Island Stage Left’s ‘Much Ado About Nothing’ Premiers Tonight

Posted July 8, 2021 at 7:48 am by

Actors rehearse “Much Ado About Nothing.” Island Stage Left, Contributed.

From Island Stage Left

“Much Ado About Nothing,” Shakespeare’s wittiest comedy, is Island Stage Left theater company’s celebratory re-opening production, premiering 8 p.m., Thursday, July 8 on the outdoor stage, 1062 Wold Road.

“I love it after COVID because it’s got a happy ending,” said stage director Helen Machin-Smith. “It feels like a joyous play, after all – people learn from their mistakes and go on, the romantic cycle continues. It feels like a summer play.”

COVID restrictions have made live theater nearly impossible for the past year, even outdoors. But the state’s reopening regulations allow the show to go on.

“When I realized it, a huge wave of relief welled up,” Machin-Smith said.

Safety remains the top priority, though: cast and crew are fully vaccinated, and a seating area will be provided for audience members who want to maintain distance from those who are maskless.

Set During Spanish Flu Pandemic

Actors rehearse “Much Ado About Nothing.” Island Stage Left, Contributed.

“Much Ado About Nothing” takes place in a world emerging from wartime, eager for sunshine and laughter. Benedick, a returning military officer, engages in bouts of mocking repartee with Beatrice.

Meanwhile, Claudio, a heroic junior officer, falls head over heels for Hero, a sweet, beautiful young heiress. But a series of sly tricks – some well-intentioned, some thoroughly vicious – throw the characters into doubt and confusion. ISL co-founder Daniel Mayes plays Hero’s father, a man shaken to the core by false accusations against his daughter.

Machin-Smith has set the story in the English countryside, in the summer of 1919, at the end of World War I, and of the Spanish flu pandemic.

The costumes, music and manners of that era (think Downton Abbey) enhance the show’s atmosphere. Costumer Kate Smokowicz and island seamstresses Sharon Lannan, Jessica McDonald, Anita Welch and Patti Wickham have crafted period dresses for Beatrice and Hero.

The Gamble of Scheduling

Preparing the play over the past few months was a gamble. The cast of 14 includes professionals from all over the country.

If the tiny theater company had started paying actors and crew, buying props and costumes and building the set, only to be canceled due to COVID, the consequence was obvious: “Stage Left goes belly up,” Machin-Smith said.

But the gamble paid off. Asked for her favorite line from the play, Machin-Smith’s answer seems tailored to the birth of this production: “But then there was a star danced, and under that was I born.”

Bring blankets and/or warm clothes (even parkas) for when the sun goes down. Admission is free, and donations are gratefully accepted. 

If You Go

What: Shakespeare’s”Much Ado About Nothing,” set during the Spanish Flu pandemic. 

When: July 8 through Aug. 8.

Where: Island Stage Left’s outdoor stage at 1062 Wold Road, San Juan Island.

Cost: Free, and donations welcomed. 

Info: 360-378-5649 or www.islandstageleft.org

Theater hosts Round Two of ‘Mamma Mia!’ Auditions July 11

Posted July 8, 2021 at 7:31 am by

From the San Juan Community Theatre

Director Margaret Hall will hold auditions for ‘Mamma Mia!’ 2 p.m. Sunday, July 11.

They will be at the Whittier auditorium at San Juan Community Theatre. All necessary health precautions will be observed.

Due to the postponement of the production in 2020, some cast members are unable to participate. Several leads and ensemble roles are now available.

Actors, singers, and dancers are needed and encouraged to audition. Scripts and audition information are available for pick up in the San Juan Community Theatre outer lobby on the box office shelf.

Full details are available at www.sjctheatre.org.

Rescheduling this production for fall is tentative, dependent on the lifting of COVID-19 restrictions. If all goes according to plan, opening night will be Friday, Nov. 5. Rehearsals will begin in early September.

Cindy Hansen is the Friday Harbor Animal Shelter’s Volunteer of the Month

Posted July 8, 2021 at 7:25 am by

From the Animal Protection Society – Friday Harbor

The Animal Protection Society – Friday Harbor is happy to announce Cindy Hansen as the volunteer of the month for July 2021.

Cindy is an island legend, known far and wide for her nurturing abilities of infant kittens of all ages until they are ready for adoption.

It’s hard to list just one specialty that Cindy is known for, but she has been the shelter’s go-to specialist for neonate kittens as young as 1 day old!

Fostering kittens is not for the faint of heart, it takes a lot of time (sometimes feeding every 2 hours around the clock) and effort to raise these special needs babies. 

However, if you’ve been lucky enough to adopt one of Cindy’s former fosters, you will likely find them to be as sweet and friendly as Cindy is.

Fire Danger is High in San Juan County

Posted July 7, 2021 at 7:19 am by

From the San Juan County Fire Marshal’s Office

Fire danger is high in San Juan County.

Refrain from burning campfires.

If you must have a fire, have water on site, do not leave the fire unattended,and put it. Soak the fire with water, stir, soak again.

Commercial burn permits

All commercial burn permits require online registration as well as an inspection from the Fire Marshal’s Office. If you are a contractor doing work that involves burning, you need a commercial burn permit in most cases. 

Types of burning that require commercial permits include land clearing, stump burning, logging, forestry work and work that involves heavy machinery.

Violation of terms of burning permits or of RCW is subject to bills for suppression services from the fire department, fines of up to $10,000 and investigation and fines from the state.

Meet the Artists at Friday Harbor Atelier’s Open House Thursday

Posted July 7, 2021 at 7:08 am by

From Friday Harbor Atelier

Meet the artists and view new work at the Friday Harbor Atelier’s Summer Open House from 4-7 p.m., Thursday, July 8 at 331 Spring St. in Friday Harbor.

The Friday Harbor Atelier now has 11 member artists. Look for their work at our open houses this spring and summer, and learn more about them below. 

Friday Harbor Atelier is a private workspace, but we are open to the public on most Saturdays in the summer, from 11 a.m.-2 p.m. We are also open for special gallery shows, open houses and by appointment. Learn more at www.fridayharboratelier.com.

‘Broadway Star,’ Theater Director’s Brother to Perform July 17

Posted July 7, 2021 at 4:30 am by

Nathan Kessler-Jeffrey. Contributed.

From San Juan Community Theatre

San Juan Community Theatre’s pay-what-you-can, outdoor summer season is up and running.

Taking place at the San Juan County Fairgrounds, the innovative summer season features live, in-person music and theater performances through Aug. 28.

Coming next is Broadway star and island favorite Ben Jeffrey in concert 7 p.m. July 17.

A member of the Broadway cast of “The Lion King,” and brother of San Juan Community Theatre Executive Artistic Director Nathan Kessler-Jeffrey, Ben Jeffrey is a quintessential member of the island theater community.

The rest of the summer lineup includes live music from local and traveling bands, kids theatre camp performances, and the San Juan Community Theatre Playwrights Festival.

All events will be pay-what-you-can admission upon entry. Bring your own seating, like picnic blankets or lawn chairs. Beer and wine will be available for purchase, and folks are welcome to bring their own food.

For the full season line up or more information visit www.sjctheatre.org or call 360-378-3210.

When Pandemic Hit, County Braced for Recession-era Finances; the Opposite Occurred

Posted July 6, 2021 at 5:30 am by

Negative Lodging Tax Funds in 2020, to the Best Year in Land Bank History in 2021

By F. Milene Henley, San Juan County Auditor

Milene Henley. Contributed.

I have always been amazed by four-way stops. Drivers learn as teens to negotiate these tricky, cooperative intersections, and most of us never forget. It’s a marvel of social engineering.

This past year has been one giant experiment in social engineering. We all had to learn to behave in ways that were not natural but were necessary to get us all through this painful intersection.

Because of the cooperation and care shown by residents of San Juan County, San Juan County had the lowest rate of COVID cases in the state and so far (knock on wood), no deaths.

Financially, San Juan County, like all of Washington state, was dealt a blow last March when businesses were closed and people told to stay home. Sales tax plummeted.

The County Health Officer’s order to close accommodations dealt a further blow. In June, the county had its first month ever in which lodging tax – a component of sales tax – was negative, because of refunds.

Based on the last recession, the county prepared for the worst: reduced sales tax, slowed building activity, decreased real estate sales, reductions in other economy-driven revenues.

That’s not what happened.

As soon as accommodations re-opened in mid-June, the economy began to pick up.

Cooped-up families found that they could travel to the San Juans, enjoy the outdoors, and still keep their distance from others. Second-home owners moved to their island homes, to work and school remotely, in the relative quiet and safety of the islands. Continue Reading

Audition for December Choir on San Juan Island this July

Posted July 6, 2021 at 5:00 am by

David Beale on Unsplash, Contributed.

From San Juan Master Chorale

San Juan Master Chorale, conducted by Amber Lauridsen, will perform Handel’s “Messiah” Dec. 18 and 19.

Auditions for both chorus and soloists are 1-5 p.m. Sunday, July 11 and 4-7 p.m. Tuesday and Wednesday, July 13 and 14 at Friday Harbor Presbyterian Church.

Casting for both soloists and chorus. If interested, please email [email protected] to schedule an audition appointment.

Please indicate your date preference and if you intend to audition for a solo so we can advise you what to prepare.

Rehearsals will be Fridays from 6:30-8:30 p.m. beginning Sept. 3.

Friday Harbor Labs Tide Bites

Posted July 6, 2021 at 4:30 am by

Microplastics and Mussel Poops

By Lyda Harris

Lyda Harris completed her PhD with Emily Carrington in 2020 in the Department of Biology at UW. For her dissertation — much of it done at FHL — she studied 1) the impacts of microplastic vs silt on marine mussel filtration rates, 2) how microplastics affect the benthic-pelagic coupling role of marine mussels and 3) the growth and spread of marine microplastics research and national plastic policies. Harris is now working as the microplastic postdoctoral fellow at the Seattle Aquarium.

Plastic is a human-created pollutant, pervasive across marine systems and is projected to increase in the future.

Microplastics (plastic < 5 mm) are ubiquitous in marine environments, from surface waters to deep-sea sediments, from sea turtles to plankton, from urban cities to arctic outposts.

Lyda (top), Harsimran (left), Nell (middle), and Jackson (right) standing in front of the laminar flume in Lab 6 at Friday Harbor Labs.

Sounds depressing, and it is, but there is important information we can gather and differences we can make from studying depressing topics like marine plastic pollution.

Motivated by the need to understand the impacts microplastics have on our environment and our lives, I set out on my dissertation research at Friday Harbor Labs.

Along the way I convinced three phenomenal undergrads, Harsimran Gill (co-author), Jackson Fennell and Nell Baumgarten, to spend a week with me in the Flume lab at the labs running experiments, counting microscopic particles and learning to operate new equipment.

Little did we know, we would become experts on mussel poop in the process. Continue Reading

Friday Harbor Celebrates Independence Day with Fireworks Display

Posted July 5, 2021 at 8:19 am by

Dena Royal, Contributed.

By San Juan Update staff

Dena Royal, of San Juan Island, had a front seat to the Fourth of July fireworks display in Friday Harbor. Check out her contributed photos of the “red, white and booms” over the harbor. 

Friday Harbor Labs Director asks Islanders, Tourists to Protect False Bay

Posted July 5, 2021 at 5:30 am by

False Bay on New Year’s at sunset. Steve Martin, Contributed. 

Keep Dogs on Leashes

By Dr. Megan Dethier, Director, Friday Harbor Labs

About a year ago, we wrote about increased use of University of Washington properties during the governor’s stay-at-home orders.

This heavy use has continued, and now with summer upon us and relaxed covid regulations, we are seeing extraordinary numbers of people at our False Bay preserve — especially on hot days.

We welcome members of the public to explore and appreciate the bay: dogs on leashes, people in kayaks, and those just wading in the cool waters are relatively harmless to the preserve’s resources.

However, dogs off leashes — chasing birds or digging in the sand — are a problem, and their presence may force us to restrict access to the area.

False Bay is a special place: the size of it, its diversity of habitats, and the extreme variation it experiences on a daily basis due to tides result in unique communities of organisms.

As a steward of the bay, the university is dedicated to preserving this exceptional habitat. In the past year, we have begun working with county, state, and local organizations to improve conditions in the bay’s watershed, studying key aspects of the quality and quantity of the waters of False Bay Creek — the health of which are essential to the health of the bay into which they drain.

Under the deed for the bay (as for other UW-owned properties in the county), the university has the right to limit public access and forbid pets in order to minimize disturbance to shorebirds, marine mammals, the sediments, and organisms living in the sediments. Continue Reading

Freezer-burned: Tales of Interior Alaska

Posted July 5, 2021 at 5:00 am by

The Allure of Gold, Part 2

“Freezer-Burned: Tales of Interior Alaska” is a regular column on the San Juan Update written by Steve Ulvi.

When Pappy Scoggins parked his modified school bus at the old boat landing in Eagle, Alaska he never imagined the grousing by locals accustomed to using that area to load boats, or camp overnight if need be.  He soon learned that river-trippers coming down the Yukon River generally pulled in there as the last chance to stop in the little historic town before being swept around the towering Eagle Bluff.  The next river town and road terminus were 150 miles downriver at Circle City.  

The unimproved vehicle turnaround and boat eddy was considered a public-commons with more convenient foot access to town than the big landing a half mile upriver.  The town sawmill, leaving few hints as to its existence, had been right there on the higher ground by 1900.  Somebody now owned the land down to the mean high-water mark of the river (the State of Alaska owned below that) but whoever it was, they didn’t care about local use.   But few folks found it acceptable to have it taken over like a “Hillbilly Holler”. Definitely not a good place to tear a school bus apart in a half-assed, Rube Goldberg attempt to build a barge.

Distant cousins, Erline and Sturgill Scoggins, knew nothing of their Idaho hitch-hikers being wanted by the law.  Their unintended big splash in town was further tainted when the nefarious brothers managed to party with the town drunkard only to steal his truck while he was passed out and get while the gettin’ was good.  “Wanted bank robbers, no less!” made for heady grist in the rumor mill.  But it is fair to say that most folks were glad that the town’s friendly inebriate now had to fall back to riding his bicycle; every bit as unsteady, hat pulled down like Gabby Hayes, weaving slowly along the dusty roads, but far less of a danger to others. Continue Reading

San Juan Community Development Counter Reopens

Posted July 5, 2021 at 4:30 am by

From San Juan County

The San Juan County Community Development department will be open to the public beginning on July 6.

The front counter will be open for walk-in traffic from 8:30-10:30 a.m. and by appointment from 10:30 a.m.-3:30 p.m.

Traffic in the lobby will be limited to two parties — one at each counter. If you are unvaccinated, you will need to wear a mask.

If you would like to make an appointment, call 360-378-2354 and speak with a receptionist.

When making an appointment please know which day you would like to meet with staff and have a tax parcel number or permit number handy.

Building permit submittals remain electronic, if you do not want to use the portal, please bring your electronic plan sets on a thumb drive.

Friday Harbor’s Fourth of July Schedule

Posted July 4, 2021 at 10:11 am by

Harvey Mahood | 2021

Posted July 4, 2021 at 10:09 am by

Harvey Mahood.

Major Harvey Allan Mahood from Marysville, WA, received PCS orders to Heaven on Thursday the 10th of June, 2021.

Harvey earned a Bachelor of Science degree from the Air Force Academy, a master’s in Meteorology at the University of Utah, and his Wings through the United States Air Force.

Harvey Mahood.

He retired as an Air Force fighter pilot in 1992 (serving 18 years) and retired in 2011 as a Northwest airline pilot with 26 years of service.

Harvey’s retirement consisted of building his Friday Harbor home, volunteering for his community, and going to the opera.

He’s survived by daughter Jody Long, brother Doug Mahood, 4 grandchildren, and 1 great-grandchild. 

A potluck and celebration of Harvey’s life will be held at his home on July 10 at 2 p.m. Please bring a dish to share and a lawn chair.

Rent Temporary Space at Shipyard Cove to Work on Boats, Cars, RVs

Posted July 4, 2021 at 9:59 am by

From the Port of Friday Harbor

Port of Friday Harbor, Contributed

The Port of Friday Harbor is happy to announce its newly constructed covered self-work spaces for boats, cars and RVs at Shipyard Cove Marina.

There are two separate bays, 60’ x 20’ x 16’6” available and can be rented for up to 14 or 28 days.

Call the port office at 360-378-2688 or email the harbormaster at [email protected] for more information or to reserve your space today.