The wood frame is Sitka spruce, shipped from Alaska then steam-bent by hand using a home-built steam box. Half-inch aluminum, bent with the aid of only a vice, makes up the engine mounts and the stays for landing gear.
In a few weeks, CPA Steve Kanters will see a new Sequim blue hole from his office’s porch. The bright blue of the former Serenity House Thrift Shop building will be replaced with an open space next to the City of Sequim’s future civic center and police station.
Crime reports from Sequim and outlying Clallam County areas.
Boosters raise funds for Oso victims, OMC board meets, Pioneer dinner tickets go on sale, Coffee with the mayor and more.
What can $3 get you these days? Not much — but it can get you a month’s digital subscription to the Sequim Gazette.
Registration is open for the Clallam Conservation District’s annual spring natural landscaping course and spring landscaping with native plants field workshop.
The National Alliance on Mental Illness in Clallam County will sponsor a Family-to-Family Education Program beginning Saturday, April 12.
Sequim resident William Rusk, 79, was found dead in the Bogachiel River in Forks on the morning of Thursday, March 27, after his boat overturned on March 21.
U.S. and Canadian birders flock to Sequim in early April each year to enjoy the three-day Olympic BirdFest. The 2014 Festival (April 4-6) offers “Birding by Land and Sea,” a new, two-day pre-festival field trip that offers an opportunity to see birdlife seldom seen from land.
A public information forum on everything you need to know about filing and running for public office will be at 10 a.m., Saturday, April 19, sponsored by the Republican Women of Clallam County at Clallam County Republican Party Headquarters, 509 S. Lincoln St., Port Angeles.
One of just six counties in Washington State to use the Home Rule Charter form of government, Clallam looks to 15 representatives — three from each of its commissioner districts — to amend the county charter, a kind of constitution for our region.
After a string of resignations, the election of a new board of trustees, and a brief closure and reopening of the exhibit center, the Museum & Arts Center in the Sequim-Dungeness Valley is moving ahead with and without some key pieces.
The laws of nature are the unchangeable laws that define all things that happen like death and if you jump, you have to come down.