WWW.VALLEYRECORD.COM Snoqualmie Valley Record • August 13, 2014 • 9
PUBLISHED AS A SUPPLEMENT TO THE VALLEY RECORD
2014
Steam power, Page 10Rare steam locomotive comes to Railroad Days
Timber Sports, Page 13David Moses team demonstrates pro chopping and sawing
All aboard!
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For the first time in 25 years, you can ride a steam train in the Valley, as the Northwest Railway Museum hosts rides on the historic Santa Cruz and Portland Cement Locomotive 2, a 1909-built Porter locomotive, for Railroad Days.
This summer is the 125th anniversary of passenger train service to the Valley.
On July 4, 1889, the inau-gural run was a day trip from the foot of Western Avenue in Seattle to Snoqualmie Falls. The excursion was operated by the M.E. Church Society over the lines of the Seattle, Lake
Shore and Eastern Railway Company. Now, 125 years later, the Northwest Railway Museum continues the tra-dition of train excursions to Snoqualmie Falls.
To ensure you get a seat, purchase your ticket in advance at the Depot. Your ticket will be ready at the will-call window in the depot at least 30 minutes prior to departure. There is no additional fee.
In additional to regular departure times, there is an extra ride added at 5 p.m. on Saturday, Aug. 16.
Between runs, visitors may encounter the steam locomotive engineer and owner, who can answer questions about the engine.
Steam power is a rarity in today’s world. The Railroad Days engine reflects exactly the kind of machine that was running in the Valley in 1889.
Said Peggy Barchi, Northwest Railway Museum spokeswoman, “You just don’t see steam engines any-more. There’s only about a
dozen working steam loco-motives in the U.S.”
The locomotive will be pulling all the passenger runs during Railroad Days.
“People will be able to ride with a real steam engine pulling their car,” Barchi said. Visitors can
hear a steam whistle, some-thing most living people haven’t heard.
“It’s part of the mystique,” Barchi said.
The railway museum has fundraising plans to restore one of its own steam engines.
Families, fill out your ‘Passport to Fun’Children and families can get more out of Railroad Days, thanks to a new “Passport to Fun” program.
Children can visit downtown businesses and collect a prize while exploring historic Snoqualmie and the Railroad Days attractions, and get their passports stamped.
A completed passport merits a special prizes, including a kid’s cone at the Snoqualmie Falls Candy Factory and a glider toy at Carmichael’s True Value Hardware. There may also be chances to sign up for a raf f le to win prizes sponsored by other area merchants.
Some events, such as the Kids Paint Junction, occur only on certain festival days.
Children can pick up their passports at the Railroad Days information booth, and at other stops.
In the past, organizers said, some attendants at Railroad Days missed out on every attraction, as they are spread out around the community. The passport helps give children and families an incentive to explore more of the things Railroad Days has to of fer.
Courtesy photos
A steam-powered train engine, the Santa Cruz and Portland Cement Locomotive 2, is coming to Railroad Days.
Rare engine stops in
SnoqualmieGo back to the steam
era during Railroad Days
Join some of the region’s most accomplished history re-enactors, the Fort Nisqually Time Travelers, as they provide demonstrations and hands-on history activities, 9 a.m. to 4 p.m. Sunday, Aug. 17, at Railroad Days.
Visitors can take a step back in time to experience life as it once was, as the the group highlights 19th century crafts and skills that were common as settlements developed in the Valley.
A “History Comes Alive” hands-on demonstration area will be near the Snoqualmie Depot. Watch re-enactors in period clothing from the 1800s, and try your hand at making rope, churn-ing butter, or starting a fire with flint and steel.
A blacksmith will demonstrate his work, as well as a Dutch oven cook. One demonstrator will show how railroad ties were squared by hand. Re-enactors will also narrate their crafts and history to visitors.
“We’re looking at craft skills (and) knowledge that would have been used
when Snoqualmie was being settled and the first trains were coming out here—the mid-19th century to early 1900s,” said Peggy Barchi, spokes-woman for the Northwest Railway Museum.
The impetus for the living his-tory exhibit is the host organization for Railroad Days, the Northwest Railway Museum. It’s also the 125th anniversary of the first train’s arrival in Snoqualmie.
“It’s a way to let people experience history first-hand, instead of reading about it in a book or having someone talk about it,” Barchi said. “There’s nothing as cool as seeing children’s eyes when they can try something, especially in this day and age when everybody’s plugged in.”
Experience living history at Snoqualmie’s Railroad Days
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Mount Si football coach Charlie Kinnune is Railroad Days grand marshal
By Seth Truscott
Editor
Charlie Kinnune’s gravelly voice rings out across Mount Si stadium. With a command here, a compliment there, a gentle ribbing for one elementary-age boy with his hands in his pockets, a fist-bump for a young girl doing well in drills, he’s bringing up a future generation of high school athletes.
Kinnune has led the Mount Si High School football program for 23 years. As head coach, he is really only the foremost member of a widening circle of coaches, parents and volunteers who make the program work. So, when I ask Kinnune about his efforts and approach, which have earned him grand marshal status for the 2014 Railroad Days parade, he tends to refer to the football family more than himself.
“Kids are our future,” says Kinnune. “We’re around a lot of kids.”
First, there’s the little leagues and speed camp, where Kinnune spends most of his summer. Then the junior leagues. Finally, there’s the high school program. Between C-team, junior varsity and the varsity squad, there’s about 350 families whose sons and daughters are directly influ-enced by Kinnune.
He agreed to be marshal because the event, like football, is part of the community.
“We’re a very young community,” he says, recognizing that, with two decades into the program, he’s earned some credibility.
With children’s Speed Camp underway, some of Mount Si’s many assistant coaches, Wayne Lewis, Brian Tawney and Randy Griffin, are at the stadium today. Dozens are part of the program (See them all at http://mtsihsfootball.com/coaches.asp). “They’re all kid-magnets,” Kinnune said.
Coaching has changed a lot since he was a kid. It’s differ-ent now. Coaches are teachers, learners.
Can a football coach be a nice guy? I ask.“Look at Pete Carroll,” the famously positive head coach
of the Seahawks, Kinnune said. “You have to be able to coach the modern athlete. You
have to work with kids and parents, and really be in tune with what makes them tick. We spend a lot of time learning our learners, finding out what works for them.”
“I try to take 120 of the most aggressive males in our hallways, and keep them tempered and focused,” Kinnune said, “and allow them to have an outlet on the football field and in the weight room, so that in the classrooms and com-mons, they’re gentlemen. And they can handle themselves.
Seth Truscott/Staff Photo
Mount Si head coach Charlie Kinnune leads a group of elemen-tary-age athletes at summer speed camps Wednesday, Aug. 6, at Wildcat Stadium. Kinnune has headed Wildcat football for 23 seasons.
Walking the talk
We have our times. It’s all about choices. Kids have so many choices. I feel my job is to hold them accountable to what they say, do and act.”
Coaches take academics seriously.“We know that’s the backbone of the development of
these kids,” Kinnune said.Kinnune’s work with younger children is fun for him, and
pays dividends down the road for them.“I love it, I invite them to our high school events, and they
look forward to coming up to the high school,” he said. “We
have great families, great parents. They want to see their kids active, and devel-op a lifelong love of fitness.”
The activity, all the run-ning, stretching and con-ditioning, also teaches kids how to be athletic safely and prevent injury. That’s important, not just for foot-ball, but many sports.
Valley residents and busi-nesses can help Kinnune and the program by coming to games and supporting the team, offering financial assistance if possible.
“We put a lot of money into our academic support program,” said Kinnune. “We scholarship a lot of kids,” providing help with the costs of play to boys who wouldn’t be able to do this otherwise.
He teaches at Mount Si, and with football in the fall and speed camp in sum-mer, he doesn’t take a lot of time off.
“My wife and I love to be around in the summer,” he said. “We love the Valley, love Puget Sound. We do lit-tle day things. When we get out of town, we get out of town in the winter… I have probably taken five weeks of vacation in my 20 years.”
At one point, our inter-view is interrupted by a phone call, and Kinnune asks to take it. The call concerns college scholar-ship prospects for one of his 2015 seniors, lineman Chris Schlichting.
“It’s his third offer,” Kinnune said. “Welcome to my world.” There are 26 ex-Wildcats playing college football this fall.
“This will be our 27th,” Kinnune said. “It’s just going to get greater.”
• You can learn more about Mount Si football at http://mtsihsfootball.com.
Vital statsKinnune is a 1981 graduate of Issaquah High School. Among high school awards, he was KingCo All League player from 1978 to 1980. He played college ball at Spokane Community College in 1981 and 1982, then at Western Washington University. He was an assistant football coach at Western and at Kentridge High, where he also was head wrestling coach. In 2006, he was named KingCo Head Coach of the Year. Last year, he was the WIAA /Washington State Coaches’ Association SeaKing District Football Coach of the Year.
Essential events
Snoqualmie’s 76th annual Railroad Days has lots of not-to miss events, including:
Grand ParadeFor over 70 years,
Railroad Days has included a grand parade down Railroad Avenue, downtown.
The parade is 11 a.m. Saturday, Aug. 16.
Art in the ParkView local artistic
creations and meet the people who make art, all weekend at Snoqualmie’s Railroad Park.
Art in the Park is 5 p.m. to 9 p.m. Friday, 11 a.m. to 8 p.m. Saturday and 11 a.m. to 4 p.m. Sunday, across King Street from the Depot.
Wagon ridesTake an old-fash-
ioned wagon ride, free, at Snoqualmie’s historic Railroad Days, on the Carmichael’s horse-drawn wagon.
Visitors can hop on the open wagon, drawn by Wayne Buckner’s draft horses and enjoy a leisurely trip up and down Falls Avenue, noon to 3 p.m. Saturday, Aug. 16.
Board at the corner of Falls Avenue and River Street.
Carmichael’s True Value has sponsored the rides for years.
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Railroad Days EventsFriday, Aug. 15
• Main Stage, 7:30 to 9:30 pm• Train rides, 11 am to 4 pm• Arts Stage, 5 to 8:45 pm• Art in the Park, 5 to 9 pm• Wine garden, beer garden & food, 5 to 9 pm
Saturday, Aug. 16• Firefighter’s Pancake Breakfast, 7 to 11 am• Plein Air Paint Out, 9 am to 3 pm• Railroad Days Fun Run, 9 to 11 am• Beer garden, noon to 10 pm• Food and vendors, 10 am to 6 pm• Grand parade, 11 am to noon• Train rides, 11 am to 4 pm, also Sunday• Art in the Park, 11 am to 8 pm• Timber Sports, 1 & 3:30 pm• Main stage, 11:45 am to 10 pm• Arts stage, noon to 8:45 pm• Kids Paint Junction, 11 am to 3 pm• Wagon rides, noon to 3 pm• Wine garden, noon to 9 pm• Field of Fun, noon to 5 pm, also Sunday• Kids’ Stage, 12:30 to 4:15 pm
Sunday, Aug. 17• Legends Classic Car Show, 8 to 4 pm
• Arts stage, 9:30 am to 4 pm• Arts at the Depot, 11 am to 4 pm• Kids’ stage, 11 am to 3:05 pm• Wine Garden, noon to 4 pm • Beer Garden, 11 am to 3 pm• History Comes Alive, 9 am to 4 pm
Schedule: Three days of fun, three stagesOn the Main Stage:
Snoqualmie Railroad Days’ Main Stage features a mix of styles and sounds. You are sure to find music you will love. So, check out the schedule and plan to be front-row-center and get your groove on.
Friday, Aug. 15• 7:30 to 9:30 pm, Randy Hansen, Jimi Hendrix tribute
Saturday, Aug. 16• 11:45 am to 12:30 pm, Clan Gordon, pipes and drums • 12:45 to 1:45 pm, Stillwater Hill Bluegrass Band• 2:15 to 3:15 pm, Kickin’ Dust, country• 3:45 to 4:45 pm, Jeff Menteer, blues• 5:30 to 7:30 pm, Heart by Heart, classic rock• 6:30 to 7:30 pm, Left Coast Gypsies, original rock & folk• 8:15 to 10 pm, Spike & the Impalers, classic rock
Sunday, Aug. 17• 11:30 am to 1 pm, Keith Scott, Chicago blues • 1:30 to 3 pm, Little Hurricane, classic rock
On the Arts Stage:Snoqualmie Railroad Days’ Arts Stage showcases talent
from throughout the region.
Friday, Aug. 15• 5 to 6 pm, Kevin Jones, original, blues, rock ‘n’ roll & covers• 6:15 to 7:45 pm, Cascade Jazz Quartet, jazz originals and modern standards
Saturday, Aug. 16• Noon to 12:30 pm, Cascade Dance Academy• 12:30 to 1 pm, Amanda Csendes, teen talent• 1 to 2 pm, Ryegrass, bluegrass and folk• 2 to 3:30 pm, Eric Fridrich, Afro-Cuban blues• 3:45 to 4:15 pm, Allesandra, bellydance• 4:30 to 5:30 pm, The Fire Inside, Celtic• 5:45 to 6:45 pm, Susanna Fuller, variety• 6:45 to 7:45 pm, Ron Wiley, pop, rock and covers
Sunday, Aug. 17• 9:30 to 11 am, Future Voice of the Valley, young talent• 11 to 11:45 am, Dylan Cragle, teen talent• 11:45 am to 12:30 pm, Danielle Tomlinson, teen talent• 12:30 to 1 pm, Ana Kilian, teen talent
• 1 to 1:30 pm, Mikaela Barnard, teen talent• 2 to 3 pm, Alex Ivy, originals, covers, pop and gospel • 3 to 4 pm, Tyler Dobbs, covers, pop, jazz, rock ‘n’ roll
On the Kid’s StageFor more family fun, visit the Kid’s Stage. Look for a
bounce house, motor car rides and historic railroad dem-onstrations, too.
Saturday, Aug. 16• 12:30 to 1:15 pm, Brian Vogan • 1:30 to 2 pm, Big Star Studios Performance Team• 2:20 to 3:05, and 3:30 to 4:15 pm, Eric Ode
Sunday, Aug. 17 • 11 to 11:45 am, Eric Ode• 12:30 to 1:15 pm, Brian Vogan• 2 to 3:05 pm, Nancy Stewart
WWW.VALLEYRECORD.COM Snoqualmie Valley Record • August 13, 2014 • 13
Pancake breakfast helps Snoqualmie firefighters
The Snoqualmie Firefighters Association holds its annual fundraising Pancake Breakfast, 7 to 11 a.m. Saturday, Aug. 16, at the fire station, 37600 S.E. Snoqualmie Parkway.
The non-profit association supports the fire department with equipment purchases and helps local organizations and historic preservation.
The firefighter-cooked breakfast includes pan-cakes, ham, orange juice and coffee served in
the main equipment bay at the fire station. Cost is $5 for adults, $3 for children (under 5
free). Children can also explore fire engines and ambulances, and parents can find lots of photo opportunities with the firefighters.
A $2 raffle for items from local businesses and a silent auction for items, such as stays at the Salish Lodge, golfing at TPC, and gift certificates from Woodman Lodge, DirtFish Rally School, Northwest Railway Museum, local spas and ath-letic clubs, is also part of the breakfast.
T-shirts, bike helmets and bandanas for pets and people are available for purchase.
To learn more, call the Snoqualmie Fire Department at (425) 888-1551.
See timber sports pros in action at RR Days demosVisitors to Snoqualmie’s Railroad Days will see timber sports in action, as done by the pros.See whirling chainsaws, flying hatchets and swift-slicing axes at two shows, 1 p.m. and 3:30 p.m. Saturday, Aug. 16, at Sandy Cove Park, just off King Street, down-town.Snoqualmie’s own David Moses, an international tim-ber sports competitor, heads up a roster of experienced timber athletes performing the demos.The first show, at 1 p.m., showcases local police and firefighters giving a repeat performance of their timber sports competition from last year.Besides David, you may see Annette Moses, David’s wife and a pro timber athlete in her own right, perform. David Moses, Sr., an experi-enced timber sports enthusi-ast and David’s trainer, may also give some chopping demonstrations.Expect to see underhand standing chop, springboard chop, the single and double-buck saws, and the jack-and-jill sawing event. You’ll also see demonstra-tions of the hot saw, a modi-fied chainsaw that’s revved up and a cut above your typical tool.David may also be inviting a lucky few from the crowd to try their hand at throwing a full-sized axe at a target, another event in the timber sports competitions.
File photos
David Moses, Sr., gives a demonstration in the 2013 Railroad Days tim-ber sports show.
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Inspired by the outdoors
Snoqualmie Plein Air Paint Out happens Saturday
Artists of all levels can find inspiration, learn from each other, and participate in the magic of painting in the great outdoors.
At the sixth Annual Snoqualmie Plein Air Paint Out, 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. Saturday, Aug. 16, artists are welcome to explore the city, find an inspiring place to paint, then share their creations.
“Plein Air” is French for open air, and the paint out is simply a reason for artists to gather, create a painting in the outdoors, in a single day, in a beautiful setting.
“Plein air has become the big thing in art. Of course it goes back hundreds of years to Cezanne and others, but plein air is sud-denly what all the artists want to do,” says event founder Jeff Waters “They love to be outside painting. That’s part of it. The other part is the incredible beauty of this Valley... this is just a rich tapestry of places to paint.”
Artists paint throughout Snoqualmie’s city parks and key locations, and there are also several venues for instructor demon-strations.
Rules and requirements for participation are minimal. For those artists who don’t want to enter the poster contest, there’s only one rule: “You have to be on-site, working,” Waters said. Painters can also sell their works, of course. “We encourage that, and we don’t take any commission,” Waters added.
For those who hope to win the honor of making next year’s event poster last year’s poster pictured at right), you start with a blank canvas, and have it stamped by orga-nizers. There is no entry fee.
The deadline for the poster con-test is 3 p.m., when an artists’ reception begins at The Black Dog, 8062 Railroad Avenue. Members of the Snoqualmie Arts Commission will select the winning entry. Food will be served.
The grand prize: Seeing your work on the poster for next year. New this year, are second and third place prizes - $100 and $50 gift certificates to Daniel Smith Art Supplies. Last year’s winning painting, by Stan Chraminsky, appears on the poster available at Carmichael’s Hardware.
WWW.VALLEYRECORD.COM Snoqualmie Valley Record • August 13, 2014 • 15
Celtic sounds break new ground
By Seth TruscottEditor
It’s an old story. The young man is leaving his
homeland for America, to earn his fortune and return to his sweetheart. Promises are made: He’ll return someday.
“They didn’t always come back,” says Tami Curtis, whose ancestors departed Ireland generations ago. “They found new homes, new dreams, a new honey, and turned their back on their old land.”
Those tales of heartbreak, of lots of looking ahead, and a little looking back, are at the heart of the tunes that Curtis, songwriter for the Eastside band The Fire Inside, and her bandmates weave. Some are based on family history, but loosely.
“Why let the truth get in the way of a good story?” asks Curtis.
The Fire Inside plays at 4:30 p.m. Saturday on the Arts Stage at Railroad Park, and 7 to 9 at the Sno Falls Brewpub. Listeners can get a taste of the band’s new sound, which references Curtis’s heritage.
Her songs depict the era when many Irish left their dwindling home-land prospects and headed
to America. She follows characters who end up in Nevada, working the silver mines, intermingling sad-ness, humor, betrayal and beer.
Based in Issaquah, Snoqualmie and Redmond, The Fire Inside is led by accomplished musicians Ashley Sullivan on fiddle and Daniel Horn on the uil-leann pipes and whistles. Both have played music since the age of 4. Michael Hurtenbach of Snoqualmie leads the rhythm section on guitar, providing vocals, and concertina on several jigs and hornpipes.
Hurtenbach is a Valley school bus driver, who pulls out his concertina and plays for students at stops.
Curtis, of Issaquah, is a writer, mom and communi-ty activist, who offers vocals and bolsters the rhythm section with her Irish drum, the bodhrán.
Rounding out the group is David Edfeldt of Issaquah, who plays mandolin and bass ukulele. A program-mer, he just got his walking papers from Microsoft, but just two months before he planned to retire, so it’s OK. Now, there’s more time for the band.
Like any band, The Fire Inside has evolved and changed over time, add-ing and losing members.
Its origins were in the fid-dlers’ jams in Issaquah, when Edfeldt and others started learning old-time Americana music.
Soon, a group coalesced around Irish music. Starting with the fiddlers, they added other instrumental-ists—a penny whistle here, a drummer there, later a gui-tarist—who came and went.
“We’re down to a group of five who really get along well,” Edfeldt said. “We can read each other well, with-out barriers, and exist in a really creative environment. The flow is so tight right now.”
Last March, The Fire Inside was chosen to play at the prestigious Irish Heritage Festival at Seattle Center during “Irish Week,” an honor bestowed upon only four bands over two days. They released their first album “Strike the Match” in December. A new album, “Spark,” comes out this fall.
These musicians range in age from 34 to 63, most fitting in families and jobs with year-round touring.
“We play a lot of different audiences,” said Curtis. “We do senior homes, which is great—they listen to our every word. You can tell these stories that they laugh and get… you can unfurl a story.”
But The Fire Inside also plays the pubs, where it’s a different vibe by far.
“You have 10 seconds in a pub to get a story across,” Edfeldt said. Go too long, and you will be hollered at.
When you’re in a pub, listeners don’t need instru-mentals or tales.
“Rowdy is good in a pub,” says Edfeldt. “People want songs. Particularly, naughty songs.”
“One of the biggest struggles is that we are Northwest,” said Curtis. “We have a fiddler who grew up on a combination of bluegrass and classical music.”
Sullivan plays in the clas-sical style, distinct from the old Irish tradition.
“We could walk on a stage, and an Irish player might snub us if they didn’t look at us with more of a global view,” she said. “We are five individuals creating something that’s not quite one category.”
North Bend resident Greg Sterns, a former band mem-ber who is from Ireland, taught Curtis how to play the bodhrán, and gave the group their name.
“He said, ‘Despite any faults in our youth and our wallets, we will always have the musical fire inside,’” she recalled.
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‘The earth laughs in fl owers’ ~ Ralph Waldo Emerson
Railroad demonstrationsThe history of successful railroad con-
struction and maintenance is peppered
with fascinating machines. The Northwest Railway Museum has several examples in its collection and Railroad Days is an opportu-nity to see some of them demonstrated.
You’ll see motor cars, a tie spacer, an automatic spiker, a ballast regulator, and even special cranes that travel on both the railroad and the road.
Demos of the old railroading machines are scheduled for 12:15, 1:15, 2:15 and 3:15 p.m at the Snoqualmie Depot.