By Seth Sjostrom

Golf and beautiful scenery often go hand in hand. When your backdrop is the Columbia Gorge, you have one of our nation’s most breath-taking courses before you even carve out your first fairway. Carson Hot Springs Resort has just that, and they delivered with a magnificent course befitting of its amazing setting.

The Elk Ridge Golf Course officially opens on September 1stin grand style with an open house offering live music, free hamburgers and hotdogs as well as libations. Mystic Mojo will be serenading attendees who come and take in the new course and updated clubhouse.

Marketing Manager Mary Faso tells me, “It took the team almost a full year to ready the greens. The grass is so lush.” With sweeping views of the Gorge, new greens grown from seed and over 40 “strategically placed” bunkers, Elk Ridge Golf Course is ready to wow the public. Multiple holes overlook the Columbia River and Cascades, maximizing the vistas of the resort. The course is designed to accommodate beginners through pro. Wide fairways and tri-tiered T-boxes offer allowances depending on skill set.

Elk Ridge Golf Course

Along with the new greens and fairways, a clubhouse and pro-shop help golfers get geared up for their Gorge golfing adventure. Carts are included in the low $28 greens fee for 9 holes and $53 for 18 helping you move around the course as swiftly as the course’s namesake. Work up a hunger or thirst while hacking away? They have you covered there with your choice of the clubhouse deli and bar or the main restaurant and bar on the property.

Ridge

After a long day on the links, relax in Carson Hot Springs famous historic spa. Along with the natural hot springs and mineral baths (running since 1892), the spa offers massages and luxurious bath and wraps as well. After all that fun and pampering, settle in for the night at the resort’s hotel – a modern reflection of the original St. Martin’s Hotel that stands vigil alongside. Current lodging offers rooms designed to be rustic and simple, akin to the Gorge’s getaway nature. Want something a little cushier? New suites are being finished in online with the rest of the property’s renovations. Kids will love the rec room and family-style game area.

Bringing golf to all the wonders that the Columbia Gorge and the historic Carson Hot Springs have to offer provides an amazing getaway just minutes from home. Yet, once you’re out there, you’ll realize you’ve quickly left the busy schedules of work and life behind. Whether you are looking for the next golf course to test your skills or the next quick family getaway, Elk Ridge Golf Course and Carson Hot Springs is poised to help you forget about it all.
About the contributor: Seth Sjostrom is a local resident and author. His thriller Blood in the Snow, is currently available and Seth releases his holiday title Finding Christmas in September. For more information on Seth or his books, visit www.wolfprintpublishing.com.

By Seth Sjostrom

Today’s economy is tough. That’s no secret. We all find ways to cinch the purse strings and do more with less. But are we doing the most with the dollars that we spend within our communities? One local organization has been created to answer that question.

Buy Vancouver is a collective of small, independent businesses that strives to educate the buying public that where and how they spend their dollars impacts their very community and local economy. The group’s premise is three-fold: locally-owned, independent businesses contribute to the unique character of the community; for every $100 spent, $45 spent with a local business remains in the community versus $15 spent at a chain; local, independent businesses create higher-paying jobs.

Mary Sisson, owner of Vancouver-based Kazoodles toy store and founder of Buy Vancouver firmly believes in the organization’s stance, “I have been promoting ‘shop local’ since we opened in 2006.” Mary developed great depth of experience in cultivating independent businesses through editing the ASTRA (American Specialty Toy Retailing Association) national newsletter.  Pulling together similarly minded business owners like Paper Tiger Coffee Roaster’s Kenny and Sue Fletcher and Vintage Books’ Becky Millner, Buy Vancouver was born.

“Our goal is to raise awareness among local buyers that where they shop makes a difference in their community,” Mary states. Many buyers prefer to buy American when they have the choice; in fact, they are often open to paying a premium for to do so. The same goes for supporting local shop owners, but buyers have to be aware of their options.

Early manifestations include a group effort in a coupon exchange where several businesses hand out the coupons of other local businesses. To further make connections in the minds of Vancouver shoppers, 21 businesses took part in a “Where’s Waldo” scavenger hunt. Each participating store had a hidden Waldo that children and families could seek out in celebration of Where’s Waldo’s 25thanniversary.  Those who submitted entries with a least 16 Waldos found were eligible for a drawing where the winner would receive the complete collection of the famous seek and find books. While not technically a Buy Vancouver event, it represented what the group of businesses could accomplish together.

Buy Vancouver has begun to take shape with fifteen official current members, with more adding on each week. Any Vancouver business that is locally owned, independent to the point where “they could change their name if they wanted to without running it up the corporate chain”, and is not publicly traded is eligible for membership.  A mere $25 fee used to cover marketing costs is the only dues demanded.

Buy Vancouver is looking towards the near term future, sponsoring a booth at Vancouver’s Peace and Justice Fair, September 8th. The booth represents their first public forum to espouse their call buy local message. Kenny Fletcher is impressed with the collaborative effort of the businesses involved so far, “Some groups can tend to be a bit passive. All of the members of Buy Vancouver are very active in the organization, each of us taking on a needed area. Even at the Peace and Justice booth, we are all ready to be involved. We will be bringing coffee for the booth’s staffers, at the very least.”

Beyond the Peace and Justice Fair, the group is in full growth mode, feeling membership is ready to explode as their early efforts are recognized. Putting together a comprehensive list of local independent businesses with a corresponding guide is on the docket for the immediate future as is increasing their presence in the community. A pair of related goals includes supporting calls for tax fairness for online merchants and for manufacturers to enforce minimum pricing – both things issues negatively impacting local independent businesses.

As you are wandering around Vancouver or in town for a shopping trip, take note of the circulating salmon sign in the window of local merchants denoting they are an independent purveyor and member of Buy Vancouver. As Vancouver’s neighbors struggle with the same challenges, there are surely lessons to be gleamed from banding together to support local independent businesses, the building blocks of the American dream.

About the contributor: Seth Sjostrom is a local resident and author. His thriller Blood in the Snow, is currently available and Seth releases his holiday title Finding Christmas in September. For more information on Seth or his books, visit www.wolfprintpublishing.com.

By Ernie Geigenmiller

Editor’s Note: We’ve been following the journey of two-time Olympic diver Christina Loukas. This is part two in our series about her diving experience at the 2012 London Olympics.

Olympic diver Christina Loukas embarks on her second Olympics competition Friday in London for the 3m springboard prelims, and to get ready she has been doing a lot of physical training, but she’s also been preparing emotionally.

“I am training my dives every day and preparing mentally for my event,” Loukas said. “Just visualizing myself performing my dives to the best of my ability in the Olympic venue.”

Like bronze medalist, David Boudia, who is experiencing his second Olympics, Loukas looks at London much differently than Beijing.

Christina Loukas
Christina Loukas, right, begins Olympic competition on Friday.
 
“This Olympic Games has been completely different than Beijing,” she said. “Personally I just have a different mindset and I am not completely overwhelmed. I am looking at this meet as just another World Championship meet but with a different title to it. I am competing against the same divers as usual so I know what to expect and have more confidence in my ability.”

After her Olympic Trials experience, Loukas adds she has more to give in London and that she hasn’t peaked. She’s going into this competition with more to give — and to show the world what she can do.2012 has been a particularly excellent Olympics for the US Diving team. It started with Kelci Bryant and Abby Johnston winning the silver in the women’s 3m synchro; David Boudia and Nick McCrory  winning bronze in their synchro event, and continued with Troy Dumais and Kristian Ipsen winning bronze on Wednesday.

“When Kelci and Abby won the silver I was so excited for USA Diving,” Loukas added. “This was our first medal in 12 years! So it was a great start to the meet for our team and really inspired me personally. It just shows that getting a medal is in our reach and we just have to go for it.”While the US Diving team continues to train, there is down time. During that time, Loukas watches other events on TV, and hangs out in the athlete center they set up for the Olympians. There is a place called “The Globe”where they have set up pool tables, video games, board games for all the athletes in the village.

The Loukas extended family has also arrived in London. More than 20 family members are joining in the fun.

“My family is doing great,” Loukas said. “I think the majority of them have arrived by now. So they have been sightseeing and taking tours. I have been able to see them a few times which has been nice because my family helps keep me calm and relaxed.”

She said she is starting to get excited and nervous.

“I feel prepared so I am looking forward to tomorrow and finally being able to compete!”