POULSBO — For the second time in as many meetings, a decision on the hotly-debated Caldart Heights community has been tabled.
And so far, neither side is budging.
INDIANOLA — Scott Trueb is only 22 years old but already has plenty of memories of his time as an Indianola resident.
POULSBO — Four people were transported after a two car collision May 20, including a Poulsbo woman who was taken to Seattle for her injuries.
KINGSTON — Dick Nowak is casting his last line this week as owner of Kingston Nautical Supply.
The fisherman who has owned the store for the past decade in downtown Kingston has decided to retire and pursue other interests, such as traveling the world.
POULSBO — There were cookies and juice, some funny stories about alligators and bears and a lot of smiles around the table.
But this was not just play time.
POULSBO — NKHS track athlete Kim Skelley has been busy this week, preparing to compete in three different events at this weekend’s district competition. But if the pressure’s getting to her, the junior sure doesn’t let it show.
POULSBO — The Kitsap lacrosse team won a convincing 13-5 semi-final game against Snohomish Thursday at Strawberry Field, with the team poised, confident and playing with a calm aura about them.
Just because you missed the Humane Society of the United States Rural Area Veterinary Services’ free clinic in Suquamish this week doesn’t mean you shouldn’t take the necessary steps to spay and neuter your pets as needed.
SUQUAMISH — The Price Is Right’s Bob Barker would be proud of the owners of more than 100 local cats and dogs who had their pets “fixed” this week.
As the legendary host often ends his famous game show by asking the nation to help control the pet population and “have your pet spayed or neutered,” residents of the North End did just that.
POULSBO —The need for additional sports facilities in North Kitsap is at the center of a plan to develop a multi-million dollar recreational complex along the Poulsbo stretch of Highway 3.
POULSBO — Just as a popular method of annexing land into the city has been reinstated, so has a perennial problem regarding annexations — who wants to be in and who doesn’t.
TACOMA — North Kitsap pitcher Jared Prince likened his baseball team’s entrance into Washington’s 4A final 16 with college’s NCAA basketball tournament.
“We’re at the sweet 16,” Prince said. “It’s like the NCAA — we have to keep on rolling.”
POULSBO — Maybe it was the smoke from the Viking Village. Maybe it was the lye from the lutefisk eating contest. Maybe it was the smell of a chainsaw carving into a piece of fresh wood.
POULSBO — As the line in the Monkees song goes, when it comes to reflexology, Ashli Schumacher is a believer.
A few years back, Schumacher said she didn’t even know what reflexology was until a friend asked her to “donate her feet” for a session. After receiving three treatments of the massage-like manipulation of certain parts of the hands, feet and ears, Schumacher said she was hooked.
KINGSTON — Norman Road residents have known for a while that their summer of 2004 would be disrupted with the construction of the Kingston Sewer Treatment plant. And project managers aren’t holding back any details, knowing that they will be making life a little rough for those living in the 20 or so houses along the rural road.
POULSBO — Charles Jensen may have been sporting the worst haircut in lutefisk eating contest history but his shaved noggin — with a square patch of hair and a miniature braid on its back — appears to have provided an aerodynamic edge at the plate.
POULSBO — Potential victims are being sought in a rape case against a local massage practitioner.
Patrick Georges Belhon, 44, the owner of Olympic Spa & Massage on Front Street and a licensed massage practitioner, was charged with rape in the third degree by the Kitsap County Prosecutor on March 2. Belhon was first arrested on the charge Feb. 27.
BREMERTON — In a pitcher’s duel featuring the league’s two best throwers — North’s Heather Case and Wilson’s Amanda Palley — the Narrows’ League Championship game could have gone either way.
Well, there probably won’t be a souped up Delorean, talk of 1.21 gigowatts or Doc Brown trying to read your mind but the Hansville Community Center will definitely be bristling with ideas that could rival the flux-capacitor.
POULSBO — Like most history teachers, Steven Paagard’s classroom is filled with posters of presidents and leaders, flags and maps of the world’s continents. POULSBO — Like most history teachers, Steven Paagard’s classroom is filled with posters of presidents and leaders, flags and maps of the world’s continents.