Sunday, July 31, 2011

Author Carol Crigger to be at Rockford Farmer's Market, Rockford, Wash., August 6, 2011


Carol Crigger, author of Two Feet Below,and  Letter of The Law will be autographing her books at the Rockford Farmer's Market Saturday, August 6, 2011, from 9:00 a.m. - 3:00 p.m.

The Farmers’ Market  now has Local Produce. "Some from our own gardens and some from donations in the area! Come and see what you can buy FRESH in Rockford!", Vivian said.

Saturday, July 30, 2011

Memories of a Rural Mail Route Carrier on The Palouse


Sue Ellis and her husband, Bernie, were long-time residents in the Palouse area, in Rockford and Waverly. Sue was the rural mail carrier for many years, braving even the worst of winter storms to serve the postal patrons on the ninety-mile route. Enjoy the entertaining, and often funny, memories of the challenges she face during her 1980-1989 tenure

Memories of a rural mail carrier was originally published in Christian Science Monitor,  by Sue Ellis, January 19, 2010. As the seasons turned, her route told its own story.

"I spent 10 years delivering mail amid rolling fields and soft meadows. One hundred and eighty stops in 90 miles, a ballet's cadence. A route full of twists and turns. Sometimes I'd be dizzy inside the maze – all those pirouettes.

 "It's all bits and pieces of memory now. But here is some of what I recall:

"The old farmsteads looked like oases with ancient, gnarled trees and farm equipment scattered about like giant toys. There were wheat and bluegrass, peas and lentils, a yield dependent on enough rain in the spring and none at all at harvest.

"Afraid of strange dogs (as I am to this day), I stepped away from the car, parcel in hand, when the German shepherd came roaring at me. Baby robins fledged in my chest as I backed away. A boy ran from the house, shouting, “It's all right! He doesn't have any teeth!”

"Calves appeared in early spring, white-faced, pristine, and spindly-legged. Before long, they became sure-footed and silly, bucking and frolicking. Then later came the mournful lows as mother and calf were separated into different pastures.

"People whose names I can’t remember lived in an old farmhouse with many children. One day the youngest, a little blond-haired boy, stood next to the gravel road, arms outstretched, palms up, waiting for me to place the letters and pretend he was the mailbox. He was naked.

"Grasshoppers plagued me during harvest. They’d spatter against the grille and roast on the radiator, emitting a fried-bug aroma that, oddly, did not seem entirely unpalatable. Mostly, though, they'd catapult through the window and boomerang through the car's interior. On more than one occasion, one of them would creep up my pant leg. To avoid wrecking the car, I'd reach down and squash it through the cloth, shivering.

"One time, I saw something up ahead in the road. An injured bird perhaps – a large one. But no, a miserable huddle of seven yellow Lab pups, in shock, abandoned and alone. I loaded them into the hatchback and finished the route, then the 40-minute drive to the city’s Humane Society. I picked up my children from school – dog lovers all – and took them along.

"On a sweltering day, someone left fresh lemonade in the mailbox for me, condensation dripping like rain from the icy Kerr canning jar. Another time, there was a piece of chocolate cake, still warm. At Christmas, I'd be overwhelmed.

"A snowstorm brought visibility to nearly zero. Reaching across the car seat to put mail in a box, I turned back to find a white pickup parked alongside me. In the truck bed, a man was on his hands and knees. He barked at me! I pulled away, stunned, and continued my route. I never learned the identity of the practical joker.

"The smell of earth wafted through my open car window as the first anxious farmers plowed a spring field. I heard the buzz of crop-duster planes, choked during bluegrass-burning season, and schussed through deep snow that insulated sound and led me gliding down long hills like a sledder.

"I recited his sister's letters to an old man who’d never learned to read – bland notes on lined paper done in a shaky hand. I wonder what she'd have written without the invasion of a stranger's eyes? I was thanked with an unwrapped pink peppermint candy that had shared a shirt pocket with a cloth pouch of pipe tobacco.

"I drove a little Subaru hatchback for several years of mail delivery. The day my family and I traded it in for a new car, we all turned to wave goodbye to the forlorn, dusty thing sitting in the dealer’s lot.

"And then, finally, the day came to say goodbye to my mail route. But it lives with me still in the fragments of memory that linger."
END

Thursday, July 28, 2011

Thursday Night Yoga in Rockford, Wash., Town Park is Great Fun

Thursday evenings, from 6:00 p.m. - 7:30 p.m. Korean Yoga, taught by Vickie   Pierce  in the Town Park on 1st. Street in Rockford, Wash., is great fun for the dozen or so men and women participating each week. (Fee, $5.)
"We have about 12 people enjoying it. Not everyone makes it each week as summer is busy. Hopefully more people will catch on to it and come," Suzi Ruskin said. "Vicki is awesome. It is really easy. The focus is on energy and healing. Alot of breathing and tapping. There are no hard moves or uneasy poses."
If it rains, the classes move into the building at the park, so bring your mat and join the fun and camaraderie while improving your health.

GPAC Footlball Registration August 3, 2011 at Palouse Park

Registration night for GPAC football scheduled at Palouse Park, Palouse, Wash., Wednesday, 6:00 -8:00 p.m., August 3, 2011. $75 registration fee. Two divisions: 3rd and 4th grders; and 5th and 6th graders. Contact Connie Kriebel, Secretary, for the proper forms: cjkriebel@hotmail.com or leave message @ (509) 635-1242,

The Palouse Health Clinic is offering a special price (appointment required, and let them know the physical is for GPAC. Have the physical and forms filled out before the first practice, tentatively scheduled for August 8, 2011.

GPAC Board of Directors policy: For a participant to play in the sport all paperwork and registration fees must be completed and turned in before the first practice unless otherwise stated in the registration notice.

Monday, July 25, 2011

Palouse City-Wide Yard Sale August 6, 2011

The Palouse City-Wide Yard Sale, a Palouse Chamber of Commerce event, is scheduled for Saturday, August 6, 2011. Call 878-1811 for more information or to have your sale placed on the map ($2.00)

HOT ROCKFORD NIGHTS Cruz-in Car Show, August 5-6, 2011

The Rockford Lions Club's annual HOT ROCKFORD NIGHTS Cruz-in Car Show event begins Friday, August 5, 2011 with a "Cruz-In/Drive-In Movie Night" featuring "American Graffiti," by Opportunity Industries.

The outdoor Movie will be at the ball park on 1st. St. in Rockford, Wash.You don’t have to have a classic car to come to the Drive-In Movie. Your car radio speakers will receive the sound from the Lions Club transmitter.

Car registers for the "Show-n-Shine Car Show," held in the Town Park the next day, can watch the movie in leu of the Car Cruise the night before the show.



 

Community Center at Rockford Attracting Patrons

The newly relocated Rocford Community Center, at 229 1/2 S. 1st. Street, in Rockford, Wash., is becoming a popular gathering place. The small house, leased from Clint Stevenson, has a pleasing decor, and it's various rooms sport a ping pong table, pool table, a multi-media room, a well-stocked lending library, and a computer lab.

A keyboard and sheet music, tables, chairs, lounge chairs, and sofa, invite casual visiting, and music. The kitchen and bathroom provide amenities, while an office completes the well organized center.

There is a need for more computers, because those donated are too antiquated to operate many software programs, and are not compatible with the Router to connect with the Internet or e-mail.

Drop in for a pleasant time, and plan to form new friendships any Monday or Wednesday 10:00 a.m. - 2:00 p.m. or 6:00 p.m. - 8:30 p.m. Call Mary-Lou for other hours when the center may be staffed, (509) 291-

Keep Your Computer Healthy and Save $$$

Now and then an email contains a link to helpful information, such as tips on how to maintain the health of a computer. Iolo provides a Free newsletter that provides a wealth of easy to understand tips such as this important article on Device drivers ... and your computer's health.

Scroll past the advertisements to read why and how to create a Restore Point, which can quickly and simply rescue you from many computer disasters!

At the bottom of the page, sign up for a newsletter to bring more free helpful computer advice. You might just save yourself from costly repairs.

Saturday, July 23, 2011

Palouse Bluegrass Festival July 30, 2011

Join us at the Palouse Bluegrass Festival for a
Pork Barbecue
&
Micro Beer

Saturday, July 30, 2011

Palouse City Park
Micro-brew Beer Garden begins at noon, the Pork Barbecue begins at 4:00pm
$12 includes pork sandwich, coleslaw, Palouse beans, cookie and drink

Beer garden will feature local breweries; Palouse Falls Brewing Company and Paridise Creek Brewery
100% of proceeds go directly to the Palouse Community Building Fund
Call 509-595-1650 for more detail
Music for Festival, http://www.visitpalouse.com/events/docs/2011_bluegrass.pdf

Tuesday, July 19, 2011

Rockford Community Gardens Thriving

Two community gardens in Rockford, Wash., promise to reward gardeners with an abundance of fresh vegetables again this year.

The garden at Lake and Maple has seventy-five tomato plants, including several species, multiple species of green peppers, and egg plant. On the grounds next to the Catholic Church at the corner of River and Pacific, three varieties of squash -- Peter Pan, Butternut and Spaghetti; potatoes, cucumbers, green beans, spinach, parsley, bunching onions, carrots, beets, peas, corn, lettuce and radishes are grown.

Congratualtions to Rockford folks for these fine contributions to their community's well-being. Both gardens are a pleasure to see and a credit to the town.

Monday, July 18, 2011

July 20, 2011 Summer Swim-Bus Program to Bus Kids to Tekoa Pool

Wednesday this week will be the kickoff day for the bus to Tekoa swim program, after rain cancelled it last week. The bus will be at the Rockford park Wednesday, July 20, 2011 and will leave Rockford at 12:05. It will cost $ 2.00 per child to swim at the Tekoa pool. Forms can be picked up at the office. (For financial assistance if needed, inquire: 291-3609.)

The official word received from Rockford City Hall hasn't changed:
IF SEVERAL KIDS PARTICIPATE ON SWIM DAY – JULY 20TH – THE ROCKFORD COUNCIL WILL CONSIDER AT ITS COUNCIL MEETING ON THE  that evening TO CONTINUE TO PARTICIPATE FOR THE REMAINDER OF THE PROGRAM. IF ONLY A FEW KIDS RIDE THE BUS ROCKFORD MAY NOT STAY IN THE PROGRAM.
The summer swim bus program originated some years ago when Palouse area town officials got together to contract for a bus and driver; Liberty School District provided the bus. A chaperone was hired. However, without enough youngsters to warrant their share of the expense, towns may opt out, and this wonderful program could end.
On Wednesdays throughout the summer, kids are bussed to the swimming pool on the school grounds in Tekoa, WA. Kids should bring their sack lunch (no cans, please.)
Bus stops include Rockford Park, Fairfield Park, Waverly Park, and Latah .. if all four towns participate again this year.
For bus times call your Town Hall.
Rockford, (509) 291-4716. Fairfield: (509) 283-2414
Waverly: (509) 283-4372
Latah: (509) 286-3471
Latah Town Hall, 108 E. Market