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Saturday, February 2, 2019

Pickleville Philosophy

Best Friend
By Jim Stone, The Pickleville Philosopher 

This is a long story but I feel like I’ve gotten off track with just sharing fun stories. I’m gonna try to get back on track. I had this great big dog, a yellow lab. His name was Bozwood.  I called him Boz. Sometimes.  I had other names for him depending on if he’d been a good or bad boy.

Boz was my best friend for 17 years until I lost him. Boz and me had a fairy tale life together. Boz and me had a silent language, we knew each other like best friends do. Sometimes you don’t have to say anything to your best friend.  You and your best friend just know how each other are feeling and doing in life.
We had been guiding in Alaska for a long time.  To me and Boz our first concern was me and Boz.  Our second concern was the safety of every one and having a lifetime great fishing and hunting trip in Alaska.

Bozwood was my best friend and, no matter what, we would look after each other through thick and thin. I can’t think of all the times Bozwood would come in to play when a big silver back grizzly bear would come in the middle of the night to raid our camp.  Boz knew they were a big threat to everyone but especially me, his friend. Boz didn’t care what anyone thought,  he would do things for me to make sure that I was ok.

Well that being said, Boz and me were on a pretty big Alaskan river. Boz would sit on top of all my gear in the middle of the boat. He had it pretty easy all day.  I had to row the boat down a wild Alaskan river all day trying to be safe and getting my clients on to some huge fish on a fly rod.

Boz and me had two new clients to take down the river. They were both fly fishermen but one of them just gave me a cold chill down my back.  I don’t know how to explain him except sheer arrogance. His friend was a real person. I’m sure the arrogant one probably paid for the trip and invited his friend just to show off his money and be a big shot like he thought he was until he messed with Bozwood, my best friend.

We took off down the river on the first day and the client I got chills from hooked Bozwood in his ear. It wasn’t a big deal, Boz had been hooked a few times so had I, and a lot of clients had been hooked too.   This guy was not very good person, he had a lot of things about him that I don’t know how to explain, just not a so good person. Kinda evil.

He was an expert fly fisherman, he could cast his fly anywhere he wanted.  Boom, he caught Bozwood in his other ear, Boz yelped out loud. I finally got the hook out of Bozwood’s ear for the second time.

When I was young I got upset at my cousin so he threw me into a cold lake to cool me down. My aunt and uncle when I got out of the cold water gave me some advice. They said before you get upset just count to 10 and don’t get upset.  I took their advice most of my life, but this time I counted to 10  ten times.
Me and Boz heard the not so good person say “watch this ...I’m sick of catching fish”and he hooked Boz for the third time. I tried to count to a 100, it didn’t work for me.

Bozwood’s ear was split and opened up.  This person was not a good person. I got Boz down of his high spot on the boat right down on the deck in front of me.
There were so many huge salmon in the river, but it didn’t matter. Sometimes in life there are people who have no regard for anyone’s loves and feelings. This guy was bragging to his friend saying to his friend, “watch this I’m gonna hook that dog in the ear again,” which he did.   Then he acted like he had a big fish on, like he was funny.  He said that it was only a dog.

I finally got the hook out of my best friend.

In Alaska after rowing a big boat for five months your arms look like Arnold S.  Me and Boz wanted to cool this guy of a little bit so when we got to where the water was only a foot deep and still cold. I hate to admit this but me and Bozwood were together on our plan.  We waited until it was shallow water with no danger; my arms wear big and strong back then. Maybe not now but back then they were, so when he locked his knees I dug my paddle in the river.  I gave my paddle a little love tap. He was lined up for a swan double triple flip to take the gold medal, but instead he did a big huge splash, cold water, belly flop.

He was flopping like a beached fish thinking he was drowning. The water wasn’t even a foot deep but it was way cold . He lost his hat but he was back in the boat safe and sound, but he was a little humbled.

His friend after we got him back into the boat and taken care of gave me a thumbs up. He had dogs too. I guess there’s a moral to this long story. To me it’s that we all have a lot of things going on in our lives but always take time for your best friends.

Robin Sighting!

Photo by Jennifer Casillas

Skating at Harbor Village Sunrise Resort & Event Center

Our first family night with skating, hot chocolate and cookies, Disney movie in the theater for the kids....Thanks everyone for coming and enjoying the evening. We’re doing it every Monday night!!!

#familyfun #visitbearlake #thenewbearlake #utah#visitutah #bearlake


Rebelettes drill revue


Deseret News features Woodruff

By Lee Benson, Deseret News

WOODRUFF, Rich County — It's the dead of winter and the thermometer in downtown Woodruff reads 9 degrees. In Salt Lake, 100 miles away to the southwest, it's 15 degrees higher. Even notoriously frigid Logan is 8 degrees warmer.

Search the entire state of Utah high and low, all winter long, on any given day, and it's unlikely you'll find a town with a lower temperature — which explains the slogan on the Welcome to Woodruff sign: "Coldest Temps … Warmest Hearts."

To get a feel for what it's like to exist in such an environment, I'm talking to Louis Stuart, a man who has lived in Woodruff all his life.

What does living in a deep freeze do to a man?

"Well, you know how you put things in the refrigerator to preserve them?" he says, letting the obvious punch line hang.

Louis's comment might be shrugged off as local hyperbole, nothing more than hometown bias.

Except for one thing.

Louis is 98.

He looks at least 20 years younger, and acts like he's 29.

"This is a wonderful place to live," says a man who was born on Dec. 12, 1912 — 12-12-12 — which means he just missed being in Woodruff when the temperature plunged to 50 below zero on Feb. 6, 1899 — still the state record for lowest recorded temperature in a municipality. (There's a place called Peter Sinks in Logan Canyon that has hit 69-below but no one lives there, or even nearby).

Louis does remember a reading of 42-below when he was a kid working on his father's ranch.

"We were building fence," he recalls, "toughest job I ever had, trying to bend wire and trying to dig post holes."

This winter the lowest temp to date in Woodruff is 30-below.

"It's been quite mild," says Louis.

Living the high life in Utah's coolest town — Woodruff's elevation is 6,340 feet — certainly hasn't slowed Louis down any. He and his wife Joan, who is 94, have raised five boys here farming and ranching. They now have 94 grandchildren and 36 great grandchildren. If you want to find the warmest place in the state, check out the kitchen in their 1,500-square-foot home on Sundays when a large portion of that posterity shows up for dinner.

I ask if Louis happened to know the late Merlo John Pusey, the Woodruff-born writer who went on to become a prize-winning journalist for 43 years for the Washington Post and won a Pulitzer Prize for biography.

"Knew the whole family, they lived across the street," he says. "Merlo was the second of seven boys. As I recall he was eager to leave Woodruff."

Not Louis. He spent two years away in 1936 when he served an LDS mission to Nebraska — "now that's cold," he says of Nebraska winters, "that wind goes right through you" — and he and Joan served a senior mission together in San Diego.

Otherwise, that's about it as far as time away from Woodruff goes, unless you count the time he and Joan used to drive back and forth to Ogden to do temple work every Saturday.

"We'd tell the people where we were from and they felt so sorry for us because they'd heard of the cold," he says. "But for us, it was always sure good to get back home."

A farmer and rancher all his life, Louis has rarely missed a day in the fields, and that included this morning when his youngest son, Bill, picked him up as he always does at quarter to eight to go out and feed the cows.

"I don't do much, only open gates and drive his truck when he needs a chauffeur," says Louis, who is yet to miss riding his horse every summer in the 4th of July parade.

Along with good luck, he attributes his longevity to "a clean life, hard work, a bowl of rolled oats every morning and a lot of open air."

The colder the better.

Lee Benson's About Utah column runs Monday and Friday. E-mail: benson@desnews.com.

Beautiful Snow

Photo by Gary McKee

Shed antler gathering

Utah Division of Wildlife Resources
If you plan to gather shed antlers in Utah between Feb. 1 and April 15, you’ll need to take our free online ethics course first. When you're done with the course, just print out your antler-gathering certificate and carry it with you in the field. You can find the course here: wildlife.utah.gov/shedantler

The Antler Gathering Ethics course is in place to protect the animals during this critical time of year. The free course shouldn’t take more than a few minutes and will teach you how to responsibly gather shed antlers without stressing animals or damaging their habitat. 

Late winter and early spring is a tough time of year for deer, elk and moose. The animals often have a difficult time finding food. If you spook an animal and cause it to run, the animal has to use up fat reserves and energy it needs to survive through the winter. Moreover, the habitat that big game animals rely on in the winter is usually wet, making it more at risk to damage. 

The course needs to be taken each year by anyone who plans to pick up sheds between Feb. 1 and April 15. Thanks for your understanding!

Wednesday, January 30, 2019

School district hiring



RICH COUNTY SCHOOL DISTRICT
Dale Lamborn, Superintendent                                        A RICH TRADITION      Jennie Johnson, Business Administrator Marlene Wilson, Admin. Assistant
                          

January 30, 2019
Rich County School District is accepting applications for the following position:

One Special Education Aide at RMS/NRE Applicants must be willing to submit to a background check.
Interested individuals must be 18 years old, be a high school graduate or equivalent, have the ability to communicate effectively and help others, have a valid Drivers License, and be willing and able to transport school age children in a district-owned vehicle. Must also be able to lift 50 pounds. Applicants should have the ability to work with children, perform routine record keeping functions, and establish  and maintain working relationships with co-workers, teachers, students, and the public.

Application can be found online



Send application to:

Rich Middle School Principal, Kip Motta   
P O Box 129
Laketown, UT 84038
Phone: 435-946-3359
Fax: 435-946-3366

CLOSING DATE:    This position will remain open and applications accepted until a qualified candidate is hired.


P. O. Box 67 Randolph, Utah 84064  Phone 435 793-2135 Fax 435-793-2136
Equal Opportunity Employer

Ice skating from now until March!

The Sunrise Resort
865 Harbor Village East Drive
Garden City, UT 84028

CONTACT:
 The Sunrise Resort and Event Center
 435-799-4645