Moses Lake resident provides a little lockdown cheer
CHARLES H. FEATHERSTONE | Hagadone News Network | UPDATED 4 years, 9 months AGO
MOSES LAKE — One Moses Lake resident has decided the town needs a little cheering up during the COVID-19 lockdown.
So, Alan Coulter put up some of his inflatable holiday display animals in the front yard of his house, at the corner of West Inglewood Avenue and South Crestwood Drive.
Two of them — a Valentine’s Day bear and a Christmas moose — are wearing masks, while all of them are maintaining a proper six-foot “social distance.”
“There’s been a lot of negativity and bad news and not a lot of things that make your day brighter,” Coulter said.
Coulter and his wife Cheryl put up the small display of inflatable characters representing significant holidays — an inflatable American flag, a Valentine’s Day bear, a leprechaun, a scarecrow, an Easter Bunny holding an egg, and a moose dressed as Santa Claus — two weeks ago to help lighten the city’s mood.
Coulter is known for his ornate Christmas yard displays of thousands of lights and scores of inflatable characters, as well as displays at other days like Halloween.
“I saw a piece that someone put up their Christmas lights,” Coulter said. “Someone asked me to do that, and I said no. I’d just put them away.”
But he did decide to take out one character for each holiday.
“It takes people’s minds off things for a little bit,” Coulter said. “But we’re not getting the traffic we get at Christmastime, which is good. People are staying home like they should be.”
Coulter said he also has a couple of stuffed teddy bears in his windows as part of the worldwide “Teddy Bear Hunt” inspired by Michael Rosen’s children’s book, “We’re Going on a Bear Hunt.” It’s a game people are playing wherever the COVID-19 pandemic has prompted closures and lockdowns, putting teddy bears in windows and then counting the ones they see.
In fact, there’s a Facebook page devoted to the teddy bear hunt in Moses Lake.
“We have a few of them,” Coulter said. “We found 62 of them around town.”
And once you start looking for them, you see them a lot of places. For example, a pair of stuffed sloths grace the window of The Cutting Edge Salon on Third Avenue, and a bright green teddy bear with a silver bow and holding a smaller black teddy bear sits in the window of attorney Larry Tracy’s offices on Fourth Avenue.
“My kids put it there this weekend,” Tracy said.
“We are a family here,” said Ali Prentice, owner of The Cutting Edge, noting that the 5-year-old daughter of one of her stylists was very excited about putting the stuffed sloths in the window. “This all sucks, but we’re going to be fine.”
Salons and barber shops were among the first businesses Inslee closed.
As for his yard display, Coulter said he wasn’t sure how much longer he would maintain it.
“I gotta mow and fertilize the yard pretty quick,” he said. “Maybe another week or two.”
Charles H. Featherstone can be reached at cfeatherstone@columbiabasinherald.com.
ARTICLES BY CHARLES H. FEATHERSTONE
Potato prices up, sales down for first quarter 2023
DENVER — The value of grocery store potato sales rose 16% during the first three months of 2023 as the total volume of sales fell by 4.4%, according to a press release from PotatoesUSA, the national marketing board representing U.S. potato growers. The dollar value of all categories of U.S. potato products for the first quarter of 2023 was $4.2 billion, up from $3.6 billion for the first three months of 2022. However, the total volume of potato sales fell to 1.77 billion pounds in the first quarter of 2023 compared with 1.85 billion pounds during the same period of 2022, the press release noted. However, total grocery store potato sales for the first quarter of 2023 are still above the 1.74 billion pounds sold during the first three months of 2019 – a year before the outbreak of the COVID-19 pandemic, the press release said.
WSU Lind Dryland Research Station welcomes new director
LIND — Washington State University soil scientist and wheat breeder Mike Pumphrey was a bit dejected as he stood in front of some thin test squares of stunted, somewhat scraggly spring wheat at the university’s Lind Dryland Research Station. “As you can see, the spring wheat is having a pretty tough go of it this year,” he said. “It’s a little discouraging to stand in front of plots that are going to yield maybe about seven bushels per acre. Or something like that.” Barely two inches of rain have fallen at the station since the beginning of March, according to station records. Pumphrey, speaking to a crowd of wheat farmers, researchers, seed company representatives and students during the Lind Dryland Research Station’s annual field day on Thursday, June 15, said years like 2023 are a reminder that dryland farming is a gamble.
Wilson Creek hosts bluegrass gathering
WILSON CREEK — Bluegrass in the Park is set to start today at Wilson Creek City Park. The inaugural event is set to bring music and visitors to one of Grant County’s smallest towns. “I've been listening to bluegrass my whole life,” said the event’s organizer Shirley Billings, whose family band plays on their porch every year for the crowd at the Little Big Show. “My whole family plays bluegrass. And I just wanted to kind of get something for the community going. So I just invited all the people that I know and they’ll come and camp and jam.” ...