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Posts Tagged ‘John Fisken photos’

Have hydro, will race. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

Boats were revved and photos were snapped.

Back from a summer RV trip across America, John Fisken (and his cameras) stayed busy Sunday documenting Hydros for Heroes.

The annual event, which went down on the waters off Oak Harbor, is a popular fundraiser which attracts more than its share of looky-loo’s.

To see everything Fisken snapped, and perhaps purchase some prints for posterity, pop over to:

https://www.johnsphotos.net/Events/Hydros-for-Heroes-2022-08-21/

 

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Aaron Lucero imparts wisdom to Maya Nottingham. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

Just when you think you’re done, you’re not.

Sitting here in mid-July, I’ve stumbled across three photos from the spring which, for whatever reason, were never used in-season.

So, here you go, a flashback to former glory.

Tenley Stuurmans, ready to launch.

Melanie Navarro gets low to snag an incoming grounder.

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Daydreaming about that indoor/outdoor swimming pool with waterfall I’ll never own. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

We’re closing in on some major milestones.

Today marks nine years and 11 months for Coupeville Sports, leaving me a month shy of the blog’s 10th birthday, which hits Aug. 15.

Two days later, CHS football begins practice, with the other fall Wolf teams taking the field Aug. 22.

Right now, this is the 9,359th story to appear on Coupeville Sports, and you can count the stories I haven’t personally written on one hand.

We’re also very close to hitting two million page views all-time and would have likely already reached that number if the pandemic hadn’t shut down all sports for more than a year.

When you write a sports blog, and there are no sports, you get creative, but readership also predictably goes down.

Though, with the return of sports, the numbers have shot back up – to the point where here in year #10, I’m currently on target to post my best numbers since the prime of the blog back in 2016.

As we head towards the big 1-0, let’s clear up a few things for those who may have joined us recently.

#1 — I am NOT employed by the Coupeville School District, and they have yet to give me a penny of financial support in a decade of being their unofficial PR agent.

If you have an issue with something I write, contact me, instead of wasting the time of school administrators. My email is davidsvien@hotmail.com.

#2 — I am NOT connected to John’s Photos, and do NOT make a penny off of his photos.

He’s been gracious enough to allow me to run his pics for the past 9+ years, but we are separate entities, and whatever money you spend on photos goes to the guy actually clicking the camera.

#3 — I may not be the only person in the state of Washington doing what I am with this blog, but it’s pretty dang close.

Find me someone else hyper-focusing on a small town and covering not just varsity, but JV, C-Team, and middle school teams on a game-by-game basis.

I’ll wait.

#4 — Coupeville Sports is free to read. Has been since Aug. 15, 2012 and will forever remain that way. No pay wall. Ever. End of story.

#5 — I understand and appreciate the pain of Oak Harbor and South Whidbey sports fans, who have been largely left high and dry with the Whidbey News-Times declining to fill its Sports Editor position after Jim Waller retired more than a year ago.

As a WNT alumni (1990-1994), it’s an embarrassment and dereliction of duty in pursuit of saving a few bucks.

That being said, I am NOT the person to ride to your rescue.

When the school athletic year is in full gear, I average 4-5 articles a day, every day, covering just Coupeville.

I can’t add two more towns and countless more teams to that.

Whidbey is too big (and gas too expensive in this economy!), my knowledge of Oak Harbor and South Whidbey sports is too limited, and my obsessive nature too likely to send me down a path to cracking up in pursuit of penning 15 stories a day.

You can start a blog literally for free, and I hope at some point someone in those towns steps up and seizes the bright, shining opportunity which exists.

But for me, I made my choice, and that’s covering sports at Coupeville schools and ballfields which sit a mile from my duplex.

#6 — Yes, Coupeville Sports is my only job.

I left the restaurant biz in 2015, and despite my many prayers, it doesn’t appear that video stores will ever return.

So, I write and write some more … and then go do some weed eating and mowing on the side as my 51-year-old back screams at me.

#7 — Yes, I will never, ever be getting my indoor/outdoor swimming pool with waterfall writing about small town sports. Sad but true.

#8 — Coupeville Sports survives because of the generosity of my readers.

You can read for free, but those who choose to financially back me, at whatever dollar amount, are the true MVPs.

Want to keep me typing away on a computer powered by three squirrels running on a mini treadmill at 2 AM? There are multiple ways.

 

Venmo: David-Svien

PayPal: https://www.paypal.com/paypalme/DavidSvien?country.x=US&locale.x=en_US

Mail: 165 Sherman, Coupeville, WA 98239

In-person: Once games start back up, I can be found flattening my tush in the stands (or occasionally being fancy in the press box).

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Brian Casey celebrates graduation with the family. (Photo courtesy Brett Casey)

Welcome to day one of the second half of 2022.

With six months in the books, it’s a perfect time to look back at the many, many photos which ran on Coupeville Sports between Jan. 1 and June 30.

After much arguing with myself, here — in no particular order — are 20 of the best of those pics.

Jumping from sports to graduation to fires, they cover a wide range of subject matter and spring from the cameras of multiple snap-happy folk.

Dominic Coffman makes a one-handed snag during a spring scrimmage. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Katie Marti beats the throw to the plate. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Nick Guay swoops to the hoop. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Samantha Streitler is an official CHS grad. (Morgan White photo)

Former Wolf ace Makana Stone slices ‘n dices as a pro hoops player. (Photo property Leicester Riders)

Abby Mulholland (left) and Gwen Gustafson enjoy the moment. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

It’s a training exercise, so burn, baby, burn. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

All is quiet on graduation eve. (Morgan White photo)

Cousins, and future Wolf hoops stars claim the hardwood. (Stevie Glover photo)

“You left your seeing eye dog where???” (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Adeline Maynes snaps off some high, hard cheese. (Allison Scarpo photo)

On to the state basketball tourney! (Mandi Black photo)

“We’re scoring so fast the scoreboard can’t keep up!” (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Grady Rickner gets bendy. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

“I feel the need. The need for speed!” (Jerry Helm photo)

Caleb Meyer and associates are on top of the world. (Photo by JohnsPhotos.net)

Cody Roberts gets a graduation smooch. (Photo courtesy Heidi Roberts)

Lyla Stuurmans shines on. (Photo courtesy Sarah Stuurmans)

Two magnificent beasts, united. (Jodi Crimmins photo)

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A semi-truck crashed into the Penn Cove Pottery building Sunday morning. (Photos by JohnsPhotos.net)

It’s a magnet for out-of-control vehicles.

For the second time in the last three months, Penn Cove Pottery was invaded by a runaway vehicle, with a semi-truck crashing into the building’s southwest corner Sunday morning.

The driver was pulled out of his truck by passerby, and firefighters responded quickly to put out the fire.

The crash follows on the heels of one in mid-April, when a truck slammed into a wooden building right next to the business, which sits on Penn Cove, at the bottom of a curve.

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