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Grace Roberts

It’s a family tradition.

Grace Roberts, who grew up in Coupeville and is now a freshman at Chelan High School, was recently named a First-Team All-League pick in softball by 1A Caribou Trail League coaches.

She was one of just two freshmen to notch the honor.

Grace, a first baseman/pitcher, joins her cousin, Landon Roberts, who was a First Team pick in baseball in the Northwest 2B/1B League while repping Coupeville’s red and black.

Her older sister, Madeline, was also an All-League player on the softball diamond, honored for her work at shortstop for Coupeville back in 2014, when the Wolves played in the 1A/2A Cascade Conference.

Chelan, which has a very young team — nine of 13 players were 8th or 9th graders this spring — finished 13-5, splitting a pair of games at the district tourney.

Blake Burrows walks on by. (Parker Hammons photo)

The face tells the story.

Intrepid photographers Bailey Thule and Parker Hammons captured the images seen above and below at the district track and field meet held in Coupeville.

They’re a series of portraits featuring the duo’s fellow CHS students, showing them in action and hanging out.

Cael Wilson is money. (Bailey Thule photo)

Issabel Johnson flies by. (Parker Hammons photo)

Wolf stars Jada Heaton (left) and Ayden Wyman support their fellow athletes. (Bailey Thule photo)

Axel Marshall ponders the universe. (Parker Hammons photo)

Zane Oldenstadt brings the magic. (Bailey Thule photo)

Aleera Kent rocks her ribbons. (Parker Hammons photo)

Katie Marti gives Carly Burt a lift. (Bailey Thule photo)

Carly Burt soars skyward in the pole vault. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Three days to rule the world.

The Coupeville High School track and field team is sending 18 athletes to the 2B state meet in Yakima later this week.

Things kick off Thursday with Kayla Crane and Carson Field competing in the 1600.

After that, things get busy.

Friday is a mix of finals and prelims, while Saturday is all finals.

The schedule:

 

Friday:

Shot Put — Zane Oldenstadt, Reese Wilkinson, Katie Marti — Finals

Javelin — Marti — Finals

Triple Jump — Matthew Ward — Finals

Pole Vault — Cael Wilson, Axel Marshall — Finals

200 — Marquette Cunningham — Prelims

400 — Lyla Stuurmans, Preston Epp — Prelims

800 — Stuurmans, Carson Field — Prelims

4 x 100 Relay — Cunningham, Davin Houston, Epp, Nick Guay — Prelims

4 x 400 Relay — Epp, Blake Burrows, Wilson, Guay — Prelims

 

Saturday:

Pole Vault — Carly Burt, Aleksia Jump — Finals

Discus — Wilkinson, Zac Tackett — Finals

High Jump — Guay — Finals

3200 — Aleera Kent, Field — Finals

 

If they finish top eight in prelims:

200 — Cunningham — Finals

400 — Stuurmans, Epp — Finals

800 — Stuurmans, Field — Finals

4 x 100 Relay — Cunningham, Houston, Epp, Guay — Finals

4 x 400 Relay — Epp, Burrows, Wilson, Guay — Finals

Nick Guay and Lyla Stuurmans are competing in multiple events at the state meet. (Bailey Thule photo)

They don’t intend to let the beat die.

A small, but passionate, group met Sunday at the Coupeville Library to discuss ways to try and keep music going in Central Whidbey schools during a time of major budget cuts.

Now, led by Emily Zenz, whose son Christopher is a CMS 7th grader, the race is on to preserve what can be saved, and help local educators build a more solid base from which to operate.

The scramble is due to the music programs in Coupeville Schools being among the first cuts as administrators work towards trimming $1.66 million from the budget.

By a 4-1 vote, the school board adopted a “modified education plan” in late April brought forward by outgoing Superintendent Steve King.

That plan cut the secondary music program and an elementary school “program to be named later” — likely art/music or STEM — and authorized the reduction of up to six certificated teachers.

Further cuts will be announced by the end of May.

King, who is returning to being a teacher, this time in Hawaii, will be replaced by Shannon Leatherwood.

As he is preparing to leave, King has expressed hope that the shuttering of the music program is not permanent.

“Recommended program reductions are temporary,” he said. “And the district is dedicated to restoring them when resources are available.”

That sliver of hope has spurred Zenz, who comes from a highly musical family, to begin the process of doing everything possible to fight the good fight.

“We need to nurture the seed, and cultivate the soil,” she said at Sunday’s meeting.

“We need music boosters, we need support; the kids of Coupeville deserve to have the same options as kids who don’t live in a small town.”

In the short term, Zenz and fellow parents are scrambling to pull together a float featuring young musicians for the Memorial Day Parade next weekend.

After that, goals include creating a web site which will feature local resources and events, putting together a music booster club similar to what local athletic supporters have built, and searching out possible grants.

Whether it’s finding a way to jump through all the loopholes and fund music instruction inside the schools, or building outside opportunities for students, the mission is clear.

“We’re not a dead duck in the water,” Zenz said. “Music is not gone.

“If school were to start a new year tomorrow, yes, it looks like they can’t fund music, but we have four months to change things,” she added. “It comes down to us as a community, working together to find solutions.

“A school district having a good music program is a feather in the cap for that district.”

 

For more info or to help, contact Emily Zenz at (715) 379-7915 or save.coupeville.music @gmail.com.

Teagan Calkins, captured in a reflective moment by her camera-carrying teammate. (Bailey Thule photos)

Bailey Thule can do it all.

She can deliver a hit on the softball diamond or deliver incisive behind-the-scenes pics of her teammates.

The snaps above and below were captured Saturday in Centralia, as Thule and the Wolves battled Toledo at the district tourney.

Allie Powers (left) and Ava Lucero

Kevin McGranahan and Taylor Brotemarkle

Adeline Maynes (left) and Mary Western

Madison McMillan (left) and Melanie Wolfe

Haylee Armstrong

L to r — Lucero, Calkins, Chelsi Stevens, and Maynes.

 

Sydney Van Dyke joins the club.

Shania Kenney flexes.