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Whidbey Life Magazine is a sponsored project of Fractured Atlas, a non-profit arts service organization. Contributions for the purposes of Whidbey Life Magazine must be made payable to Fractured Atlas and are tax-deductible to the extent permitted by law. HAT ISLAND, THE SLAVE TRADE, AND THE U.S. SUPREME COURT In 1792, a British expedition under Captain George Vancouver mapped the region. His ships anchored off present day Mukilteo for a time, and although a little island appears on the maps of the expedition, Vancouver did not name it. Forty-one years later, an American expedition commanded by Lt. Charles Wilkes entered Puget Sound. Like Vancouver before him, Wilkes anchored off Mukilteo, but WHERE DID THOSE BIG SHIPS COME FROM? || SABOT SAILOR TO He worked his way up through the ranks and his last command was the Polar Tanker, Endeavor. It’s a big journey from sailing a Sabot in the harbor of Santa Barbara to handling massive container ships. (photo by David Welton) After many months-long voyages he yearned for a job closer to home, so he studied to become a Puget Sound Pilot. CULINARY STORY AND BLOGS by Art News in Community News, Culinary, Literary. Posted on: March 23, 2016 12:39 pm - Permalink. March 23, 2016 A consumable art exhibition—the fourth annual South Whidbey Edible Book Festival—returns from 1:30 to 3:30 p.m. on Saturday, April 2 at Bayview Community Hall, 5642 Bayview Rd Hall, off Hwy. 525. OAK HARBOR HIGH SCHOOL'S CULINARY PROGRAM: A TASTE-GOOD Whidbey Island is a place of abundance. We revel in it. Vistas of water, mountains, and pastures astonish us every day. Actors and musicians greet us over coffee at the corner bistro. Public servants of all ages rub shoulders with us everywhere. Up north, Oak Harbor High School’s culinary arts program revels in its own abundance of talent, gratitude, and service to the community. SHE’S RETIRED AS MAYOR, BUT THIS NATIVE DAUGHTER IS STILL Nancy Conard first came to Coupeville when she was a year and a half old; her dad was in the Navy. That was in 1953, and she proves it by showing a picture of herself as a tow-headed toddler playing on the beach at Ebey’s Landing. What’s remarkable is that, except for a brief stretch after high school, she’s never lived any place else. FOLLOWING ISAAC EBEY TO WHIDBEY ISLAND From the boat, he could see the trees rising from Admiralty Inlet. The tall pines, the lowland salt marshes, the sandy beaches all beckoned him to come ashore. Then, as if by divine intervention, the trees parted to reveal a prairie on an island. Isaac Ebey would later write to his brother Winfield about Whidbey Island, calling it “almost a paradise of nature.” WHITESAVAGE AND LYLE HAND-FORGE PUBLIC ART ON WHIDBEY You’ve probably seen their art. That’s the nature of public art. It’s in our lives whenever we’re in public places. Sometimes it’s startling and hard to ignore. Other times it blends into the urban environment seamlessly. Seamless and artistic is a difficult balance to achieve, but Jean Whitesavage and Nick Lyle are a pair of Whidbey artists who have managed that for years with art ROGER PURDUE: A LEGACY OF NORTHWEST COAST NATIVE ART ON A major artistic highlight of Purdue’s career was the creation of the Salmon Wheel, which he worked on from 1993 to 1996. “The Spirits of the Salmon” originally was displayed at the base of the Coupeville Wharf but now resides in the Island County Museum. NANCY NOLAN: SINGING TO REACH THE ETERNITY OF NOW October 7, 2015. Once upon a time, a little four-year-old girl had never had a piano lesson. She didn’t know she needed one. Absorbed, as children are, in the elusive and ever present ‘now,’ she would hear a tune on the TV or radio and run to the piano in the kitchen and play it. The gift of music manifested itself early in Whidbey Island WHIDBEY LIFE MAGAZINEPERSPECTIVESADVERTISE/SPONSORABOUTCONTACTUSSUBSCRIBECULINARY
Whidbey Life Magazine is a sponsored project of Fractured Atlas, a non-profit arts service organization. Contributions for the purposes of Whidbey Life Magazine must be made payable to Fractured Atlas and are tax-deductible to the extent permitted by law. HAT ISLAND, THE SLAVE TRADE, AND THE U.S. SUPREME COURT In 1792, a British expedition under Captain George Vancouver mapped the region. His ships anchored off present day Mukilteo for a time, and although a little island appears on the maps of the expedition, Vancouver did not name it. Forty-one years later, an American expedition commanded by Lt. Charles Wilkes entered Puget Sound. Like Vancouver before him, Wilkes anchored off Mukilteo, but WHERE DID THOSE BIG SHIPS COME FROM? || SABOT SAILOR TO He worked his way up through the ranks and his last command was the Polar Tanker, Endeavor. It’s a big journey from sailing a Sabot in the harbor of Santa Barbara to handling massive container ships. (photo by David Welton) After many months-long voyages he yearned for a job closer to home, so he studied to become a Puget Sound Pilot. CULINARY STORY AND BLOGS by Art News in Community News, Culinary, Literary. Posted on: March 23, 2016 12:39 pm - Permalink. March 23, 2016 A consumable art exhibition—the fourth annual South Whidbey Edible Book Festival—returns from 1:30 to 3:30 p.m. on Saturday, April 2 at Bayview Community Hall, 5642 Bayview Rd Hall, off Hwy. 525. OAK HARBOR HIGH SCHOOL'S CULINARY PROGRAM: A TASTE-GOOD Whidbey Island is a place of abundance. We revel in it. Vistas of water, mountains, and pastures astonish us every day. Actors and musicians greet us over coffee at the corner bistro. Public servants of all ages rub shoulders with us everywhere. Up north, Oak Harbor High School’s culinary arts program revels in its own abundance of talent, gratitude, and service to the community. SHE’S RETIRED AS MAYOR, BUT THIS NATIVE DAUGHTER IS STILL Nancy Conard first came to Coupeville when she was a year and a half old; her dad was in the Navy. That was in 1953, and she proves it by showing a picture of herself as a tow-headed toddler playing on the beach at Ebey’s Landing. What’s remarkable is that, except for a brief stretch after high school, she’s never lived any place else. FOLLOWING ISAAC EBEY TO WHIDBEY ISLAND From the boat, he could see the trees rising from Admiralty Inlet. The tall pines, the lowland salt marshes, the sandy beaches all beckoned him to come ashore. Then, as if by divine intervention, the trees parted to reveal a prairie on an island. Isaac Ebey would later write to his brother Winfield about Whidbey Island, calling it “almost a paradise of nature.” WHITESAVAGE AND LYLE HAND-FORGE PUBLIC ART ON WHIDBEY You’ve probably seen their art. That’s the nature of public art. It’s in our lives whenever we’re in public places. Sometimes it’s startling and hard to ignore. Other times it blends into the urban environment seamlessly. Seamless and artistic is a difficult balance to achieve, but Jean Whitesavage and Nick Lyle are a pair of Whidbey artists who have managed that for years with art ROGER PURDUE: A LEGACY OF NORTHWEST COAST NATIVE ART ON A major artistic highlight of Purdue’s career was the creation of the Salmon Wheel, which he worked on from 1993 to 1996. “The Spirits of the Salmon” originally was displayed at the base of the Coupeville Wharf but now resides in the Island County Museum. NANCY NOLAN: SINGING TO REACH THE ETERNITY OF NOW October 7, 2015. Once upon a time, a little four-year-old girl had never had a piano lesson. She didn’t know she needed one. Absorbed, as children are, in the elusive and ever present ‘now,’ she would hear a tune on the TV or radio and run to the piano in the kitchen and play it. The gift of music manifested itself early in Whidbey Island CULINARY STORY AND BLOGS It’s springtime, and lambs are being born at the Glendale Shepherd dairy farm. Their mamas, about 60 ewes, are milked twice a day to produce milk for yogurt, soft brebis frais, and hard cheese. The ewes are a cross between European and North American breeds, and owners Lynn and Stan Swanson have been making award-winning cheese from their WHITESAVAGE AND LYLE HAND-FORGE PUBLIC ART ON WHIDBEY You’ve probably seen their art. That’s the nature of public art. It’s in our lives whenever we’re in public places. Sometimes it’s startling and hard to ignore. Other times it blends into the urban environment seamlessly. Seamless and artistic is a difficult balance to achieve, but Jean Whitesavage and Nick Lyle are a pair of Whidbey artists who have managed that for years with art DRINKING IN THE VIEW Whidbey Life Magazine Contributor. May 18, 2016. On the island, water can seem mesmerizingly ubiquitous. We drink in the view from every possible angle. But drinking in the aqueous view can deceive us. Despite the water that stretches to the horizon in every direction, we actually have a limited supply of fresh drinking water, and thatsupply
HOW TO BUILD BRIDGES IN POLARIZED TIMES Regardless of your political or cultural orientation, it’s hard to overlook the fact that our country is in the midst of almost unprecedented polarization. Heather Johnson has been wrestling with that challenge. She says, “It’s difficult to maintain equilibrium with the intensity of vitriol at every level of society.” Johnson addresses this polarization by striving to hold a larger LADIES OF THE BEACH: WALKING THE ISLAND’S EDGES FOR THE Ladies of the Beach: Walking the Island’s Edges for the Last 40 Years. Whidbey Island is unique in its shape and terrain, beautiful, and a little rugged. Just ask the group of women who know the edges of the island better than anyone. Harriet Hertzog, Alice Field and Alice Hanson started walking on the beaches around the island in 1975. GUARDIAN TREES: RAGGED REMNANTS OF THE GREAT COASTAL Mostly all we have left, any more, are ragged remnants of the great coastal barrier forests that used to be.”. The trees that used to be. Once upon a time, between 7,000 to 10,000 years ago, Douglas firs were giants that grew in abundance on Whidbey Island, with a A PASSION FOR PIES—AND FOR GREENBANK FARM—AT WHIDBEY PIES It’s common knowledge that one of the best places to have a slice of pie on Whidbey Island is Whidbey Pies Café at Greenbank Farm. It’s also no secret that the reason the loganberry, strawberry-rhubarb, cherry, Granny Smith apple, peach, huckleberry and marionberry pies are so delicious is because Whidbey Pies Café’s owner and pie maven, Jan Gunn, has a passion for pie perfection. SIEGERREBE: A REWARDING MOUTHFUL, IMPOSSIBLE TO PRONOUNCE Siegerrebe originated in Germany. The delicate white wine produced from these grapes comes from a cross between Gewurztraminer and Madeleine Angevine grapes. In the early 1980s, Gerard Bentryn of Bainbridge Island Vineyard and Winery was the first winemaker to grow Siegerrebe in the United States. Greg Osenbach, proudly presenting the2013
THE MACHINE SHOP BRINGS JOY TO LANGLEY FOR TEENAGERS (AND When I was a kid, which was not long ago, I loved going into Langley. My mom was a waitress at the Dog House and Mike’s Place was just across the street. But both of these lively places have been closed for quite a while now, and Langley has seemed to be losing its aspect of a fun place to hang out for people my age. CHUCK PETTIS, EARTH SANCTUARY AND SACRED SPACES Chuck Pettis, founder of Earth Sanctuary—a nature reserve and Buddhist retreat center in Freeland—wondered the same thing. His curiosity resulted in a lifelong quest to tap into energies that create positive resonance. Pettis studied ancient concepts such as dowsing (a way to discover water, minerals or other material below theearth’s
WHIDBEY LIFE MAGAZINEPERSPECTIVESADVERTISE/SPONSORABOUTCONTACTUSSUBSCRIBECULINARY
Whidbey Life Magazine is a sponsored project of Fractured Atlas, a non-profit arts service organization. Contributions for the purposes of Whidbey Life Magazine must be made payable to Fractured Atlas and are tax-deductible to the extent permitted by law. HAT ISLAND, THE SLAVE TRADE, AND THE U.S. SUPREME COURT In 1792, a British expedition under Captain George Vancouver mapped the region. His ships anchored off present day Mukilteo for a time, and although a little island appears on the maps of the expedition, Vancouver did not name it. Forty-one years later, an American expedition commanded by Lt. Charles Wilkes entered Puget Sound. Like Vancouver before him, Wilkes anchored off Mukilteo, but WHERE DID THOSE BIG SHIPS COME FROM? || SABOT SAILOR TO After many months-long voyages he yearned for a job closer to home, so he studied to become a Puget Sound Pilot. His apprenticeship included 267 trips on a variety of vessels to different harbors and moorings inPuget Sound.
WHITESAVAGE AND LYLE HAND-FORGE PUBLIC ART ON WHIDBEY You’ve probably seen their art. That’s the nature of public art. It’s in our lives whenever we’re in public places. Sometimes it’s startling and hard to ignore. Other times it blends into the urban environment seamlessly. Seamless and artistic is a difficult balance to achieve, but Jean Whitesavage and Nick Lyle are a pair of Whidbey artists who have managed that for years with art HOW TO BUILD BRIDGES IN POLARIZED TIMES Regardless of your political or cultural orientation, it’s hard to overlook the fact that our country is in the midst of almost unprecedented polarization. Heather Johnson has been wrestling with that challenge. She says, “It’s difficult to maintain equilibrium with the intensity of vitriol at every level of society.” Johnson addresses this polarization by striving to hold a larger SHE’S RETIRED AS MAYOR, BUT THIS NATIVE DAUGHTER IS STILL Nancy Conard first came to Coupeville when she was a year and a half old; her dad was in the Navy. That was in 1953, and she proves it by showing a picture of herself as a tow-headed toddler playing on the beach at Ebey’s Landing. What’s remarkable is that, except for a brief stretch after high school, she’s never lived any place else. SIEGERREBE: A REWARDING MOUTHFUL, IMPOSSIBLE TO PRONOUNCE BY STEVE KILISKY Whidbey Life Magazine Contributor May 6, 2015. I used to think Gewürztraminer (guh–VERTS-truh-MEE-nur) was the hardest wine varietal to pronounce and spell (even the Microsoft Word Dictionary spells it incorrectly).For a long time it didn’t matter because I didn’t particularly enjoy drinking it, so being able to pronounce it wasn’t important to me. ROGER PURDUE: A LEGACY OF NORTHWEST COAST NATIVE ART ON A major artistic highlight of Purdue’s career was the creation of the Salmon Wheel, which he worked on from 1993 to 1996. “The Spirits of the Salmon” originally was displayed at the base of the Coupeville Wharf but now resides in the Island County Museum. NANCY NOLAN: SINGING TO REACH THE ETERNITY OF NOW Beautiful, talented, young and hard-working, Nolan applied her considerable discipline to studying the great American singers and composers. The glamorous, romantic moments onstage—often six nights a week—belied the long, arduous hours of preparation, or “woodshedding” in THE MACHINE SHOP BRINGS JOY TO LANGLEY FOR TEENAGERS (AND When I was a kid, which was not long ago, I loved going into Langley. My mom was a waitress at the Dog House and Mike’s Place was just across the street. But both of these lively places have been closed for quite a while now, and Langley has seemed to be losing its aspect of a fun place to hang out for people my age. WHIDBEY LIFE MAGAZINEPERSPECTIVESADVERTISE/SPONSORABOUTCONTACTUSSUBSCRIBECULINARY
Whidbey Life Magazine is a sponsored project of Fractured Atlas, a non-profit arts service organization. Contributions for the purposes of Whidbey Life Magazine must be made payable to Fractured Atlas and are tax-deductible to the extent permitted by law. HAT ISLAND, THE SLAVE TRADE, AND THE U.S. SUPREME COURT In 1792, a British expedition under Captain George Vancouver mapped the region. His ships anchored off present day Mukilteo for a time, and although a little island appears on the maps of the expedition, Vancouver did not name it. Forty-one years later, an American expedition commanded by Lt. Charles Wilkes entered Puget Sound. Like Vancouver before him, Wilkes anchored off Mukilteo, but WHERE DID THOSE BIG SHIPS COME FROM? || SABOT SAILOR TO After many months-long voyages he yearned for a job closer to home, so he studied to become a Puget Sound Pilot. His apprenticeship included 267 trips on a variety of vessels to different harbors and moorings inPuget Sound.
WHITESAVAGE AND LYLE HAND-FORGE PUBLIC ART ON WHIDBEY You’ve probably seen their art. That’s the nature of public art. It’s in our lives whenever we’re in public places. Sometimes it’s startling and hard to ignore. Other times it blends into the urban environment seamlessly. Seamless and artistic is a difficult balance to achieve, but Jean Whitesavage and Nick Lyle are a pair of Whidbey artists who have managed that for years with art HOW TO BUILD BRIDGES IN POLARIZED TIMES Regardless of your political or cultural orientation, it’s hard to overlook the fact that our country is in the midst of almost unprecedented polarization. Heather Johnson has been wrestling with that challenge. She says, “It’s difficult to maintain equilibrium with the intensity of vitriol at every level of society.” Johnson addresses this polarization by striving to hold a larger SHE’S RETIRED AS MAYOR, BUT THIS NATIVE DAUGHTER IS STILL Nancy Conard first came to Coupeville when she was a year and a half old; her dad was in the Navy. That was in 1953, and she proves it by showing a picture of herself as a tow-headed toddler playing on the beach at Ebey’s Landing. What’s remarkable is that, except for a brief stretch after high school, she’s never lived any place else. SIEGERREBE: A REWARDING MOUTHFUL, IMPOSSIBLE TO PRONOUNCE BY STEVE KILISKY Whidbey Life Magazine Contributor May 6, 2015. I used to think Gewürztraminer (guh–VERTS-truh-MEE-nur) was the hardest wine varietal to pronounce and spell (even the Microsoft Word Dictionary spells it incorrectly).For a long time it didn’t matter because I didn’t particularly enjoy drinking it, so being able to pronounce it wasn’t important to me. ROGER PURDUE: A LEGACY OF NORTHWEST COAST NATIVE ART ON A major artistic highlight of Purdue’s career was the creation of the Salmon Wheel, which he worked on from 1993 to 1996. “The Spirits of the Salmon” originally was displayed at the base of the Coupeville Wharf but now resides in the Island County Museum. NANCY NOLAN: SINGING TO REACH THE ETERNITY OF NOW Beautiful, talented, young and hard-working, Nolan applied her considerable discipline to studying the great American singers and composers. The glamorous, romantic moments onstage—often six nights a week—belied the long, arduous hours of preparation, or “woodshedding” in THE MACHINE SHOP BRINGS JOY TO LANGLEY FOR TEENAGERS (AND When I was a kid, which was not long ago, I loved going into Langley. My mom was a waitress at the Dog House and Mike’s Place was just across the street. But both of these lively places have been closed for quite a while now, and Langley has seemed to be losing its aspect of a fun place to hang out for people my age. DRINKING IN THE VIEW Is our drinking water supply vulnerable? Ninety percent of the wells on the southern end of the island are sunk in the sea level aquifer. As we enter the age of climate change, this places the potable water supplies of Island County—especially given our many miles of shorelines—at risk. WHITESAVAGE AND LYLE HAND-FORGE PUBLIC ART ON WHIDBEY You’ve probably seen their art. That’s the nature of public art. It’s in our lives whenever we’re in public places. Sometimes it’s startling and hard to ignore. Other times it blends into the urban environment seamlessly. Seamless and artistic is a difficult balance to achieve, but Jean Whitesavage and Nick Lyle are a pair of Whidbey artists who have managed that for years with art HOW TO BUILD BRIDGES IN POLARIZED TIMES Regardless of your political or cultural orientation, it’s hard to overlook the fact that our country is in the midst of almost unprecedented polarization. Heather Johnson has been wrestling with that challenge. She says, “It’s difficult to maintain equilibrium with the intensity of vitriol at every level of society.” Johnson addresses this polarization by striving to hold a larger OAK HARBOR HIGH SCHOOL'S CULINARY PROGRAM: A TASTE-GOOD Whidbey Island is a place of abundance. We revel in it. Vistas of water, mountains, and pastures astonish us every day. Actors and musicians greet us over coffee at the corner bistro. Public servants of all ages rub shoulders with us everywhere. Up north, Oak Harbor High School’s culinary arts program revels in its own abundance of talent, gratitude, and service to the community. LADIES OF THE BEACH: WALKING THE ISLAND’S EDGES FOR THE Every week, a different route is chosen, and communicated to all the walkers.. Car pools help with parking and protection of the environment. The group has divided the walk around the island’s edges into 48 different segments, each with an average distance of three to four miles. FOLLOWING ISAAC EBEY TO WHIDBEY ISLAND From the boat, he could see the trees rising from Admiralty Inlet. The tall pines, the lowland salt marshes, the sandy beaches all beckoned him to come ashore. Then, as if by divine intervention, the trees parted to reveal a prairie on an island. Isaac Ebey would later write to his brother Winfield about Whidbey Island, calling it “almost a paradise of nature.” LANGLEY IS FOR THE BIRDS—BIG, COLORFUL BIRDS… Don’t be alarmed! If you happen to spy a large, multicolored, tropical bird flying through the forest on the south end of Whidbey Island, you’re not hallucinating or losing your mind. The parrot or macaw is likely a resident of Flying Colors Aviary. THE MACHINE SHOP BRINGS JOY TO LANGLEY FOR TEENAGERS (AND When I was a kid, which was not long ago, I loved going into Langley. My mom was a waitress at the Dog House and Mike’s Place was just across the street. But both of these lively places have been closed for quite a while now, and Langley has seemed to be losing its aspect of a fun place to hang out for people my age. SHE’S RETIRED AS MAYOR, BUT THIS NATIVE DAUGHTER IS STILL Nancy Conard first came to Coupeville when she was a year and a half old; her dad was in the Navy. That was in 1953, and she proves it by showing a picture of herself as a tow-headed toddler playing on the beach at Ebey’s Landing. What’s remarkable is that, except for a brief stretch after high school, she’s never lived any place else. GUARDIAN TREES: RAGGED REMNANTS OF THE GREAT COASTAL BY KATE POSS Whidbey Life Magazine Contributor June 22, 2016 (corrected 6/24/16) We can time-travel here on Whidbey Island. A visit to the guardian trees, which protect our coastal old-growth woods, becomes a walk with elders who are hundreds of years old. WHIDBEY LIFE MAGAZINEPERSPECTIVESADVERTISE/SPONSORABOUTCONTACTUSSUBSCRIBECULINARY
Whidbey Life Magazine is a sponsored project of Fractured Atlas, a non-profit arts service organization. Contributions for the purposes of Whidbey Life Magazine must be made payable to Fractured Atlas and are tax-deductible to the extent permitted by law. WHERE DID THOSE BIG SHIPS COME FROM? || SABOT SAILOR TO He worked his way up through the ranks and his last command was the Polar Tanker, Endeavor. It’s a big journey from sailing a Sabot in the harbor of Santa Barbara to handling massive container ships. (photo by David Welton) After many months-long voyages he yearned for a job closer to home, so he studied to become a Puget Sound Pilot. HAT ISLAND, THE SLAVE TRADE, AND THE U.S. SUPREME COURT In 1792, a British expedition under Captain George Vancouver mapped the region. His ships anchored off present day Mukilteo for a time, and although a little island appears on the maps of the expedition, Vancouver did not name it. Forty-one years later, an American expedition commanded by Lt. Charles Wilkes entered Puget Sound. Like Vancouver before him, Wilkes anchored off Mukilteo, but WHITESAVAGE AND LYLE HAND-FORGE PUBLIC ART ON WHIDBEY You’ve probably seen their art. That’s the nature of public art. It’s in our lives whenever we’re in public places. Sometimes it’s startling and hard to ignore. Other times it blends into the urban environment seamlessly. Seamless and artistic is a difficult balance to achieve, but Jean Whitesavage and Nick Lyle are a pair of Whidbey artists who have managed that for years with art OAK HARBOR HIGH SCHOOL'S CULINARY PROGRAM: A TASTE-GOOD Whidbey Island is a place of abundance. We revel in it. Vistas of water, mountains, and pastures astonish us every day. Actors and musicians greet us over coffee at the corner bistro. Public servants of all ages rub shoulders with us everywhere. Up north, Oak Harbor High School’s culinary arts program revels in its own abundance of talent, gratitude, and service to the community. SIEGERREBE: A REWARDING MOUTHFUL, IMPOSSIBLE TO PRONOUNCE Siegerrebe originated in Germany. The delicate white wine produced from these grapes comes from a cross between Gewurztraminer and Madeleine Angevine grapes. In the early 1980s, Gerard Bentryn of Bainbridge Island Vineyard and Winery was the first winemaker to grow Siegerrebe in the United States. Greg Osenbach, proudly presenting the2013
SHE’S RETIRED AS MAYOR, BUT THIS NATIVE DAUGHTER IS STILL Nancy Conard first came to Coupeville when she was a year and a half old; her dad was in the Navy. That was in 1953, and she proves it by showing a picture of herself as a tow-headed toddler playing on the beach at Ebey’s Landing. What’s remarkable is that, except for a brief stretch after high school, she’s never lived any place else. ROGER PURDUE: A LEGACY OF NORTHWEST COAST NATIVE ART ON A major artistic highlight of Purdue’s career was the creation of the Salmon Wheel, which he worked on from 1993 to 1996. “The Spirits of the Salmon” originally was displayed at the base of the Coupeville Wharf but now resides in the Island County Museum. NANCY NOLAN: SINGING TO REACH THE ETERNITY OF NOW October 7, 2015. Once upon a time, a little four-year-old girl had never had a piano lesson. She didn’t know she needed one. Absorbed, as children are, in the elusive and ever present ‘now,’ she would hear a tune on the TV or radio and run to the piano in the kitchen and play it. The gift of music manifested itself early in Whidbey Island THE MACHINE SHOP BRINGS JOY TO LANGLEY FOR TEENAGERS (AND When I was a kid, which was not long ago, I loved going into Langley. My mom was a waitress at the Dog House and Mike’s Place was just across the street. But both of these lively places have been closed for quite a while now, and Langley has seemed to be losing its aspect of a fun place to hang out for people my age. WHIDBEY LIFE MAGAZINEPERSPECTIVESADVERTISE/SPONSORABOUTCONTACTUSSUBSCRIBECULINARY
Whidbey Life Magazine is a sponsored project of Fractured Atlas, a non-profit arts service organization. Contributions for the purposes of Whidbey Life Magazine must be made payable to Fractured Atlas and are tax-deductible to the extent permitted by law. WHERE DID THOSE BIG SHIPS COME FROM? || SABOT SAILOR TO He worked his way up through the ranks and his last command was the Polar Tanker, Endeavor. It’s a big journey from sailing a Sabot in the harbor of Santa Barbara to handling massive container ships. (photo by David Welton) After many months-long voyages he yearned for a job closer to home, so he studied to become a Puget Sound Pilot. HAT ISLAND, THE SLAVE TRADE, AND THE U.S. SUPREME COURT In 1792, a British expedition under Captain George Vancouver mapped the region. His ships anchored off present day Mukilteo for a time, and although a little island appears on the maps of the expedition, Vancouver did not name it. Forty-one years later, an American expedition commanded by Lt. Charles Wilkes entered Puget Sound. Like Vancouver before him, Wilkes anchored off Mukilteo, but WHITESAVAGE AND LYLE HAND-FORGE PUBLIC ART ON WHIDBEY You’ve probably seen their art. That’s the nature of public art. It’s in our lives whenever we’re in public places. Sometimes it’s startling and hard to ignore. Other times it blends into the urban environment seamlessly. Seamless and artistic is a difficult balance to achieve, but Jean Whitesavage and Nick Lyle are a pair of Whidbey artists who have managed that for years with art OAK HARBOR HIGH SCHOOL'S CULINARY PROGRAM: A TASTE-GOOD Whidbey Island is a place of abundance. We revel in it. Vistas of water, mountains, and pastures astonish us every day. Actors and musicians greet us over coffee at the corner bistro. Public servants of all ages rub shoulders with us everywhere. Up north, Oak Harbor High School’s culinary arts program revels in its own abundance of talent, gratitude, and service to the community. SIEGERREBE: A REWARDING MOUTHFUL, IMPOSSIBLE TO PRONOUNCE Siegerrebe originated in Germany. The delicate white wine produced from these grapes comes from a cross between Gewurztraminer and Madeleine Angevine grapes. In the early 1980s, Gerard Bentryn of Bainbridge Island Vineyard and Winery was the first winemaker to grow Siegerrebe in the United States. Greg Osenbach, proudly presenting the2013
SHE’S RETIRED AS MAYOR, BUT THIS NATIVE DAUGHTER IS STILL Nancy Conard first came to Coupeville when she was a year and a half old; her dad was in the Navy. That was in 1953, and she proves it by showing a picture of herself as a tow-headed toddler playing on the beach at Ebey’s Landing. What’s remarkable is that, except for a brief stretch after high school, she’s never lived any place else. ROGER PURDUE: A LEGACY OF NORTHWEST COAST NATIVE ART ON A major artistic highlight of Purdue’s career was the creation of the Salmon Wheel, which he worked on from 1993 to 1996. “The Spirits of the Salmon” originally was displayed at the base of the Coupeville Wharf but now resides in the Island County Museum. NANCY NOLAN: SINGING TO REACH THE ETERNITY OF NOW October 7, 2015. Once upon a time, a little four-year-old girl had never had a piano lesson. She didn’t know she needed one. Absorbed, as children are, in the elusive and ever present ‘now,’ she would hear a tune on the TV or radio and run to the piano in the kitchen and play it. The gift of music manifested itself early in Whidbey Island THE MACHINE SHOP BRINGS JOY TO LANGLEY FOR TEENAGERS (AND When I was a kid, which was not long ago, I loved going into Langley. My mom was a waitress at the Dog House and Mike’s Place was just across the street. But both of these lively places have been closed for quite a while now, and Langley has seemed to be losing its aspect of a fun place to hang out for people my age. FOLLOWING ISAAC EBEY TO WHIDBEY ISLAND From the boat, he could see the trees rising from Admiralty Inlet. The tall pines, the lowland salt marshes, the sandy beaches all beckoned him to come ashore. Then, as if by divine intervention, the trees parted to reveal a prairie on an island. Isaac Ebey would later write to his brother Winfield about Whidbey Island, calling it “almost a paradise of nature.” DRINKING IN THE VIEW Whidbey Life Magazine Contributor. May 18, 2016. On the island, water can seem mesmerizingly ubiquitous. We drink in the view from every possible angle. But drinking in the aqueous view can deceive us. Despite the water that stretches to the horizon in every direction, we actually have a limited supply of fresh drinking water, and thatsupply
LADIES OF THE BEACH: WALKING THE ISLAND’S EDGES FOR THE Ladies of the Beach: Walking the Island’s Edges for the Last 40 Years. Whidbey Island is unique in its shape and terrain, beautiful, and a little rugged. Just ask the group of women who know the edges of the island better than anyone. Harriet Hertzog, Alice Field and Alice Hanson started walking on the beaches around the island in 1975. LANGLEY IS FOR THE BIRDS—BIG, COLORFUL BIRDS… Langley is for the Birds—Big, Colorful Birds. Don’t be alarmed! If you happen to spy a large, multicolored, tropical bird flying through the forest on the south end of Whidbey Island, you’re not hallucinating or losing your mind. The parrot or macaw is likely a resident of Flying Colors Aviary. Susan Hilliard and Mark Hockettoperate
OAK HARBOR HIGH SCHOOL'S CULINARY PROGRAM: A TASTE-GOOD Whidbey Island is a place of abundance. We revel in it. Vistas of water, mountains, and pastures astonish us every day. Actors and musicians greet us over coffee at the corner bistro. Public servants of all ages rub shoulders with us everywhere. Up north, Oak Harbor High School’s culinary arts program revels in its own abundance of talent, gratitude, and service to the community. GUARDIAN TREES: RAGGED REMNANTS OF THE GREAT COASTAL Mostly all we have left, any more, are ragged remnants of the great coastal barrier forests that used to be.”. The trees that used to be. Once upon a time, between 7,000 to 10,000 years ago, Douglas firs were giants that grew in abundance on Whidbey Island, with a A PASSION FOR PIES—AND FOR GREENBANK FARM—AT WHIDBEY PIES It’s common knowledge that one of the best places to have a slice of pie on Whidbey Island is Whidbey Pies Café at Greenbank Farm. It’s also no secret that the reason the loganberry, strawberry-rhubarb, cherry, Granny Smith apple, peach, huckleberry and marionberry pies are so delicious is because Whidbey Pies Café’s owner and pie maven, Jan Gunn, has a passion for pie perfection. SHE’S RETIRED AS MAYOR, BUT THIS NATIVE DAUGHTER IS STILL Nancy Conard first came to Coupeville when she was a year and a half old; her dad was in the Navy. That was in 1953, and she proves it by showing a picture of herself as a tow-headed toddler playing on the beach at Ebey’s Landing. What’s remarkable is that, except for a brief stretch after high school, she’s never lived any place else. THE MACHINE SHOP BRINGS JOY TO LANGLEY FOR TEENAGERS (AND When I was a kid, which was not long ago, I loved going into Langley. My mom was a waitress at the Dog House and Mike’s Place was just across the street. But both of these lively places have been closed for quite a while now, and Langley has seemed to be losing its aspect of a fun place to hang out for people my age. CULTIVATING CONNECTIONS TO THE PAST AND THE LAND AT Honoring the tradition of our coastal Native Americans, Angela Lindstrom directs and hosts the event each year for fourth grade students in Waldorf schools from Bellingham to Olympia. WHIDBEY LIFE MAGAZINEPERSPECTIVESADVERTISE/SPONSORABOUTCONTACTUSSUBSCRIBECULINARY
Whidbey Life Magazine is a sponsored project of Fractured Atlas, a non-profit arts service organization. Contributions for the purposes of Whidbey Life Magazine must be made payable to Fractured Atlas and are tax-deductible to the extent permitted by law. WHERE DID THOSE BIG SHIPS COME FROM? || SABOT SAILOR TO He worked his way up through the ranks and his last command was the Polar Tanker, Endeavor. It’s a big journey from sailing a Sabot in the harbor of Santa Barbara to handling massive container ships. (photo by David Welton) After many months-long voyages he yearned for a job closer to home, so he studied to become a Puget Sound Pilot. HAT ISLAND, THE SLAVE TRADE, AND THE U.S. SUPREME COURT In 1792, a British expedition under Captain George Vancouver mapped the region. His ships anchored off present day Mukilteo for a time, and although a little island appears on the maps of the expedition, Vancouver did not name it. Forty-one years later, an American expedition commanded by Lt. Charles Wilkes entered Puget Sound. Like Vancouver before him, Wilkes anchored off Mukilteo, but OAK HARBOR HIGH SCHOOL'S CULINARY PROGRAM: A TASTE-GOOD Whidbey Island is a place of abundance. We revel in it. Vistas of water, mountains, and pastures astonish us every day. Actors and musicians greet us over coffee at the corner bistro. Public servants of all ages rub shoulders with us everywhere. Up north, Oak Harbor High School’s culinary arts program revels in its own abundance of talent, gratitude, and service to the community. WHITESAVAGE AND LYLE HAND-FORGE PUBLIC ART ON WHIDBEY You’ve probably seen their art. That’s the nature of public art. It’s in our lives whenever we’re in public places. Sometimes it’s startling and hard to ignore. Other times it blends into the urban environment seamlessly. Seamless and artistic is a difficult balance to achieve, but Jean Whitesavage and Nick Lyle are a pair of Whidbey artists who have managed that for years with art SHE’S RETIRED AS MAYOR, BUT THIS NATIVE DAUGHTER IS STILL Nancy Conard first came to Coupeville when she was a year and a half old; her dad was in the Navy. That was in 1953, and she proves it by showing a picture of herself as a tow-headed toddler playing on the beach at Ebey’s Landing. What’s remarkable is that, except for a brief stretch after high school, she’s never lived any place else. NEW DOCUMENTARY BY ISLAND FILMMAKERS PREMIERES ON PBS ON A new documentary, "Shift Change" by Whidbey filmmakers, Mark Dworkin Melissa Young, will premieres on PBS on KCTS 9 at 5 p.m. on Sunday,April 6
ROGER PURDUE: A LEGACY OF NORTHWEST COAST NATIVE ART ON A major artistic highlight of Purdue’s career was the creation of the Salmon Wheel, which he worked on from 1993 to 1996. “The Spirits of the Salmon” originally was displayed at the base of the Coupeville Wharf but now resides in the Island County Museum. NANCY NOLAN: SINGING TO REACH THE ETERNITY OF NOW October 7, 2015. Once upon a time, a little four-year-old girl had never had a piano lesson. She didn’t know she needed one. Absorbed, as children are, in the elusive and ever present ‘now,’ she would hear a tune on the TV or radio and run to the piano in the kitchen and play it. The gift of music manifested itself early in Whidbey Island COWS, PIGS AND SHEEP—OH MY! IT’S “FARM DAY” AT 3 SISTERS The Muzzall family has had plenty of hands-on farming experience—five generations—dating back to the turn of the century when Edwin and Stella Muzzall moved from Michigan to a rented farm in Everett, Washington. In 1910, they moved to Whidbey Island and along—with their son and daughter-in-law, Lyle and Edna—started with milk cows and egg laying hens. WHIDBEY LIFE MAGAZINEPERSPECTIVESADVERTISE/SPONSORABOUTCONTACTUSSUBSCRIBECULINARY
Whidbey Life Magazine is a sponsored project of Fractured Atlas, a non-profit arts service organization. Contributions for the purposes of Whidbey Life Magazine must be made payable to Fractured Atlas and are tax-deductible to the extent permitted by law. WHERE DID THOSE BIG SHIPS COME FROM? || SABOT SAILOR TO He worked his way up through the ranks and his last command was the Polar Tanker, Endeavor. It’s a big journey from sailing a Sabot in the harbor of Santa Barbara to handling massive container ships. (photo by David Welton) After many months-long voyages he yearned for a job closer to home, so he studied to become a Puget Sound Pilot. HAT ISLAND, THE SLAVE TRADE, AND THE U.S. SUPREME COURT In 1792, a British expedition under Captain George Vancouver mapped the region. His ships anchored off present day Mukilteo for a time, and although a little island appears on the maps of the expedition, Vancouver did not name it. Forty-one years later, an American expedition commanded by Lt. Charles Wilkes entered Puget Sound. Like Vancouver before him, Wilkes anchored off Mukilteo, but OAK HARBOR HIGH SCHOOL'S CULINARY PROGRAM: A TASTE-GOOD Whidbey Island is a place of abundance. We revel in it. Vistas of water, mountains, and pastures astonish us every day. Actors and musicians greet us over coffee at the corner bistro. Public servants of all ages rub shoulders with us everywhere. Up north, Oak Harbor High School’s culinary arts program revels in its own abundance of talent, gratitude, and service to the community. WHITESAVAGE AND LYLE HAND-FORGE PUBLIC ART ON WHIDBEY You’ve probably seen their art. That’s the nature of public art. It’s in our lives whenever we’re in public places. Sometimes it’s startling and hard to ignore. Other times it blends into the urban environment seamlessly. Seamless and artistic is a difficult balance to achieve, but Jean Whitesavage and Nick Lyle are a pair of Whidbey artists who have managed that for years with art SHE’S RETIRED AS MAYOR, BUT THIS NATIVE DAUGHTER IS STILL Nancy Conard first came to Coupeville when she was a year and a half old; her dad was in the Navy. That was in 1953, and she proves it by showing a picture of herself as a tow-headed toddler playing on the beach at Ebey’s Landing. What’s remarkable is that, except for a brief stretch after high school, she’s never lived any place else. NEW DOCUMENTARY BY ISLAND FILMMAKERS PREMIERES ON PBS ON A new documentary, "Shift Change" by Whidbey filmmakers, Mark Dworkin Melissa Young, will premieres on PBS on KCTS 9 at 5 p.m. on Sunday,April 6
ROGER PURDUE: A LEGACY OF NORTHWEST COAST NATIVE ART ON A major artistic highlight of Purdue’s career was the creation of the Salmon Wheel, which he worked on from 1993 to 1996. “The Spirits of the Salmon” originally was displayed at the base of the Coupeville Wharf but now resides in the Island County Museum. NANCY NOLAN: SINGING TO REACH THE ETERNITY OF NOW October 7, 2015. Once upon a time, a little four-year-old girl had never had a piano lesson. She didn’t know she needed one. Absorbed, as children are, in the elusive and ever present ‘now,’ she would hear a tune on the TV or radio and run to the piano in the kitchen and play it. The gift of music manifested itself early in Whidbey Island COWS, PIGS AND SHEEP—OH MY! IT’S “FARM DAY” AT 3 SISTERS The Muzzall family has had plenty of hands-on farming experience—five generations—dating back to the turn of the century when Edwin and Stella Muzzall moved from Michigan to a rented farm in Everett, Washington. In 1910, they moved to Whidbey Island and along—with their son and daughter-in-law, Lyle and Edna—started with milk cows and egg laying hens. HAT ISLAND, THE SLAVE TRADE, AND THE U.S. SUPREME COURT In 1792, a British expedition under Captain George Vancouver mapped the region. His ships anchored off present day Mukilteo for a time, and although a little island appears on the maps of the expedition, Vancouver did not name it. Forty-one years later, an American expedition commanded by Lt. Charles Wilkes entered Puget Sound. Like Vancouver before him, Wilkes anchored off Mukilteo, but CULINARY STORY AND BLOGS by Art News in Community News, Culinary, Literary. Posted on: March 23, 2016 12:39 pm - Permalink. March 23, 2016 A consumable art exhibition—the fourth annual South Whidbey Edible Book Festival—returns from 1:30 to 3:30 p.m. on Saturday, April 2 at Bayview Community Hall, 5642 Bayview Rd Hall, off Hwy. 525. FOLLOWING ISAAC EBEY TO WHIDBEY ISLAND From the boat, he could see the trees rising from Admiralty Inlet. The tall pines, the lowland salt marshes, the sandy beaches all beckoned him to come ashore. Then, as if by divine intervention, the trees parted to reveal a prairie on an island. Isaac Ebey would later write to his brother Winfield about Whidbey Island, calling it “almost a paradise of nature.” LADIES OF THE BEACH: WALKING THE ISLAND’S EDGES FOR THE Ladies of the Beach: Walking the Island’s Edges for the Last 40 Years. Whidbey Island is unique in its shape and terrain, beautiful, and a little rugged. Just ask the group of women who know the edges of the island better than anyone. Harriet Hertzog, Alice Field and Alice Hanson started walking on the beaches around the island in 1975. SIEGERREBE: A REWARDING MOUTHFUL, IMPOSSIBLE TO PRONOUNCE Siegerrebe originated in Germany. The delicate white wine produced from these grapes comes from a cross between Gewurztraminer and Madeleine Angevine grapes. In the early 1980s, Gerard Bentryn of Bainbridge Island Vineyard and Winery was the first winemaker to grow Siegerrebe in the United States. Greg Osenbach, proudly presenting the2013
NEW DOCUMENTARY BY ISLAND FILMMAKERS PREMIERES ON PBS ON A new documentary, "Shift Change" by Whidbey filmmakers, Mark Dworkin Melissa Young, will premieres on PBS on KCTS 9 at 5 p.m. on Sunday,April 6
SHE’S RETIRED AS MAYOR, BUT THIS NATIVE DAUGHTER IS STILL Nancy Conard first came to Coupeville when she was a year and a half old; her dad was in the Navy. That was in 1953, and she proves it by showing a picture of herself as a tow-headed toddler playing on the beach at Ebey’s Landing. What’s remarkable is that, except for a brief stretch after high school, she’s never lived any place else. CELEBRATE SPRING WITH MAYFAIRE FESTIVAL Spring infuses us with the energy brought on by longer daylight and welcome sun. In celebration of this fecund time of year when the sap rises and the birds sing early morning songs, the Whidbey Island Waldorf School celebrates its thirtieth year and welcomes spring with MayFaire, a festival on Saturday, May 7, 10:30 a.m. – 2:30 p.m. A PASSION FOR PIES—AND FOR GREENBANK FARM—AT WHIDBEY PIES It’s common knowledge that one of the best places to have a slice of pie on Whidbey Island is Whidbey Pies Café at Greenbank Farm. It’s also no secret that the reason the loganberry, strawberry-rhubarb, cherry, Granny Smith apple, peach, huckleberry and marionberry pies are so delicious is because Whidbey Pies Café’s owner and pie maven, Jan Gunn, has a passion for pie perfection. CHUCK PETTIS, EARTH SANCTUARY AND SACRED SPACES Chuck Pettis, founder of Earth Sanctuary—a nature reserve and Buddhist retreat center in Freeland—wondered the same thing. His curiosity resulted in a lifelong quest to tap into energies that create positive resonance. Pettis studied ancient concepts such as dowsing (a way to discover water, minerals or other material below theearth’s
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ISSUE NO. 12 | FALL / WINTER 2019 Renewal. Regeneration. Rejuvenation. These are words we tend to associate with a specific season of the year. But, in truth, acts of renewal and restoration occur constantly. In this, the twelfth issue of Whidbey Life Magazine, we celebrate those acts—and the compassion and creativity they reveal. In Gimme Shelter, writer Patricia Herlevi and photographer Sarah← Older posts
SPOTLIGHT
HAPPY TRAILS TO YOU
AVIAN ART TAKES FLIGHT MAKING CIDER THE HARD WAY FLOWERS, FOLIAGE, AND FUN!RUN, WHIDBEY, RUN
PRAISE FOR THE PRAIRIESHELTERING SMALL
SETTING THE STAGE
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Issue No. 11 | Spring / Summer 2019 Issue No. 10 | Fall / Winter 2018 Issue No. 9 | Spring / Summer 2018 Issue No. 8 | Fall 2017 / Winter 2018← Older posts
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Whidbey Life Magazine is a sponsored project of Fractured Atlas, a non-profit arts service organization. Contributions for the purposes of Whidbey Life Magazine must be made payable to Fractured Atlas and are tax-deductible to the extent permitted by law.Read more about us
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