The Coupeville High School tennis team left little doubt who is the king of the conference with a 6-0 win over visiting Chimacum/Port Townsend Wednesday, Oct. 14.
Pumpkins and zucchini were weighed in a driving rain storm Saturday during the annual Giant Pumpkin Contest, but hardy souls stood by until the winners were announced.
In 1996 a majority voted to save the Greenbank Farm from development. The Greenbank Farm Management Group was formed as a nonprofit to manage and run the farm as a tenant of the Port of Coupeville.
It doesn’t appear there’s going to be anything graceful about the Greenbank Farm Management Group’s split with the Port of Coupeville.
Despite claims by the nonprofit group that it is doing everything in its power to not fan the flames of community discord, the group’s actions say otherwise.
Fall is a busy time for Rick Castellano at the Island County Museum.
And it just got busier.
Castellano, the museum’s executive director, recently got word that he needs to find a new site to store the museum’s collections.
Coupeville High School’s homecoming week will culminate with a parade and football game Friday followed by a dance Saturday night.
If Rusty the Cocker Spaniel mix had been able to contain his excitement, he might’ve avoided running free into the great outdoors and getting stuck in the mud at Crockett Lake Saturday.
The Greenbank Farm has its first casualty as a result of ongoing turmoil between the Port of Coupeville and Greenbank Farm Management Group.
Heather Ausman is not sure why she’s still alive, uncertain whether to trace her existence to chemotherapy and radiation treatments, a mastectomy or endless prayers from friends and family in her adopted hometown of Coupeville and from other parts of the country.
But she is grateful beyond words to still be with her husband Josh and their three young daughters, Brooke, 12; Harlee, 10; and Josie, 8; and tries to make the most of each day.
A friend of mine recently revealed her husband was worried about their western red cedar trees. You see, he’d noticed areas of orange foliage dotted throughout the canopy and thought they were dying.
I told her to tell him to relax. When sections of old cedar foliage lose their green color in the late summer through fall, it’s just a normal part of their growth cycle called flagging.
All activities begin at 1 p.m. at the Coupeville United Methodist Church on Main Street. Lunch is served every Wednesday at noon. Contact Glenda Cantrell, 360-720-2955 or Glenda@islandseniorservices.org
The Coupeville and Sequim high school tennis teams played a 4-3 non-league match for the second time this season; this time Sequim won Monday, Oct. 12, in Coupeville.
The Coupeville High School tennis team all but wrapped up the Olympic League 1A title with a 4-3 win over visiting Klahowya Friday, Oct. 9.