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Makinzie Nelson’s Last ‘Home’ Run

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Makinzie Nelson, Wood River High School senior, waits for the pitch during a recent game. Photo Credit: Nicky Elsbree

Wood River Softball Star Rewrites The Record Books With Her Father At Her Side

BY Mark Dee

Members of Wood River Wolverines girls softball team gather to cheer on a team member. Photo Credit: Nicky Elsbree

Looking back, some of Matt Nelson’s favorite moments coaching his four daughters might have been his most miserable. He calls them “shins and chins” practices, set up behind the plate as low fastballs pelted his legs and spiked curves leapt from the infield dirt up into his face. Nelson raised his girls in the game. They could all hit and pitch and field their positions. They were all competitors—on the diamond, in the yard, over a deck of cards in the living room. One-on-one, though, the Wood River High School head coach hoped to impart a bit more—a sense of how to approach the game, and through it, their lives after.
With his second daughter, Wood River High School star senior Makinzie Nelson, he can pinpoint the moment he saw those lessons take: First inning, versus Sugar-Salem, on April 8. The Wolverines had limped to a 1-8 start, still warming up as their fields greened in Hailey. Nelson, a three-year varsity player already committed to play at Division I Montana next year, had been solid. With her first at bat, her season turned spectacular. Nelson hit two home runs in the game, leading the Wolverines to their second win of the year. And she didn’t stop, homering in each of the next eight games.
“Every ball she hit just exploded off her bat,” Matt Nelson said. “I was like, ‘Holy Cow.’ I mean, the kid’s locked in. Here we go.”
In softball, where long seasons are defined by routine and superstition, the best thing a player can hear is nothing at all. Just like no one mentions a pitcher is nearing a no hitter, no one speaks about a hitter on a streak. And for much of this season, Makinzie Nelson’s teammates—and her father—didn’t say anything about what she was doing.
“It’s like ‘Fight Club,’ you know?” Matt Nelson said. “You don’t talk about Fight Club.”
She didn’t think about it, either—avoiding stats and doing everything she could to quiet her mind. At home, she’d draw or paint; in the dugout, she’d think about her dog; at the plate, she’d repeat the simple mantra she’d coined for herself and shrink the world to the grapefruit-sized yellow streak beaming in her direction. “See ball, hit ball,” she’d say, and more often than not, she did.
On Thursday, Burley beat Wood River to end the Wolverines’ season one game shy of a state tournament berth. With it ended one of the most dominant statistical seasons ever posted by a Wood River High School athlete. Over 28 games, Makinzie Nelson batted .709, in the top 100 nationally, per stats recorded by the high school athletics clearinghouse MaxPreps. She drove in 58 runs and slugged 1.663, both top 50 in the country. And she hit 19 home runs, top 25, including her nine-game streak, a run Wood River Athletic Director Kevin Stilling called “simply outstanding.”
Kevin Stilling has seen school records set before. He thinks of Johnny Radford reaching the mark for points in basketball, or Alec Nordsieck and Cade Schoot setting back-to-back passing records on the football field. Tanner Dredge’s 39-goal soccer season comes to mind. So do the All-State girls basketball runs of KT Martinez and Haylee Thompson.
“I am not, however, aware of athletes whose numbers ranked nationally the way Makinzie’s have,” he said. “Credit to her and all the work she has put in to make this record-setting season possible.”
For Makinzie Nelson, it was years coming. As a child, she learned softball with the girls seniors on this Wood River team. Then, her skill pulled her away. She sought more and better competition, playing on travel teams in Boise or Idaho Falls. Softball hasn’t always been a strong sport in the valley, she said, where the long winter means seasons invariably start with indoor practices and road games. She played where she could, and lost the connection to teammates close to home.
As a rare freshman on varsity, Nelson was thrown straight into the fire, starting the season as the team’s number one pitcher.
“I was a scared little teenage girl,” she remembers. “I didn’t know any of the girls I was playing with. They were all older than me.” Through the seasons, she got stronger. Familiar faces joined the team—girls she’d played with as a nine year old. “That connection came right back.”
“The more comfortable I got, the more loose I got,” she says. She grew more, was more confident off the field, and it translated in her play. “And this year, something hit. I felt like I could own any pitcher that came against me. On the mound, (I could) pitch to any batter that was hitting against me. Something just clicked this year…It’s probably the best year of my life.”
It didn’t start that way. In late December, a teammate died suddenly. Before every game this year, her friends hung her jersey on a ski pole and raised it in the dugout like a banner. Her name, Matt said, was Faith. His voice cracks thinking of her. This season, he wanted to help his team remember her, too. So they’d hang the jersey, and their coach would remind them that “faith is the stuff you can’t see anyway.”
“You gotta believe it,” he said before the Burley game. Honoring their friend has “been good for the healing process for those kid,” he said. “The bond is hitting right now.”
As for coaching his daughter, Matt said the hard part is over. She knows how to play. She loves the game. This year was about fine tuning her mindset, and making sure she savors her last high school season—the kind of a coaching parents do every day.
“It’s like having a violin,” he said. “You wind that thing too tight, it’s going to snap. So we always try to keep her enjoying the game. As long as she’s enjoying it, I’m all for letting her do whatever she wants. You play your game, play it hard, play it the best you can, and that’s all you can do. When you don’t enjoy it anymore, put your spikes in the fire pit and let them cook, just end it right there.”
That’s the lesson he saw sprout in the first at bat against Sugar Salem, and blossom in the games since.
“There are so many fundamental things that he has taught me, but this year I’ve been a pretty mental player, just ‘because, you know, the whole world feels like it’s been on my shoulders,” she said. “But he pulls me off to the side and he, he always just tells me, ‘Do what you can control. Do the best that you can be. Nothing else matters, just perform to your best. And if your best is, you know, hitting maybe one line drive and then getting out the rest of the time, I’ll still love you. If it’s, you know, striking out 10 girls, and then hitting it out every time, I’ll still love you. Just know that whatever you do is, you know, just do it to, to the best of your ability and I’ll stand by you for the rest of my life.’”
After the Burley loss, Matt Nelson gathered his girls on the field. Some, he’d coached half their lives. It was the last time he’d coach Makinzie in competition.
“I just let the girls know how proud I was of them and their effort they gave me this year after all the tragedy and record-breaking events that happened,” he said later. “I just told them how proud I was of the resilience and unwavering ability to keep a smile on their faces.” He told his seniors that their lives are “gonna be full of dream-makers, and heartbreakers, and that this little game that doesn’t mean anything” can teach you everything, in a world where you need mental toughness, determination, teamwork and faith. He reminded them that in uniform or out, they’re part of “a group of people that would do anything for you for the rest of your life.”
Before the loss, Nelson told me that just thinking of Makinzie on the diamond made him smile.
“I’m gonna be there one day as an old guy sitting on my front porch, watching the sunset,” he said, “and my wife and I will reminisce about the kind of year she had this year, and just how amazing it was to watch.”
Maybe Makinzie and her sisters will be there too. And she’ll share that her favorite memory from her high school career isn’t really about her at all. In it, they’re in Buhl. She’s standing on second base. Her sister Paityn, now a sophomore, is at bat, her father—her coach—is in the dugout. She’s looking to him for a sign. Instead, she hears the resonant thwack of Paityn’s bat, the unmistakable sound of a ball on its way over the wall. She looks at Matt before she starts to run, and sees that he’s near tears. When she pictures it now, she sees the rest through her father’s eyes: His daughters jogging the base paths, smiling on their slow way home.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Forecasts Predict Mounting Fire Risk This Summer

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The National Interagency Fire Center predicts an above-average chance of elevated fire risk in southern Idaho this August. Graphic courtesy of National Interagency Fire Center.

Local Firefighters Urge Vigilance As Questions Linger About Federal Support

By Mark Dee

Last summer, Idaho lost more acreage to wildfire than in any year since 2007. This year, preliminary forecasts call for similar conditions in the months ahead.
Models from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration’s Climate Prediction Center call for an above average chance of hotter-than-normal temperatures and lower than usual precipitation totals. That, coupled with an analysis of the last winter’s weather and on-the-ground vegetation, led the forecasters at the National Interagency Fire Center to anticipate above-average fire risk spreading into Idaho this July and, especially, August.
“For July and August, concern shifts northward to northern Nevada and Idaho,” the center stated in its May 1 outlook. “Fine fuel carryover is expected to be above normal in the lower elevations. Meanwhile, despite the healthy winter snowfall, forecast prolonged warm and dry conditions will bring the higher elevations of Idaho into play by August, with above normal potential forecast.”
The next forecast is scheduled for June 1.
Between the weather and fuels, Ketchum Assistant Fire Chief Seth Martin expects conditions “to be similar” to 2024. Nearly 1 million acres burned across the Idaho last season, accounting for about one ninth of all land burned in the United States in 2024. By pure acreage, that statistic makes last year Idaho’s worst fire season since 2007, when the Murphy Complex Fire, Idaho’s largest since 1910, burned close to half a million acres by itself near the Nevada border.
Locally, the impact was hard to ignore. The Wapiti Fire, which lightning sparked near Grandjean on July 24, burned more than 125,000 acres before it was contained on Halloween, casting a smoky pall on Stanley’s summer. While much smaller, the human caused Bench Lakes Fire was just as visible, burning through the popular hiking destination near Redfish Lake and, eventually, down to the shores of the lake itself.
Martin isn’t in the business of forecasting fires, but he isn’t surprised by the prevailing outlook.
“It’s been proven for many years that the climate is getting hotter and drier,” he said, “and a hotter and drier climate makes fires bigger and faster.”
Ketchum Fire is looking to hire an engine boss to run its wildland apparatus, but is otherwise fully staffed, Martin said.
Martin reiterated that all of the area’s mutual aid agreements, which promise that local and federal agencies help across jurisdictional bounds, remain intact.
Less clear is how that help will look as federal employees reel from a winter of staff cuts following President Donald Trump’s suite of executive orders aimed at paring the government’s workforce. Trump’s orders spared public safety staff, including wildland firefighters, but slashed many supporting roles. About 10% of U.S. Forest Service employees lost their jobs in February, according to ProPublica, along with 8% of Bureau of Land Management employees, according to the National Resources Defense Council, a conservation advocacy group.
About 75% of Forest Service employees are trained in wildland firefighting, working on the frontlines, ProPublica reported, with others providing support during a fire. Other employees are tasked with preventative work in fire-prone areas, like thinning and executing controlled burns.
By press time, Forest Service had not responded to questions about its firefighting capacity on the Sawtooth National Forest, or what preparations were underway on Forest Service land. Martin, whose jurisdiction is largely surrounded by that national forest, did not comment on questions of federal support this summer.
Further south, Wood River Fire and Rescue Fire Marshal Mike Elle told the Wood River Weekly that “BLM equipment is fully staffed at all stations and deployment yards. Aircraft usually come online June 1, Elle said, though he expects some support to be ready sooner.
“We do almost all of our response work with the BLM,” he said, “so that is our biggest concern in the south end of the Wood River Valley.”

Firefighters: Prepare Your Home For Fire Season
Both Elle and Martin asked homeowners to use the springtime to get their properties ready for the summer ahead. Every city in the Wood River Valley sits in what the U.S. Fire Administration calls the Wildland-Urban Interface, where manmade structures like homes meet undeveloped vegetation—fuel for fire, Martin said. These areas are most prone to destructive, sometimes deadly, wildfires.
At minimum, both firefighters emphasize creating a “defensible space” around buildings by thinning vegetation, clearing deadfall, pruning low-hanging branches and ensuring you have a 20-foot-wide driveway clear of overhead obstructions that can accommodate fire trucks.
Elle suggests going further to make your home “survivable” during a wildfire. Defensible spaces allow firefighters to get between a building and an encroaching blaze. A “survivable home” can withstand a fire on its own.
“Fire Departments in this county do not have enough fire engines or firefighters to protect every single home from an approaching wildfire, so making a home ‘survivable’ means a wildfire can burn around your home without setting it on fire and without firefighters there to protect it,” Elle said. “Once a wildland fire passes by an area, fire engines then patrol the area looking for hot spots or embers that possibly start another fire.”
For more information, including a checklist of ways to secure your property, Elle recommends go to www.firewise.org.

WRMS Sixth Graders to Speak at City Council

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Wood River Middle School student, Ryeland Waite, takes notes while reaching out to Clear Creek Disposal for information about bear-proof garbage cans in preparation for an appearance before Hailey City Council. Photo credit: Jennifer Peterson

To Protect Bears and People

By WRMS

Sixth-grade students from Wood River Middle School are stepping up to protect their community and local wildlife. On Monday, May 12, students will attend the Hailey City Council meeting to ask leaders to take action by purchasing bear-proof trash containers for public areas.
“We care about the safety of both bears and people,” said Mahayla Shipp-Stephenson, a sixth-grader at WRMS. “When garbage cans are left out too early, or unsecured, bears come into neighborhoods, which can be dangerous for everyone.”
The students have been researching the issue and are concerned that unsecured garbage attracts bears into towns, which can lead to harmful interactions. They believe that bear-proof containers are a smart solution to reduce these risks.
The class will present their findings and ideas during the public comment portion of the meeting, held at 5:30 p.m. on Monday, May 12, 2025 at Hailey City Hall.
“We hope the city will listen and help us make a positive change,” said Kendall Monjaras-Marrujo.
For more information, please contact Jennifer Peterson at jpeterson@blaineschools.org.

Sun Valley Brewery to Close

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Sean Flynn stands proud in his soon-to-be closed pub. Photo credit: Isaiah Frizzell

BY ISAIAH FRIZZELL

Heavy news: the Sun Valley Brewery (SVB) is closing its doors on Friday, May 30th.
Beloved in the social scene, the Sun Valley Brewery has offered years of excellent food, delightful staff and a social bar where, like in the show “Cheers,” you’ll always find a friend. Even if you might not know the patron sitting next to you, the vibe and clientele that Sean Flynn has attracted make for a congenial, fun and exciting group of people who love to joke and connect. This is absolute community.

Family, Friends, Community
Sun Valley Brewery is a family-run business operating since 1986. Flynn has been at the helm since 1993.
“My wife and I, Cynthia, have personally been here for 23 out of the 32 or 33 years we’ve been here, 23 of them, and her family has been a major part of it. Her brother, Derek, who passed away in September, started it, and her sister, Jeanette, came on in 2007 and has made a huge contribution. My kids have worked here, you know, grown up here. It’s a family business and (pause) it’s such a sad thing, but it’s something that has to be done.”
It must be noted that something which has been encroaching on many properties across the Valley has sunk its fangs into yet another cherished location.
Three years ago a “For Sale” sign was put in front of the establishment. Directly in front of the outdoor patio ‘beer garden” Flynn had designed. It was put up by the owner of the building with allegedly zero explanation to SVB.
“We’ve had a really good long-term lease and the owners have been good to us, but they put it on the market about three years ago and it’s created a lot of uncertainty for customers and for our business as well, as far as not knowing what’s going to happen and not wanting to put any further investment into it because it could be sold and the new owner might make other decisions.”

Are We Seeing a Trend?
“That’s been a really hard thing the last three years. It’s really progressively brought our business slower. A lot of people didn’t know what was going on, so I think that created confusion and has taken a toll on the bottom line.”
Shaky ground rattles the confidence and operational facility of a business. Will the new owner raise rent or decide to build something else? Who knows? The ‘who knows’ is what creates uncertainty. Uncertainty about a business’s very embodiment taxes, daily, the decisions the business can make. Of course COVID-19 did what it did but it was then the “For Sale” sign, a foreboding eyesore that made devoted patrons ask questions about their favorite haunt—and of course poor advertisement for new patrons —those driving by looking for a cool place to visit.

Silver Linings and Passionate Paths
Not all is doom and gloom. While the Sun Valley Brewery will close, Flynn, heavy-hearted but optimistic, is making moves for the future. They’ve known it was coming and chose to get out with new pursuits and on a smart timeline. The whole scenario is a common theme we’re seeing in real estate and while they’ll be alright, the fact that third-party factions can create this scenario for a beloved business is a sign of the times. Yet another Folgers moment for the new world era.
“We’re fine now, and we don’t want to get into debt or anything. We want to get out while we’re still ahead. Basically, get out and do it the right way instead of having to be forced to be shut down.” Flynn is calm but definitely bittersweet.
“We made the decision, nobody’s making us. The owner would have let us stay till it sells, but we don’t know when that is. We want to do it on our own terms. I mean, it could have happened any time during these past three years, and we would have just had to deal with it. We’ve had time to think about it now, and we’re, like, you know what, this is probably how we should do it before we get any further along.”
Running an establishment of this size means equipment, staff, product and cleaning, after overhead, of course. The SVB is a lovely, large, well-equipped spot, generally full of patrons. However, with the fickle and generally silent moves that realtors make, the threat of eviction makes it nearly impossible to find bearing, invest and maintain a place even as community-centered and busy as the Sun Valley Brewery has been.

Speaking in Tongues
Any chance you’ll open elsewhere?
“I think I still have that in my blood. The whole restaurant and brewery part but we haven’t decided that, and I doubt it, but you never know. You never know. At the moment, we’re not really thinking about that. We probably just want to take a break and rethink things and see what happens.”
Flynn, who was an Army interrogator and language specialist, can talk to anyone. Fluent in French, Spanish and Arabic (at least), he is moving from part to full time as a teacher and learning specialist at the Sun Valley Community School.
“That kind of helped me make the decision too, is knowing that I did have something to do. But we would have had to anyway.” Flynn remains optimistic.
“It’s kind of a relief and some sadness, too. We’ve thought about it, but not very seriously about doing it, even when things were good. Maybe we should do something different. It probably would have been a few more years before we would have done anything different. So this is kind of a little, you know, we’ve been a little more ‘pushed’ to make decisions. But still, we’re doing it on our own terms.”
In other words, they’re being smart about making the transition before going into debt. The decision made to sell the building, the silence of the entities who may be buying the building, the uncertainty, and undoubtedly, the slowing of business due to the pandemic along with a honking ‘For Sale’ sign have all contributed to a generational, family run business and community hub closing.
The final day hosts a bittersweet if unadvertised celebration. You can be sure the regulars and locals know. If you don’t know, now is a time to visit a Wood River Valley legend.

Friday, May 30th
Take your last chance to pop into a legendary community hub that served as an essential. Grab a beer, a pizza, a cocktail, a photo. This is what true community looks like.
As they push off into the new world operating system, they will be selling most of their restaurant gear. If you or someone you know is in the market for such equipment, contact Flynn and make it happen.
Bittersweet, somewhat unjust, definitely disturbing—yet smart on the Flynns, like Erol Flynn in his pirate movies, breaking a perceived fall by slicing through the sail. Godspeed and with maybe a tear. The Sun Valley Brewery closes as another era ends and the Valley metamorphosizes into its next phase.

 

 

A Growing Passion for Pickleball

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By Mike McKenna

Pickleball was invented in the Northwest, so it was only a matter of time before it caught on in Idaho.
First created back in 1965 by some bored families on Bainbridge Island in Washington, the sport has really caught on recently. Pickleball has been the fastest growing sport in the country for several years and the Wood Rive Valley is proof.
“Pickleball has definitely arrived in the Valley,” Lee Sponaugle said. “We have a really great pickleball community here.”
Lee is a nationally-ranked player and president of the Wood River Pickleball Alliance (WRPA). The former tennis player used to think pickleball was “just a fad.” Then he played and, like so many others, Lee quickly got hooked on the sport.
It’s estimated that nearly 20 million Americans played pickleball last year alone. The local WRPA league itself has nearly 200 members. And it doesn’t take a Pulitzer Prize-winning journalist to figure out why pickleball is so popular.
“Pickleball is the every person’s sport,” Adam Taylor, WRPA’s vice president explained.
Featuring small courts, short games, light paddles and soft, forgiving pickleballs, it’s the rare sport where people of all ages and just about any physical ability can learn to play and have fun rather quickly. Pickleball is also a very social sport, which is a big part of its appeal.
“Most pickleballers are just out to have fun, to get some exercise and be social,” Lee said. “They’re very welcoming and you just have to play once to feel like you’re a pickleball player and part of the sport.”
The Wood River Valley now offers pickleball options year-round. The Blaine County Recreation District, or “BCRD,” has indoor courts in Hailey offering leagues and clinics. The WRPA has an outdoor summer league at Atkinson Park in Ketchum and indoors during the winters at Gravity Fitness in Hailey. Adam and others also lead free clinics for players of all abilities most Friday mornings.
There’s no doubt about it, people have gone crazy for pickleball and the Wood River Valley is no different.
“The pop-pop-pop sound is a beacon,” Adam said. “It’s the sound of something fun happening.”

In addition to the local pickleball leagues, the Wood River Valley now hosts three annual events that draw players from far and wide. In May, the WRPA hosts its Summer Kick-off Tournament. In August, the MSCL Pickleball Bash is held at The Valley Club. The star-studded fundraiser includes legends in rackets sports like Mats Wilander and John McEnroe. In September, the Sun Valley Pickleball Classic attracts some of the best players from across the country to the cozy confines of the historic resort. Find out more at WoodRiverPickleball.org.
And don’t forget to get your tickets for the return of the Chamber Awards Banquet before they sell out. The popular event will be held on Thursday, May 29th from 6-8 p.m. at The Senior Connection. Find out more at ValleyChamber.org or call 208-788-3484.

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Fishing

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picabo angler
Hwy 20 in Picabo info@picaboangler.com (208)788.3536 www.picaboangler.com

The wait is almost over. On Friday, May 23rd at 5 p.m., Picabo Angler will kick off Memorial Day and the start of a new season with our annual Opening Weekend Party! Rain or shine (outdoors or indoors), we will be enjoying live music by Barton & Bollar, ice cold refreshments from Sawtooth Brewery, dinner by the Picabo Angler Grill, raffles, and all the fly-fishing vendors coming to show us the latest and greatest products. Please join us for what has become an incredibly special event. Everyone is welcome!
If you plan to fish on Saturday, May 24th, on Opening Day, be prepared to fish Silver Creek, as it will likely be the only game in town for several weeks. The Big Wood River and Copper Basin waters will be in runoff, and the lower Big Lost River will likely see flows spiking very soon.
The Opening Weekend Silver Creek menu will feature Baetis (BWO), PMDs and Callibaetis. Have emergers, duns, and spinners in sizes 14–20. We have TONS of new and effective fly patterns in the shop designed for Silver Creek!
Ants and Beetle patterns are a must-have for the first weeks on Silver Creek. These patterns, especially large Beetles, will often bring fish to the surface that aren’t actively rising. One of the fun parts of Opening Week on the Creek is trying all sorts of “unusual” patterns and colors.
Brown Drakes are probably a few weeks away. With that said, no one ever truly knows when this hatch will appear, and history says have some of these patterns in your fly box from the moment the clock strikes 12 a.m. on Opening Day.
Remember that Silver Creek downstream of the Highway 20 bridge remains open to fishing, and the large spring PMDs (size 14) are present.
Stillwater fisheries such as the Magic, Little Wood and Mackay reservoirs are fishing very well at the moment. Leech patterns are the ticket!
Please call us at 208-788-3536 or email us at info@picaboangler.com for more information. We look forward to seeing you all on Friday, May 23rd at 5 p.m.

Happy fishing, everyone!

HAPPY HIKING!

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Photo credit: Fran Jewell

By Fran Jewell

It’s that time of year again when we are out in droves hiking this beautiful landscape and soaking in the moderate temperatures. And, what would a hike be without our beloved companions?
It is becoming harder and harder to find places to hike in comfort where our dogs are not confronted by other dogs, especially off-leash dogs that have no recall. All of us have the right to take our dogs, but our dogs have a right to remain safe as well as we humans. As a community with all the same goals of enjoying this delightful paradise we live in, we must remain kind and thoughtful.
Just what is kindness when it comes to hiking with our dog?
It means respecting that not all people will enjoy your overenthusiastic greeter even if he is “friendly.” As someone who is still recovering my balance from two total hip replacements this winter, I am still working desperately to regain my former balance. There are many people out on the trail that have hidden disabilities. If your loose, “friendly” dog knocks someone over, it can be life threatening for someone who is older or with a hidden disability. Do NOT let your dog run up to anyone, regardless of how friendly he is.
Kindness is also keeping your dog on a down/stay or on a leash as someone else passes on the trail. It’s not hard to carry a leash with you and snap it on when someone else alone or with a dog passes by. It just good old-fashioned kindness!
Don’t expect everyone’s dog to be friendly or want to play. Don’t say, “Oh, he just wants to play!” when your dog is an obnoxious greeter invading the space of another dog. Every dog has a right to be on a walk, even if they are not especially social. If someone has a non-social dog ON A LEASH and they ask you to call your dog, be responsible and call your dog. Do not criticize them for having an unsocial dog. That dog may have already been seriously attacked at one time and is now terrified of invasive “friendly” dogs.
TRAIN YOUR DOG! An off-leash dog in our environment MUST have 100% recall! Our environment is filled with life-threatening challenges. Did you know that 90% of the time you are on a walk in the woods you are being watched by a mountain lion? That is the statistic I have heard. A dog that comes unless there is a distraction should not be allowed to run free. A confrontation with any wildlife could be fatal for your dog. TRAIN for a perfect recall in any distraction. Train, THEN let your dog run, and then COME!
Be respectful of our environment. Dog feces upsets the health of wildlife. Clean up after your dog! Carry a plastic bag, treats as a paycheck for your dog for an excellent recall and BRING a LEASH! You never know when you might need one.
Make space between your dog and other dogs and people. It’s just the kind thing to do! When I am on the bike path working a client dog and the dog is being taught to come and sit just off the path, every bicycle rider has said, “Thank you!” It means a lot to the other person!

Let’s make hiking fun and be responsible, be kind to others, and train your dog! TRAIN. RUN. COME!
Fran Jewell is a dog behavior consultant, NADOI-certified instructor and vice president. She owns Positive Puppy Dog Training LLC and can be reached at (208) 721-7221.

FOMC

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BY SUZANNE HAZLETT, MBA, CIMA®, CFP®

Suzanne Hazlett, MBA, CIMA®, CFP®, founder of HAZLETT WEALTH MANAGEMENT, is a Certified Investment Management Analyst® and CERTIFIED FINANCIAL PLANNERTM professional.

At the end of the May Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) meeting, the Fed kept interest rates unchanged, as expected. The Fed indicated, “Uncertainty about the economic outlook has increased further.” They also noted that while U.S. net exports grew slower, the employment market remained strong, and inflation remained “somewhat elevated.”
Some have interpreted these statements as accepting that the economy’s risks for stagflation have increased. Stagflation, by definition, is persistently high inflation combined with high unemployment and stagnant demand in the country’s economy.
Key Takeaways of Commentary by Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell:

  • Inflation expectations have moved up, but longer-term inflation expectations are at a level consistent with the inflation target.
  • Tariffs have been larger than anticipated.
  • Inflation will increase, and economic growth will slow if these tariffs remain.
  • We are in a good position to wait for more certainty on the future environment.
  • A great deal of uncertainty exists about the potential for employment and inflation.
  • The Fed is in a good place to wait and see what the evolution of the economy is.
  • The underlying inflation picture is in a good place. Still, there is so much uncertainty that we are not hurrying to change policy.
  • We are comfortable with the current policy stance.
  • We cannot be preemptive at this time because we need more information.
  • The pressure from President Trump does not affect our decision on interest rates.
  • The downside risks to the economy have increased but have not materialized yet.

The next FOMC meeting takes place June 17 and 18, 2025.

Suzanne Hazlett, MBA, CIMA®, CFP®, is a Certified Investment Management Analyst® and CERTIFIED FINANCIAL PLANNERTM professional. Investment advisory services are offered through Raymond James Financial Services Advisors, Inc. Securities are offered through Raymond James Financial Services, Inc., member FINRA/SIPC. The information has been obtained from sources considered to be reliable. Still, we do not guarantee that the foregoing material is accurate or complete. This information should not be construed as a recommendation. The foregoing content is subject to change at any time without notice. The content provided herein is for informational purposes only. There is no guarantee that these statements, opinions, or forecasts provided herein will be correct. Economic and market conditions are subject to change. HAZLETT WEALTH MANAGEMENT, LLC is independent of Raymond James and is not a registered broker/dealer. 675 Sun Valley Road, Suite J1 + J2, Ketchum, Idaho, 83340 208.726.0605 HazlettWealthManagement.com

COSTLY UNFREE SPEECH

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BY JOELLEN COLLINS

JoEllen Collins—a longtime resident of the Wood River Valley, now residing in San Francisco— is an Idaho Press Club award-winning columnist, a teacher, novelist, fabric artist, choir member and proud grandma.

For the most part, I prefer writing about the amazement of the experiences and sights I have enjoyed. I am not a political columnist, nor do I wish to be one. In my long-ago childhood, we didn’t discuss religion, sex or politics at our dinner tables and, due to relatively supported presidencies, I never heard my parents argue or raise their voices about any of those topics. However, I was also the peacemaker in the family, avoiding at all costs argument and disagreements. It has taken many decades to realize that hearing an unpopular opinion is not only part of learning many aspects of issues, but necessary for accurate communication and the avoidance of a superficial understanding of events. Many years ago, I wrote a column (not for this paper) and mentioned my concerns about the then-current political election. Afterwards, I was flabbergasted and fearful when I received unduly vicious hate mail.
I am a free woman who can discuss controversial issues with friends and family without wrath and anger. I don’t have to be respected, loved, or even tolerated by others. I can spend time with caring people and choose more positive than negative moments at this late part of my life.
Thus, today I change my usually sunny column. As an English teacher, a writer, and avid fan of so many kinds of communication, I am seriously afraid that our beloved American promise of free speech is vanishing quickly. Today, another presidential edict announced denying federal funding and thus limiting our access to NPR. I have already been stunned by the possible destruction of PBS, and threats to defund politically “incorrect” newspapers and magazines.
I have watched the Kennedy Center Honors for as long as I had access to their filming and always felt a surge of delight with the abundance of gifted performers and the freedom of expression that has resulted in such a powerful display of beauty, talent and amazing discipline within our appreciative society. I even had a silly “bucket list” dream to somehow, sometime, be in that audience. The other evening I was gifted with attending a performance here in Walnut Creek, California, of an all-wind instrument orchestra playing some of the most affective pieces from Broadway. Some of us wept a bit and smiled a lot with the powerful and familiar presentation of the gifts we receive from listening to the plethora of options in theater, broadcasting and other media sources.
So what will happen if our broadcasts only conform to the desires of the very wealthy or a regime that doesn’t tolerate opposition to its tastes and political beliefs? I have aways considered America to be the halcyon example of a freely informed citizenry and thus entertained as well by our creative artists. It is not up to the government to silence dissenters or opposition that doesn’t share the tastes of those in power. True power comes from citizens who respect the freedoms of others. Censoring by eliminating radio, TV, motion pictures or communication sources is a truly un-American sin.

DREAMING BIG

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By Dove

How big do we allow our dreams to be? Do we limit the size of our dreams because we cannot determine how they will come about if we dream too big? We could be disappointed.
With this kind of thinking, you have already limited your greatest outcome, and your dreams keep getting smaller. I have a friend who constantly lives in past glories and it makes it very difficult to manifest in the present because all of the energy is focused in the past. You can’t make a joyous future if you can’t dream it. Only the anticipation of greater things can bring you greater things. I know this from experience.
If you dream small, you will experience small, but it does keep you safe where you can deal with little shifts in reality. What would happen if you dreamed big, expanded your beliefs beyond all limitations and declared in a voice loud and clear what you want? What if you then took action to bring your dreams to reality? What is the worst thing that can happen? You might be disappointed, but the possibility also exists that you might be directed to a greater manifestation than you ever imagined Sometimes Source, God, has a bigger, better plan than the one you are holding.
My father always told me that it does not matter if you fail; what matters is that you try. I have never been afraid of failing, per se. I will admit that it took a lot of courage for me to rappel down a mountain in my younger years, but I took a deep breath and gave it a go. I discovered I would much rather rappel down than find handholds to climb up. If you don’t make the climb you don’t get to rappel down.
So you have the opportunity to become more than you are, or you can stay stuck in the same old pattern, having the same old experiences. That just doesn’t work for me. At this point in my life my dreams are different… much more simple than when I was younger, but I still love to see where my creations will take me. Yesterday, I planted corn in my garden. Now, this may not seems like a big dream to you but if I can keep it from freezing and making it to maturity, I will be so joyful. Walls of water can protect the plants if we get one of our June freezes, but I had to get the seeds in the ground to have the plants be knee-high by the Fourth of July. This may seem like a simple dream, but it brings me great joy to see if I can do it. I envision my strawberry bed abundant and overflowing. I have to take precautions to protect all my plants from the abundant wildlife, which I love.
My challenge to you is to love your dreams, whether big or small. Support them with all your heart and you will be blessed with the magic of the unknown. Blessings, Dove