barnes had produced.

“I predicted a top three finish for Heni when I first saw her doc at regionals,” Royal said. “Yes, it was that good!”

Barnes, who was coached by Coupeville’s legendary (and modest) farmer/teacher, Wilbur Purdue, is also now a National Humanities Scholar after her win.

During the track and field season, she was the Wolves’ main female threat in the throwing events.

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Lexie (left) and Brittany Black.

Lexie (left) and Brittany Black.

Stylin'.

Stylin’.

The early days.

The early days.

She is the best.

As she turns 26 today, Lexie Black (born with an E, so it stays there, lil’ missy!) the former Coupeville High School basketball star (she still holds a record for the most blocks in a 1A state playoff game), college hoops stud, superb barista, even-better journalist, international supermodel in the making and Milla Jovovich doppleganger, is still off-the-charts awesome.

From her days as a youthful scalawag behind the counter at Videoville to that moment when she embraced all six feet, two inches and stopped slouching and finally stood straight and proud, she was, and is, a shining example of what Coupeville can produce.

She will tell you she doesn’t know what you’re talking about, but you can’t go through life and not realize at some point why everyone around you thinks you’re awesome. Now she just has to accept it.

Once upon a time I thought about calling this blog Lexie Black’s Block Party, which would have been the coolest blog name ever, even if no one understood it.

For young Wolf basketball players now, especially ones who have height and size and long arms like Lexie, I wish that they would commit to playing the game the way she did.

As half of the immortal Black ‘n Blue Sisters, with sidekick lil’ sis Brittany running on the wing, Lexie owned the paint. As sweet and likeable a person as you will ever meet off the court, she thrashed folks on the hardwood.

She believed every shot was hers to reject and every rebound was hers to haul in. She would not back down. Ever.

It is quite simple why the most sustained run of excellence any sports program has had at CHS in the past 20 years came from girls’ basketball.

With the Black sisters, Ashley Ellsworth-Bagby, Tina Lyness and others, the Wolves believed they were going to state, never doubted it, and followed through, year after year.

The current generation could do the same, if they played like Lexie.

You can look like a super model, be a goofball off the court and freak people out once you step on the hardwood.

It’s called bein’ awesome. It’s called bein’ Lexie Black.

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