Senior Times - April 2016

16
Senior Times 8919 W. Grandridge Blvd., Ste. A1 Kennewick, WA 99336 PRESORTED STANDARD U.S. POSTAGE PAID PASCO, WA PERMIT NO. 8778 PLEASE DELIVER TO CURRENT OCCUPANT Roses grown by all Tri-Cities gardeners invited to show DON’T MISS IT April 19 9 a.m. - 3 p.m. Senior Times Spring Expo Pasco Red Lion 509-737-8778 Northwest Trek gives uncaged views of wildlife Tie flies with Columbia Basin Fly Casters By Loretto J. Hulse Whether your tastes run to 1920s rusty rattlers, 1950s-style flashy hotrods or those classics in between, you’ll find them all at Ye Olde Car Club of Tri-Cities’ annual Swap Meet on May 7. The swap meet is from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. and will be held indoors and outdoors at the Benton Franklin Fairgrounds in Kennewick. Admission is free. While some of the cars at the swap meet will be for sale, the main attraction is the chance to talk to others who have a similar love for old relics. You can swap stories and learn from others who’ve found the best way to remove rust, or the best paints and upholstery techniques, said John Trumbo, swap meet chairman. “It’s a very social, very educational event that’s all about the hobby,” he said. The swap meet has taken place annually since 1976 and is one of the most popular events of its kind in the Pacific Northwest. It draws more than 200 car part vendors from Washington, Oregon, Idaho, British Columbia and Nevada. It’s a great place to rummage for hard to find parts for vehicles from the 1920s to the 1970s. “You can also buy cars — if you can call them that. A lot are missing pieces and would have to be taken home on a trailer,” Trumbo said. About 3,000 people attend the event each year, he added. “The swap meet attracts basically anyone with a very strong interest in cars, whether they’re hobby type, classic antiques or col- lectibles,” Trumbo said. Antique vehicles are generally classified as those from the mid-1920s and older while classic cars are those large and luxuri- ous cars — like Duesenbergs, Chryslers, Cadillacs and Auburns — built up until 1920 and up to the Depression, he said. Jack Kiley of the Olympia Rose Society prepares his roses for entry into the 2015 Seattle Rose Society’s rose show. Kiley is treasurer of the Pacific Northwest District of the American Rose Society, a national organization promoting the culture and appropriation of roses and and propagation of new varieties. Photo courtesy of Harlow Young of the Tri-City Rose Society. Volume 4 • Issue 4 April 2016 Tri-Cities’ women create hand-dyed wool Car parts, repair tips and tall tales all exchanged at annual auto swap meet Washington’s partnership with insurance agencies strengthens long-term care policies By Jessica Hoefer for Senior Times In their mid-20s, at a time when Todd and Daydra Bauman’s biggest worry should have been paying off student loan debt or saving up for their first home, the couple faced the unthinkable. A rare illness debilitated the 27-year-old Daydra. “A normal body can detect what’s good and what’s bad,” said Todd Bauman. “Her body couldn’t.” Because of her condition, Daydra required assistance as her sight and mobility suffered. Her husband tried to help as much as he could, but he needed work so the couple could stay ahead of the every-mounting piles of medical bills. “We had to pay somebody to be with her at home,” Todd Bauman explained. Thankfully, Daydra Bauman regained her strength within a year and was able to manage most daily tasks on her own. But the couple hasn’t forgotten the financial and emotional burden they bore during that time. By Loretto J. Hulse Royalty could be hiding among the roses in your garden. And there’s only one way to find them — enter your blooms in the Tri-City Rose Society’s 68 th annual show May 28 at the Richland Community Center. One of your roses could easily be named King, Queen or Princess of the Show. “We’ve seen over the years that even someone who’s never shown before can have roses just as beauti- ful, just as worthy of a blue ribbon, as someone who’s been showing for years,” said Rose Show Chairman JoAnn Brehm. There’s no entry fee and entries will be accepted from 7:30 to 10 a.m. on the back patio of the community cen- ter. You don’t have to be a Rose Society member to enter. The only require- ment is that you must have grown the blooms yourself and know the name of the rose. Even if the tag is long lost, take it anyway. Chances are good that one of the consulting rosarians at the show, who all have years of training, will be able to identify it. uROSE, Page 8 uCARS, Page 2 uINSURANCE, Page 6

description

 

Transcript of Senior Times - April 2016

Page 1: Senior Times - April 2016

Senior Times8919 W. Grandridge Blvd., Ste. A1

Kennewick, WA 99336

PRESORTED STANDARD

U.S. POSTAGE PAID PAScO, WA

PERMIT NO. 8778 PLEASE DELIVER TO CURRENT OCCUPANT

Roses grown by all Tri-Cities gardeners invited to show

Don’t miss it

April 199 a.m. - 3 p.m.senior times spring Expo

Pasco Red Lion509-737-8778

northwest trek gives uncaged

views of wildlife

tie flies with Columbia Basin

Fly Casters

By Loretto J. HulseWhether your tastes run to 1920s rusty

rattlers, 1950s-style flashy hotrods or those classics in between, you’ll find them all at Ye Olde Car Club of Tri-Cities’ annual Swap Meet on May 7.

The swap meet is from 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. and will be held indoors and outdoors at the Benton Franklin Fairgrounds in Kennewick. Admission is free.

While some of the cars at the swap meet will be for sale, the main attraction is the chance to talk to others who have a similar love for old relics. You can swap stories and learn from others who’ve found the best way to remove rust, or the best paints and upholstery techniques, said John Trumbo, swap meet chairman.

“It’s a very social, very educational event that’s all about the hobby,” he said.

The swap meet has taken place annually since 1976 and is one of the most popular events of its kind in the Pacific Northwest. It draws more than 200 car part vendors from Washington, Oregon, Idaho, British Columbia and Nevada.

It’s a great place to rummage for hard to find parts for vehicles from the 1920s to the 1970s.

“You can also buy cars — if you can call them that. A lot are missing pieces and would have to be taken home on a trailer,” Trumbo said.

About 3,000 people attend the event each year, he added.

“The swap meet attracts basically anyone with a very strong interest in cars, whether they’re hobby type, classic antiques or col-lectibles,” Trumbo said.

Antique vehicles are generally classified as those from the mid-1920s and older while classic cars are those large and luxuri-ous cars — like Duesenbergs, Chryslers, Cadillacs and Auburns — built up until 1920 and up to the Depression, he said.

Jack Kiley of the Olympia Rose Society prepares his roses for entry into the 2015 Seattle Rose Society’s rose show. Kiley is treasurer of the Pacific Northwest District of the American Rose Society, a national organization promoting the culture and appropriation of roses and and propagation of new varieties. Photo courtesy of Harlow Young of the Tri-City Rose Society.

Volume 4 • Issue 4April 2016

tri-Cities’ women create hand-dyed

wool

Car parts, repair tips and tall tales all exchanged at annual auto swap meet

Washington’s partnership with insurance agencies strengthens long-term care policiesBy Jessica Hoefer for Senior Times

In their mid-20s, at a time when Todd and Daydra Bauman’s biggest worry should have been paying off student loan debt or saving up for their first home, the couple faced the unthinkable. A rare illness debilitated the 27-year-old Daydra.

“A normal body can detect what’s good and what’s bad,” said Todd Bauman. “Her body couldn’t.”

Because of her condition, Daydra required assistance as her sight and mobility suffered. Her husband tried to

help as much as he could, but he needed work so the couple could stay ahead of the every-mounting piles of medical bills.

“We had to pay somebody to be with her at home,” Todd Bauman explained.

Thankfully, Daydra Bauman regained her strength within a year and was able to manage most daily tasks on her own. But the couple hasn’t forgotten the financial and emotional burden they bore during that time.

By Loretto J. HulseRoyalty could be hiding among the

roses in your garden. And there’s only one way to find them — enter your blooms in the Tri-City Rose Society’s 68th annual show May 28 at the Richland Community Center.

One of your roses could easily be named King, Queen or Princess of the Show.

“We’ve seen over the years that even someone who’s never shown before can have roses just as beauti-ful, just as worthy of a blue ribbon, as someone who’s been showing for years,” said Rose Show Chairman

JoAnn Brehm.There’s no entry fee and entries will

be accepted from 7:30 to 10 a.m. on the back patio of the community cen-ter.

You don’t have to be a Rose Society member to enter. The only require-ment is that you must have grown the blooms yourself and know the name of the rose. Even if the tag is long lost, take it anyway. Chances are good that one of the consulting rosarians at the show, who all have years of training, will be able to identify it.

uROSE, Page 8

uCARS, Page 2

uINSURANCE, Page 6

Page 2: Senior Times - April 2016

2 Senior Times • April 2016

(509) 737-8778(509) 737-8448 fax

8919 W. Grandridge Blvd., Ste. A1Kennewick, WA 99336

srtimes.com

Senior Times accepts original columns from local professionals, educators and business leaders.

The goal of these pieces is to share use-ful tips and knowledge helpful to seniors. It is best to contact the Senior Times office for a copy of contributor guidelines before submitting anything. Although we cannot publish every submission we receive, we will keep columns that best fit the mission and focus of Senior Times for possible future use.

Senior Times also accepts original letters to the editor and guest editorials. Submissions must include the writer’s full name and daytime contact information for verification.

All submissions will be edited for spell-ing, grammar, punctuation and questions of good taste or libel.

If there is news you’d like Senior Times staff to report on, or there are any topics you’d like to read about, please contact the news staff via email at [email protected] or (509) 737-8778.

Senior Times, a publication of TriComp Inc., is published monthly. Subscriptions are $20 per year, prepayment required, no refunds. Contents of this publication are the sole prop-erty of TriComp Inc. and can not be repro-duced in any form without expressed written consent. Opinions expressed by contributors and advertisers do not necessarily reflect the opinions of Senior Times staff, other contribu-tors or other advertisers, nor do they imply endorsement by Senior Times staff, other con-tributors or advertisers. Every effort will be made to assure information published is cor-rect; however, we are not liable for any errors or omissions made despite these efforts.

Loretto J. HulseReporter(509) 737-8778 ext. [email protected]

Melanie HoeferGeneral Manager(509) 737-8778 ext. [email protected]

Mike HaugenAdvertising Director(509) 737-8778 ext. [email protected]

Shawna DinhAd Design/Production(509) 737-8778 ext. [email protected]

Britta ThompsonAdvertising Account Manager(509) 737-8778 ext. [email protected]

Mary CoffmanManaging Editor/Reporter(509) 737-8778 ext. [email protected]

Staff

1143

Jessica Hoefer..................................Cathy MacCaul.............................Elsie Puig........................................

CONtRIBUtORS

CARS, From page 1“Collectible cars are not era-spe-

cific and include those from the 1920s and 1930s and post W.W.II, including the fat-fendered cars of the 1940s and mid-1950s,” Trumbo said.

The performance automobiles are classic mid-1950s like T-Birds and Chevys that are frequently hot-rod-ded and the muscle car era vehicles of the 1970s that had monster engines in them, he said.

When Ye Olde Car Club was founded in 1962, most of the mem-bers had cars from the 1920s and 1930s. But as the club members aged through the decades, the cars have become newer, though still not automobiles commonly found for sale on used car lots.

The swap meet will be in Building 2 and at the paved area and the lawn near the entrance. Food will be available.

Proceeds from the event help Ye

Olde Car Club of Tri-Cities under-write its annual scholarship dona-tions to the Kennewick School District’s Tri-Tech Skill Center automotive program and various Tri-Cities’ charities.

A limited number of vendor spac-es are still available and must be reserved by April 23. For more information or to register as a ven-dor for the swap meet, contact John Trumbo at 582-4297 or 366-2241.

For more information about Ye

Olde Car Club of Tri-Cities go to yocc.org. The group meets each Wednesday at 7 a.m. at Sterling’s Restaurant at 2500 Queensgate Blvd., in Richland and visitors are welcome.

The club organizes dozens of tours and outings with their cars during the year including visits to two dozen retirement and assisted-living facilities in the Tri-Cities in the spring and summer.

Gearheads will find plenty of treasures at Ye Olde Car Club Annual Tri-Cities’ Swap Meet, which will be May 7 at the Benton Franklin Fairgrounds in Kennewick. The show has something of interest for all.

“[The swap meet] is a very social, very

educational event that’s all about the hobby.”

- John Trumbo,Ye Olde Car Club of Tri-

Cities’ Swap Meet chairman

Page 3: Senior Times - April 2016

3Senior Times • April 2016

By Elsie Puig for Senior TimesNorthwest Trek in Tacoma is part

zoo and part Wildlife Park. The park is situated among towering Douglas fir trees in 725-acres 35 miles southeast of Tacoma off State Highway 161 near Eatonville.

Northwest Trek, which is accredited by the Association of Zoos & Aquariums, is dedicated to conserva-tion, education and recreation by dis-playing, interpreting and researching native Northwest wildlife and their natural habitats.

The park offers visitors a 50-minute narrated tram tour along a five-mile loop of its 435-acre free-roaming area featuring meadows, lush forests, and thick woodland trails. From the moment visitors hop on the tram, it’s like a game of Where’s Waldo. The immersive tour takes visitors just feet away from herds of American bison and Roosevelt elk, bighorn sheep, mountain goats, deer, caribou and moose and one moose, and spotting them is half the fun. A knowledgeable naturalist guides you through the forest and offers interesting facts and infor-mation on the different free-roaming animals.

All the free-roaming animals are herbivores and part of the bovine fam-ily. All the animals are native to the Northwest and can be found in in the wild in Washington, except the bison, which were overhunted in the 1800s and now only exist as managed herds. Northwest Trek is home to more than 200 animals representing 43 species.

Visitors can also walk forested trails and paved paths through the forest to view golden eagles, snowy owls, and large predators like grizzly bears, wolves, cougars, black bears, foxes, coyotes, lynx, and bobcats, all in natu-ral, up-close enclosed exhibits. In the smaller, wetland areas, you’ll see bea-vers, fishers, and wolverines.

During daily Trailside Encounters, animal keepers offer talks, giving visi-tors a closer look at some of the ani-mals.

The park also offers specialized tours for photographers looking to cap-ture the perfect picture from a tram. Keeper’s Tours allows visitors to climb on the bed of a truck and see park staff feeding free-roaming animals during daily morning rounds. During the elk-breeding season in September, visitors can enjoy a two-hour guided tour and participate in listening for elk calls, notice special postures and, on occa-sion, see the bull elk spar. Those tours are $60 for Northwest Trek members and $65 for all others.

Northwest Trek also offers activities like zip lining and challenge courses carefully positioned through the park’s tree canopy. The courses offer fun and educational opportunities for children as young as 5 and adults of all ages. Each course contains sections of zip line separated by barriers that visitors must walk, climb or crawl over.

The challenges feature swinging log bridges, tight ropes, bridges with slat-ted steps, cargo nets, and even some balance beams.

In April, Northwest Trek will debut a new half-acre, nature-inspired play-ground and rock climbing area for children. The playground will allow

children to climb through a massive old growth tree trunk, splash in a cascading stream, build forts and sculpt struc-tures.

Northwest Trek Wildlife Park is also a great place to see and learn about Northwest-native plants and flowers. Visit the Rain Garden in the center hub of the park, or just stroll through the trails to see a variety of wildflowers and plants.

In 1971, Dr. David “Doc” and Connie Hellyer donated the original

land that became Northwest Trek Wildlife Park to Metro Parks Tacoma. At the time, the land was valued at $3 million to $5 million. Northwest Trek opened its doors four years later on July 17, 1975.

Over the next 15 years, the park expanded its exhibits and grew in size. More than 6.5 million people have vis-ited the park since it opened.

The park continues on its mission of promoting conservation and wildlife research. Since it opened, the park has been involved in critical repopulation and conservation projects. These proj-ects include acting as a breeding site for the endangered fisheries, mapping wildlife, saving endangered trumpeter swans, pygmy rabbits, Western toads and Oregon-spotted frogs.

Northwest Trek is open seven days a week during spring and summer. Visit www.nwtrek.org for information on prices, hours, and scheduled events.

Northwest Trek Wildlife Park gives visitors close-up view of wildlife

A small herd of Mountain goats can be seen during the tram tours offered at Northwest Trek Wildlife Park, where visitors ride through 435 acres of forest and meadows where animals roam freely. All the animals are native to the northwest and can be found in Washington, except the bison.

Day Trips

IMPROVING OURCOMMUNITY’S HEALTHProviding personalized service to all patients,

no matter their financial circumstance.

Visit one of our convenient locations in Richland, Kennewick or Pasco

Looking for a Qualified Health Plan?Call 509.543.1952 for FREE Assistance!

509.54

3.1999

| myTCCH.org

MEDICAL/DENTALEYE CARE SERVICES

URGENT CARE

PHARMACY/WIC/MSSBEHAVIORAL HEALTH

ENROLLMENT SERVICES

Stop by our TCCH booth at the 2016 Spring Senior Times ExpoTuesday, April 19 • 9:00 a.m. - 3:00 p.m. • Pasco Red Lion

We can assist you with questions about Medicaid Enrollment which is year round!

Page 4: Senior Times - April 2016

4 Senior Times • April 2016

Wednesday, Apr. 611:30 a.m.Monthly meeting & luncheon National Active and RetiredFederal Employees AssociationRed Lion, Columbia Centerwww.narfe1192.org

Thursday, Apr. 75-6 p.m.EMS Levy Public MeetingBC Fire District No. 2 District2604 Bombing Range Road,West Richland509-967-2496

Saturday, Apr. 911 a.m. – 5 p.m.Plant Sale Benefit for The Chaplaincy Hospice HouseAnything Grows Garden Supply1625 Columbia Park Trail, Richland

Sunday, Apr. 1011 a.m. – 5 p.m.Plant Sale Benefit for The Chaplaincy Hospice HouseAnything Grows Garden Supply1625 Columbia Park Trail, Richland

4-6 p.m. Suebonnet Sue ReceptionWhite Bluffs Quilt Museum 294 Torbett, Richlandwhitebluffscenter.org

Monday, Apr. 119 a.m. Medicare ClassKadlec Healthplex1268 Lee Blvd., RichlandRSVP 509-942-2700

Tuesday, Apr. 1210 a.m. Dial-A-Ride Transportation SeminarAffinity TheaterAffinity at Southridge5207 W. Hildebrand Blvd., KennewickRSVP 509-222-1212

Wednesday, Apr. 137 p.m.Monthly MeetingTri-City Genealogical SocietyCharbonneau8264 W. Grandridge Blvd., Kennewick509-554-1050

Thursday, Apr. 146:30 p.m.Grow Your Own VegetablesWSU Extension Master Gardener ProgramMaster Gardener Demonstration GardenMid-Columbia Library1620 W. Union, Kennewick509-735-3551

Friday, Apr. 157-10 p.m.Wild & Scenic Film FestivalBlue Mountain Land TrustMaxey Auditorium, Whitman CollegeBmlt.org

Monday, Apr. 189 a.m. Medicare ClassKadlec Healthplex1268 Lee Blvd., RichlandRSVP 509-942-2700

Tuesday, Apr. 199 a.m. – 3 p.m. Senior Times Spring ExpoPasco Red Lion509-737-8778

Thursday, Apr. 214-5 p.m. Multiple Myeloma UpdateTri-Cities Cancer Center7350 W. Deschutes Ave., KennewickRSVP 509-737-3427

6 p.m.2016 Tri-Citian of the YearThree Rivers Convention Center509-572-4056

7-8 p.m.Bandannas to Badges: Stories &Songs of Northwest WorkersCommunity Series LectureRichland Public Library955 Northgate Dr., Richland

Friday, Apr. 22Noon- 2 p.m. Luau LuncheonParkview Estates7820 W. Sixth Ave., KennewickRSVP 509-734-9773

Noon – 6 p.m. 2016 Spring Bazaar & Flea MarketKennewick Valley Grange #7312611 S. Washington St., Kennewick

Saturday, Apr. 239 a.m. - 4 p.m. 2016 Spring Bazaar & Flea MarketKennewick Valley Grange #7312611 S. Washington St., Kennewick

7 p.m.Wade in the WaterBells of the DesertCentral United Protestant Church1124 Stevens Dr., RichlandBellsofthedesert.org

Wednesday, Apr. 271 – 4 p.m.End of Life Planning SeminarKadlec Healthplex1268 Lee Blvd., RichlandRSVP 509-942-2700

Thursday, Apr. 282-4 p.m. Ice Cream Social-Open HouseDilly Dally PubAffinity at Southridge5207 W. Hildebrand Blvd., KennewickRSVP 509-222-1212

4-5 p.m.The Issues Around Testicular CancerTri-Cities Cancer Center7350 W. Deschutes Ave., KennewickRSVP 509-737-3427

Saturday, Apr. 309 a.m. – 3 p.m. Benton City Spring Opener Car & Bike ShowKiona-Benton City Middle School913 Horne Dr., Benton Citybcspringopener.com

10 a.m. – 2 p.m.Open House U.S. Coast Guard434 Clover Island Dr., Kennewick509-586-1110

Calendar of events

www.homeinstead.com/tricitieswaServing Mid-Columbia and Walla Walla

We’re by your side so your parents can stay at home

Personal Services • CompanionshipMeal Preparation • Alzheimer’s Care

Medication Reminders • Respite CareCall for a free, no obligation appointment!

(509) 591-0019

Page 5: Senior Times - April 2016

Spring Senior Times ExpoAbout 55 vendors will be on hand

for the Spring Senior Times Expo, which will be from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. April 19 at the Pasco Red Lion. The event is free for attendees.

The event is geared toward Baby Boomers and seniors who live through-out the Mid-Columbia. Vendors will offer information about regional activi-ties, health care, investment, retire-ment, senior living facilities and more.

The expo, which takes place twice a year, is free for attendees and includes a Hunt for the Treasure contest with more than two dozen prizes, including Dust Devil tickets, retail gift cards, Mid-Columbia Musical Theatre tickets and more.

Today seniors are more affluent, educated and active than ever before, with that in mind, the Senior Times Expo strives to provide valuable infor-mation, access to a wide range of health services and products, new opportunities and ideas that interest today’s seniors. Exhibitors include insurance professionals, healthcare companies, investment professionals, community organizations, retirement communities, fitness businesses, phar-maceuticals, security, assisted living facilities, nonprofit organizations, senior organizations, and more.

The vendors often offer free promo-tional items to attendees.

For more information about the

Senior Times Expo, contact Mike Haugen at 737-8778.

Gem & Mineral Show planned

The Lakeside Gem & Mineral Club will have its 20th Annual Gem & Mineral Show April 16-17 at the Benton County Fairgrounds.

There will be a large variety of gems, minerals and fossils on display and available for purchase.

The show will be held in Building 1 at the fairgrounds and admission is $5 for adults. Children 14 and under are free if they are accompanied by an adult.

The event includes demonstrations on how to cut spheres out of solid rock, how to crack geodes and the art of jew-elry making. There will also be a junior rock hounds corner, where children can experience discovering precious trea-sures and win prizes.

The show offers door prizes and silent auctions throughout both days at 30-minute intervals. The show opens at 10 a.m. both days and runs until 5 p.m. Saturday and 4 p.m. Sunday.

For information, go to the website at lakesidegemandmineralclub.com.

Banquet helps recovering addicts

The Pacific Northwest Adult & Teen Challenge Tri-Cities Campus will have a banquet to support its addiction recovery services in the Tri-Cities. The banquet will feature a talk by a recov-ering addict and how his life was changed by the program.

The event is at 6 p.m. April 22 at the Red Lion Hotel. Tickets are $25 and are available at the door. For more information, call 509-845-7711, email [email protected], or go to teenchallengepnw.com.

Tri-Citian of the Year Nominations are being accepted

for the 2016 Tri-Citian of the Year. The Tri-Citian of the Year exempli-fies the highest standards of commu-nity service, leadership and the vol-untary contribution of selfless acts to positively impact community devel-opment, economic growth and the overall well-being of mankind. Nomination forms are available at tricitianoftheyear.org and the dead-line is Mar. 17.

The Tri-Citian of the Year will be

named at the annual banquet, which will be 6 p.m. April 21 at the Three Rivers Convention Center in Kennewick.

Matt Potratz, an elite snowmobile free-rider, will be the keynote speak-er.

Tickets are $50 per person. For reservations or more information, call Ruby Ochoa at 509-572-4056 or email [email protected].

Extension offers volunteer trainingThe Washington State University Extension service will provide train-ing for Master Food Preserver volun-teers in Benton and Franklin counties beginning April 19. Participants receive more than 30 hours of intensive training on all aspects of food safety, food storage and food preservation. Once trained, volunteers are asked to provide 50 hours of time helping others in the community through education and outreach. Volunteer time is most often completed by staffing educational booths at local Farmer’s Markets, teaching classes or answering con-sumer questions on the phone. There is a $75 registration fee to cover the cost of training materials. For more information, contact the WSU Benton County Extension office in Kennewick at 509-735-3551.

5Senior Times • April 2016

In Brief

uBRIEFS, Page 14

Name

Business Name (if applicable)

Address Phone

City State Zip

E-mail

Card Number Exp. Date

Name on card 3 Digit Code

Billing Address (zip code too!)

Mail completed forms to:8919 W. Grandridge Blvd., Ste. A1 / Kennewick, WA 99336

509.737.8778 / Fax 509.737.8448 / srtimes.comMake checks payable to Senior Times. Pre-payment required, no refunds. Prices include Kennewick sales tax.

To subscribe, simply fill out the form below. Please notify our office of any address change during your subscription, as the

paper will not be forwarded should you move.Make checks payable to Senior Times.

o One year $21.67 o Two years $34.70 o Three years $42.30

Get local senior news every month in your mailbox

Page 6: Senior Times - April 2016

6 Senior Times • April 2016

INSURANCE, from page 1Todd Bauman, now a State Farm

agent in Walla Walla, often relays the experience to clients considering purchasing long-term care insurance.

Long-term care insurance pays for care not generally covered by regular health insurance or Medicare.

According to the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, a 65-year-old today has a 70 percent chance of needing some type of long-term care services and support in their remaining years. And with health care costs outpacing inflation, Bauman and Kennewick State Farm agent, Scott Smith, agree that it’s an option most people should consider.

“Most of us hope we’ll die in our

sleep when we’re 90 and never need it,” said Smith, “But many people do, and the alterative is that you don’t have it, and you go the state route. The state is going to make sure all the assets you have are used. They’re not going to let you keep a million in the bank. You’ll have to show you’ve depleted what you have.”

Long-term care insurance can protect a person from losing their home, assets and investments, and allow them to pass something on to their children.

On average, a person will use two to three years of long-term care in their lives. Depending on the amount of care they need, a $250,000 policy can disappear quickly. If a person

requires more care, they might have to apply for Medicaid once their benefits run out.

Unless it’s a Washington Partnership for Long-Term Care policy, the state would require the policyholder’s assets, including their home, to be sold to pay for services.

Partnership program policies offer the same benefits and options as non-partnership policies for roughly the same cost; however, under a partnership policy, people can keep assets equivalent to the policy’s maximum coverage. Another difference is that partnership policies also include inflation protection. If you buy a partnership policy in Washington, it will help protect your

assets in other states, too. Washington’s agreement with certain states allows policyholders to move to another reciprocity state and receive dollar-for-dollar asset protection.

Like State Farm, Thrivent Financial is one of a couple of dozen insurance agencies listed on the Washington State Insurance Commission’s website to sell Washington State Long Term Care Partnership Policies.

Before policy benefits can kick in, a person must be unable to perform two of the six activities of daily living, or ADL, which include: bathing, dressing, feeding, toileting, grooming (hygiene) and functional mobility.

Policies can be purchased for two, three or five years of long-term care, but instead of a deductible, Smith said there’s also an elimination period that needs to be fulfilled. When creating a policy, a person can choose from a 30-, 90- or 180-day elimination period to see if they can regain the ability to perform ADL tasks on their own, relying on friends and family to help bridge the gap in the meantime.

“You love that person, but you become their nurse, their servant, their everything,” said Smith. “It’s a tough role to be put into.”

Deb Newman, CEO of the Minnesota-based Newman Long Term Care, said that the impact on the caregiver, both physically and emotionally, could take as many as 10 years off of the life expectancy on the caregiver.

“Is that what we want to be doing to the people that we love the most?” Newman said. “That to me is the reason this discussion [between loved ones] has to happen.”

Advisors suggest talking about long-term care policies early, when they can visualize their retirement, health and assets. However, the longer a person waits, the higher the premiums are as rates go up with age.

“And a lot of people assume everyone can qualify for long-term care. If you’ve already had serious health issues, you might not,” said Smith. “Insurance is all about actuarial odds and some people beat the odds.”

Newman pointed out that deductibles might be tax deductible depending on the type of business someone owns.

“An S-Corp or an LLC, the government has a chart that tells you how much of your premiums you’d be allowed to deduct,” she said.

Michelle Clary, a Wealth Advisor with Thrivent Financial—another agency that carries Partnership Policies—said premiums could be structured so that the expense is gone by the time a person retires.

uINSURANCE, Page 12

Page 7: Senior Times - April 2016

7Senior Times • April 2016

By Loretto J. [email protected]

Seated side-by-side, identical looks of concentration on the faces a grand-father and his granddaughter as they tightly wrap thread around the shank of fishhooks, securing tufts of elk hair to the flies.

“You need good eyesight for this work,” said Sam Camp, 64, of Grandview, to his granddaughter, Amy Patacini, 9, of Prosser.

Camp taught himself to tie flies several years ago but wasn’t aware that there’s a local club called the Columbia Basin Fly Casters that is dedicated to the sport of fly fishing.

He discovered the group during a sportsman expo at TRAC this winter and signed himself and his grand-daughter up for a fly-tying class.

“I thought this would be something fun we could do together. Besides the price was right — free,” he said.

Even with her youthful eyes, Patacini found fly tying to be chal-lenging, but fun. But she swore that her flies would catch a lot of fish.

“Maybe more than yours,” Patacini said to her granddad.

“We’ll just have to see about that,” he replied.

Challenge accepted.Amy Patacini wasn’t the only

youngster in the class, which was held in March. There were four or five oth-ers and the adults ranged from their mid- to late-20s and older.

“We usually get a mix of adults and kids,” said Craig Anderson of Richland. He’s a longtime member of the Columbia Basin Fly Casters and has taught the fly tying class for years.

“I like seeing the kids and younger adults in the class. We could use some younger members in the club,” said Anderson.

Anderson has been fishing since he was a kid in upstate New York. There he did mainly bait fishing, fly fishing isn’t as popular on the east coast as it is here in the Northwest.

And one thing his discovered when

he started fly fishing is that you need lots of flies.

“You’ll lose in the rivers and snag them on trees,” Anderson said. “I find it more economical to tie my own. Besides it gives me something to do in the winter when I can’t fish.”

Once you’re hooked on fly tying, you’ll find yourself spending much more on the feathers, hair, hooks, che-nille, floss, beads and more that are used mimic the insects the fish feed on.

The tools — bobbins, pliers, hair stacker, bodkin and more — can be picked for about $5 to $10 each. Even the vise that clamps to a table and holds the hook steady costs some-where between $80 and $90, Anderson said.

“Everything you need to get started fly tying can be found at nearly any sporting goods store, but for real vari-ety go to the internet,” Anderson said. “You’ll probably be like a kid in a candy store and find yourself accu-mulating more materials than you can ever use.”

While taking a class in fly tying is helpful, it’s not necessary. There are lots of how-to-books and videos on the internet. One television program Anderson recommends is Fly Tying: The Angler’s Art, hosted by LeRoy Hyatt and Carolyn Sells. It’s broadcast on American Public Television and carried by Northwest Public Television, KWSU-31, out of Pullman. It runs at 6 a.m. on Sundays.

Anderson said the best advice he can give someone who is new to fly tying is to practice, practice.

“When trying out a new pattern, make several flies at one time — at least a half dozen or a dozen — you need that repetition,” he said.

A great way to learn is at the fly-tying classes offered by the Columbia Basin Fly Casters.

The group is offering another class from 9 a.m. to noon April 23 at Southridge High School. Pre-registration is required.

Longtime club member, Dan Robertson, will lead the class. He’ll demonstrate a dry, wet and a streamer pattern flies. These patterns will pro-vide the basic foundation for most styles of fishing flies. This is a hands-on class. Fly tying materials and tools are provided by the club.

The Columbia Basin Fly Casters meet at 6 p.m. on the second Tuesday of the month (except during July and August) at the Country Gentleman restaurant in Kennewick. Cost of the dinner is $15 and reservations are required.

Tying flies for fishing takes nimble fingers and good eyesight said Sam Camp, 64, of Grandview, in left forefront of photo. Sitting at his right is his granddaughter, Amy Patacini, 9, of Prosser, who’s intent on getting the elk hair on her hook perfectly aligned.

uFISHING, Page 9

Columbia Basin Fly Casters teach the art of fooling the fish with flies

Enriching independent living with meal

preparation, medication reminders, light

housework and more.

Call today for a FREE in-home evaluation.

509-572-2128www.interimhealthcare.com

Page 8: Senior Times - April 2016

8 Senior Times • April 2016

Caregivers • SeniorS • Families

For more information call 509.737.8778 or visit srtimes.com

SP

rin

G 20

16

Tuesday, April 19 9:00 a.m. to 3:00 p.m.Pasco Red Lion Hotel

2525 N. 20th Ave. • Pasco

Come visit with exhibitors as they share products, services and ideas for senior living.

There will be prizes, drawings, samples, giveaways and a Senior Times “Hunt for the

Treasure” contest. Mark your calendar and be sure to attend the Spring 2016 expo!

FREE TO

ATTEND!

Sponsored by

ROSE, From page 1“If you do need help identifying

your rose and filling out the entry tag, go early. Don’t wait until 15 minutes before the entries close,” said Brehm.

There is an adult division and one for young gardeners who are 17 years of age and younger.

It’s easy to choose a rose to enter. Just go out into your garden and pick the most perfect one you can find. That’s advice from Norma Boswell, a longtime TCRS member and con-sulting rosarian.

There are classes for every variety of rose imaginable — mini, flori-bunda, grandiflora, hybrid tea, climbing and more. You may enter single blooms, a spray, which is two or more blooms on a single cane, or entire floral arrangements. There’s even a class for roses without a stem.

If you have a knack for crafts and access to dried roses, there’s a com-petition for wreaths, wall and door hangings, corsages and more.

No rose garden? Anyone with a photographic eye can enter their best rose photograph.

“It doesn’t have to be one they’ve grown themselves, but the photo does have to be one they’ve shot,” said Brehm.

They can be photos of single roses of any type, but it does have to be more than just a bud. There are classes for a spray, arrangements, for photos of a rose garden or a Rose Society activity.

There are even three local rose gardens open to the public where you can take photos:

• The rose garden at Lawrence Scott Park in Kennewick off Canal Drive.

• The Washington State University Benton Franklin Master Gardeners’ demonstration garden next to the Mid-Columbia Library, 1620 S. Union St., Kennewick.

• The Tri-City Memorial Rose Garden, 915 The Bypass Highway, Richland.

A list of all the Tri-City Rose Society Rose Show classes and instructions will be published on the group’s website, www.owt.com/ros-esociety, in April or plan to attend the Rose Society’s May 23 meeting.

“That entire meeting will be devoted to preparing entries for the show and you’ll also be able to check out vases to take home in order to prep your roses in them before transporting them to the show,” said Brehm.

The meeting is at 7 p.m. at the Sandberg Event Center, 331 S. 41st Ave. (off Van Giesen Street), West Richland. Printed copies of the book-let listing the show classes will also be available at the meeting.

uROSE, Page 10

Page 9: Senior Times - April 2016

9Senior Times • April 2016

Start the spring out right by getting fit with the Pasco Senior CenterBy Mary [email protected]

The Pasco Senior Center’s Enhance Fitness program, which is designed specifically for those over the age of 40, can help you get moving toward a healthier lifestyle. The program starts monthly and is from 10 to 11 a.m. Monday, Wednesday and Friday. The cost for April is $33 for Pasco residents and $41 for all others.

Wavemakers Aqua Fit is a warm water exercise class that includes the use of an underwater treadmill, upper body strengthening and leg strengthen-ing exercises, stretching and more.

The class is offered by Oasis Physical Therapy and it can help you relieve the pain of arthritis, fibromyalgia, lower back pain and more.

Classes are available 11:45 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. on Mondays and Wednesdays or on Tuesdays and Thursdays. The cost is $80 per month for Richland residents or $100 for all others.

Reserve your seat now if you want to participate in the trip to see the Best of Broadway production of Newsies on May 5 in Spokane. The trip is being offered by the cities of Pasco and Richland.

The bus leaves the Pasco at 10 a.m. to travel to Spokane for the matinee

production of the musical Newsies. After the show, participants will enjoy a delicious dinner at Anthony’s Homeport Restaurant before returning home. The cost is $149 for Pasco resi-dents and $186 for all others. The fee includes transportation, dinner, gratuity and ticket, orchestra seating center in rows N and P.

Keeping your feet healthy is essen-tial as you age. Those 60 and older can participate in the Pasco Senior Center’s Foot Care Program, Happy Feet. The program is designed to provide preven-tative maintenance and education to Franklin County and Burbank resi-dents.

Through the program, a registered nurse will inspect your feet for early detection of corns, calluses, ingrown toenails and other minor foot problems. The nurse will also trim your toenails, apply lotion to your feet and give you instruction on properly caring for your feet at home. The service is free, but there is a suggested donation of $10 per person.

The Happy Feet foot care program is available by appointment only from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m. Tuesday through Thursday. Call 509-545-3459 for an appointment.

The AARP Smart Driver defensive driving course will be at 9 a.m. Tuesday,

Apr. 13 and Wednesday, Apr. 14. The course focuses on age-related

changes and teaches you how to com-pensate for those changes. Participants must attend both days. The cost is $15 for AARP members, who must show their AARP card, and $20 for all others. Participants may receive a discount on

their insurance for completing the course.

The Pasco Senior Center has plenty of great activities to help you meet new friends, learn new skills and stay active.

For more information about activi-ties at the Pasco Senior Center, call 509-545-3459.

Pasco Senior Center(509) 545-3459

1315 N. Seventh Ave. • Pasco

1741 Del Cambre Loop, Richland4 BD • 2-1/2 BA • $324,900

Beautiful 2,439-sq.-ft home in desirable Sagewood Meadows neighborhood in south Richland. Close to walking path, park, Badger Mountain Elementary school and shopping. Quarter-acre lot with mature landscaping situated on a low-traffic half-circle. Granite counters,

cooktop island and Jenn-Air appliances in kitchen. Hardwood floors in kitchen, entry and dining room. Main floor also features a family room with rock-surround fireplace and chunky wood mantle, sunken living room and den. Upstairs has four bedrooms including a large

master suite with tiled bathroom, complete with soaking tub and walk-in shower. Fresh, neutral interior paint throughout.

Available now • Showings by appointment • Text or call owner at 509.521.2041

For Sale by owner

FISHING, From page 7The business portion of the

meeting begins at about 7:15 p.m. and includes a video or presenta-tion.

For information or to RSVP, call Rich Holten, 509-521-4291.

For information about the

Columbia Basin Fly Casters go to columbiabasinflycasters.org.

The club schedules several out-ings during the year to popular fly-fishing lakes and streams. Members also teach free fly-tying, fly-casting and rod-building class-es each year.

Please recycle the Senior Times when you are done reading it,

or pass it on to a friend.

Page 10: Senior Times - April 2016

10 Senior Times • April 2016

By Mary [email protected]

Reserve your seat now see the Best of Broadway production of Newsies on May 5 in Spokane.

The bus leaves the Richland Community Center at 10 a.m. to travel to Spokane for the matinee production of the musical Newsies. After the show, participants will enjoy a delicious dinner at Anthony’s Homeport Restaurant before return-ing home. The cost is $149 for Richland residents and $186.25 for all others. The fee includes transpor-tation, dinner, gratuity and ticket, orchestra seating center in rows N and P.

Don’t miss the Richland Senior Association’s third Friday dance, which will be from 1-4:30 p.m. Friday, Apr. 15 at the Richland Community Center. Music is by the Easy Swing Band.

Take a tour of the past by partici-pating in a Mid-Century Modern Tour from the Richland Parks &

Recreation Department. While many people may be famil-

iar with Richland’s Alphabet houses, few realize the city is also home to a significant number of mid-century modern houses.

This volunteer-led walk, which will be from 9 to 11 a.m. Saturday, Apr. 16, meanders through north Richland neighborhoods and will help you discover some of the more interesting examples of this archi-tectural style. The walk is moderate to easy and two and a half to three miles long. There is no fee or regis-tration required. Those who would like to participate should meet at the Newcomer Street parking lot in Leslie Groves Park by 9 a.m.

AARP Tax Aide volunteers are still available at the Richland Community Center to provide free, confidential advice to help seniors and low-income taxpayers prepare their tax returns properly and to answer questions.

The volunteers will be available

from 8:30 – 11:30 a.m. every Tuesday and Thursday through April 14. Appointments are not necessary.

You will need to bring a copy of your prior year’s tax return, as well as documents supporting informa-tion to prepare this year’s return, including real estate tax statements.

The Richland Community Center is an electronic filing site and will not prepare returns for paper filing. For quicker and safer tax refunds, it is recommended that taxpayers have refunds directly deposited into their bank accounts, so you will need to have your bank account information.

The April AARP Smart Driver defensive driving course will be at 9 a.m. Wednesday, Apr. 20 and

Thursday Apr. 21. The course focuses on age-related

changes and teaches you how to compensate for those changes. Participants must attend both days. The cost is $15 for AARP members, who must show their AARP card, and $20 for all others. Participants may receive a discount on their insurance for completing the course.

For a full list, view the Richland Parks and Recreation’s Activity Guide at richlandparksandrec.com.

For more information about upcoming events or to register for any of these events, call 509-942-7529 or go to richlandparksandrec.com.

Richland Community Center(509) 942-7529

500 Amon Drive • Richland

Richland plans trip to Best of Broadway’s Newsies in Spokane

ROSE, From page 8If you can’t make the meeting, here

are some tips for entering your roses in the show:

• At home, either cut your roses on the evening before the show or early

the same morning. Take a bucket or vase of warm, not cold, water out to the garden with you and put the cut stems into water immediately.

After you’ve selected the flowers you will enter, recut the stems about an

inch and then let the roses suck up as much water as they can.

One tip an experienced rosarian shared years ago, is that by cutting your blooms the night before you’ll be able to see if your rose is going to hold up

the day of the show. If it looks wilted, choose another.

“Hopefully, you’ve been out in the garden beforehand surveying what’s in bud, what’s showing color and so have already made your selections. But sometimes a rose will surprise you just before the show and the one you thought wouldn’t be in bloom will be showing off. Who knows? That one may become Queen of the Show,” said Brehm.

Be sure to take only blooms that stand straight up. You don’t want any bowed heads before the judges.

• Don’t worry too much about any semi-circular bites the leaf cutter bees have taken out of the foliage. Either clip off that leaf, or, if they’ve chewed on all the leaves on that rose, choose another, Brehm said.

But, you should remove any bugs or spiders, which will cost you points if discovered by the judges.

“Also, remove any dirt from the leaves with a soft, damp, cloth or an old nylon.”

• Before taking the flowers to the show, mark each bloom with its name using a piece of masking tape, a Sticky note or even by wrapping a piece of paper around the cane.

Even if you’re not exhibiting, drop by the show. There are few places where you’ll be able to see such a wide variety of roses in full bloom.

It’s also a great place to take your rose-gardening questions — the room will be full of experts. The rose show will be open to the public for viewing from 1-4 p.m. and admission is free.

Page 11: Senior Times - April 2016

By Loretto J. [email protected]

Three Tri-Cities women enjoy giving fiber artists new brilliant choices by creating kaleidoscopes of color.

They’re owners of S.M.A.K. Super Fibers, a home-based business that makes hand-dye wool and other animal fibers. They sell their yarns on Etsy.com and at Badger Mountain Yarns in Richland, and at local bazaars during the holiday season.

The women started the home-based business in February 2015, selling first on Etsy.com.

S.M.A.K. is an acronym created from the first initials of the found-ers: Sara Tracy of Kennewick; Ariana Howland of Richland; and Melissa Lyle of West Richland. The fourth founder is no longer associ-ated with the company.

The women have created 55 color combinations they offer as their standards and try to keep several skeins of them on hand for filling orders.

“We advertise that orders will be filled within three weeks but, other than the holiday season, we can usu-ally get them out faster,” said Howland.

They meet about twice a week to dye yarns for orders and to experi-ment with different color combina-tions and fibers.

“Once we’re set up to work the actual dying goes fairly quickly,” said Tracy.

They’ve been taking turns work-ing in each other’s kitchens. But are looking forward to the day when Tracy’s basement remodeling proj-ect is complete. One room of the basement will be dedicated as their work/storage room.

“It’ll be great to have all our stock and tools in one place,” said Lyle.

Dying fiber is fairly easy, once you’ve established a routine. Their tools are regular kitchen pans, uten-

sils and some plastic ware. They use acid-based dyes from Dharma Trading Co. located in California.

The pots and pans can be bought in any kitchen store but these are dedicated to the dying process because the chemical composition of the dyes etches into the cookware, said Howland.

Other than the kitchenware, the only other requirements are a stove or microwave to heat the dyes to set the colors and a sink to rinse out any excess dye. The wet wool dries on a wooden laundry rack — outdoors in the summer, in Howland’s laundry room in the winter.

Dying is done one skein at a time. Each weighs 3.5-ounces or 100 grams. The women work primarily with mill-spun wool, either worsted or fingerling, which refers to the size of the yarn. The skeins run $16 for the worsted wool, or $20 for the fingerling, sometimes referred to as stocking yarn.

They’ll also do special orders in other fibers and bulky wool yarns.

“We really enjoy the challenge of custom orders,” said Tracy.

The trio cheerfully admits their business, S.M.A.K., is the result of a hobby that’s gotten out of hand. They’re self-taught.

“We were just experimenting with

colors, having some fun,” said Tracy.Their first try at dying involved

strong solutions of Kool-Aid, which produced attractive, pastel and mid-range colors. They also tried natural, plant-based dyes.

“The plant-based dyes were inconsistent color-wise and pro-duced mainly muted, earthy colors,” said Tracy.

So they decided to try some com-mercial dyes.

“We bought some inexpensive wool yarn, some dyes and — with the help of the internet — began experimenting,” said Tracy. “We’re much happier with the intense colors we can get with these acid-based dyes.”

11Senior Times • April 2016

Ariana Howland uses a technique called painting, which requires spooning liquid dye in broad stripes across the damp skeins of wool. When done she’ll wrap the skeins in plastic wrap and heat them briefly in the microwave to set the colors.

uFIBERS, Page 15

89.7fm NPR NEWS & 89.1fm CLASSICAL

Tri-Cities women create vivid rainbows in wool for fiber artists

Errands & ShoppingLight Housekeeping

Meal PreparationFriendly CompanionshipAssistance in Hygiene

Respite Care for Families

Experienced senior care for total peace

of mind

509-582-7800 www.VisitingAngels.comAlzheimer and Palliative Care Certified

Page 12: Senior Times - April 2016

12 Senior Times • April 2016

By Mary [email protected]

The City of Kennewick is taking reservations for a trip May 1 to watch the Seattle Mariners play the Kansas City Royals.

The bus will depart from Kennewick at 7 a.m. and travel to Seattle for the game.

The cost is $93 for those who regis-ter by Apr.13, and $113 for all others. The fee includes transportation, Mariner’s ticket and bus parking, but does not include any meals. The bus will stop for dinner in North Bend on the return trip.

If you would like to learn to crochet, knit or tat, there is an ongoing class from 1 to 3 p.m. every Thursday. Newbies receive instruction by volun-teer teacher Donna Gier. The cost is $2 per day.

The Computer Tutor is back to help you gain confidence with your com-puter skills, offering one-on-one atten-tion during the two-hour class.

Students learn about computer basics and components, troubleshooting,

security and privacy and more. Classes are 9 a.m. to 11 a.m. or

12:30 to 2:30 p.m. Tuesday, Apr. 12. and Tuesday, Apr. 26. The cost is $40 for Kennewick Senior Center Valued Supporters or $60 for all others.

The AARP Smart Driver Course will be from 9 a.m. to 2 p.m. Thursday, Apr. 21 and Friday, Apr. 22 at the Kennewick Senior Center. The course is designed for those 55 and older and those who participate may receive a discount on their auto insurance. The cost is $15 for valued supporters and $20 for all oth-ers.

If you like to dance, but lack a part-ner, get in line. Line dancing, that is. The Senior Center offers line from 6 to 7 p.m. every Monday. It’s a good work-out and a lot of fun. The cost is $24 for

residents and $36 for all others. Get back to basics with the Back to

Basics Fitness Class. The low-impact, motivational workout offers a combi-nation of toning and firming using the body for resistance and light cardio to increase heart rate. It also helps improve the core through various exercises. Workouts can be modified to all levels and abilities.

Classes are 10 a.m. to 10:45 a.m. each Monday, Wednesday and Friday from April 4 through June 3. The cost is $41 for Kennewick Valued Supporters and $61 for all others. There is no class on May 30.

For more information about activi-ties at the Senior Center or for ques-tions, call 509-585-4303 or go to go2kennewick.com/seniorcenter.

See the Mariners vs. Royals with the Kennewick Senior Center

Kennewick Senior Center(509) 585-4303

500 S. Auburn St. • Kennewick

Providing In-Home Care Services:• Personal care & bathing• Housekeeping & laundry• Transportations to doctors, shopping & errands• Meal preparation• Respite care• Trained & Screened caregivers• We proudly serve our Veterans and work with VA benefits

509-735-8680www.ResCareHomeCare.com

Helping seniors maintain their independence

Payment options: private pay and Medicaid (COPES, MPC, DDD, Respite)

We guarantee replacement caregivers!

INSURANCE, from page 6“We’re really encouraging

people to make those decisions and talk about long-term care early,” she said, adding that people can use their HSA accounts to pay long-term care premiums.

The policies Smith handles average about $140 a month. It’s not uncommon for children to purchase policies for their parents, each chipping in a monthly portion to ensure their parents are cared for in the event they need assistance.

At Thrivent Financial, the earliest a person can purchase long-term care insurance is 18, although those policies are rare. Clary purchased a policy at 37, and Bauman bought one for himself at 33.

“No matter how you choose to solve it, it’s going to cost you,” said Bauman. “The average daily cost for long-term care is $200 across the country.”

That’s $73,000 a year you’d have to come up with. Assuming a long-term care insurance policy is $200 a month, a person would pay $2,400 a year for 20 years for a typical policy.

“So you can pay $48,000 over time or write checks for $73,000 every year,” Bauman said.

For those interested in learning more about long-term care policies, a list of Washington Partnership Policy carriers can be located on the insurance commission’s website.

Thrivent Financial will give educational presentations on the long-term care insurance May 16 and 17 at the Sageland Center, 11257 W. Clearwater Ave., Ste. 120, in Kennewick. For times and reservations, call 509-582-0570 by May 11.

By Mary [email protected]

The West Richland Senior Center’s monthly potluck will be at 6 p.m. Tuesday, Apr. 12. Bring your favorite dish to share.

Weekly exercise classes take place at 9 a.m. every Tuesday and Thursday at the West Richland Senior Center, where a personal trainer offers an exercise class at 9 a.m. The co-ed class is fun for all.

AARP Smart Driver Defensive Driving Course will be from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. Monday, Apr. 11 and 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Tuesday Apr. 12.

The cost is $15 for AARP members

and $20 for all others. Sign up at the Senior Center or call 509-943-4979 to register.

Be sure to make it for bingo, which begins at 1 p.m., Monday, Apr. 18. The doors open at noon, when you can get a hot dog, drink and chips for $3. There are cash prizes and gift certificates available.

Other activities this month include dominoes at 1 p.m. Tuesday, Apr. 26; Bunco at noon Wednesday, Apr. 6 and Friday, Apr. 15. There’s also painting at 1 p.m. every Saturday.

Spring activities abundant at West Richland Senior Center

West Richland Senior Center(509) 967-2847

616 N. 60th, West Richland

Page 13: Senior Times - April 2016

13Senior Times • April 2016

Just for Fun9

2 5 94 5

79

6 42

3

69

54

2

7 1

© 2

016

Syn

dica

ted

Puz

zles

3 6 2 5 74 3

3 15 8 1

9 3 1 64 9 5

7 82 1

1 8 6 2 5

© 2

016

Syn

dica

ted

Puz

zles

STR8TSMedium

How to beat Str8ts – Like Sudoku, no single number 1 to 9 can repeat in any row or column. But... rows and columns are divided by black squares into compartments. Each compartment must form a straight - a set of numbers with no gaps but it can be in any order, eg [7,6,9,8]. Clues in black cells remove that number as an option in that row and column, and are not part of any straight. Glance at the solution to see how ‘straights’ are formed.

SUDOKU

To complete Sudoku, fill the board by entering numbers 1 to 9 such that each row, column and 3x3 box contains every number uniquely.

For many strategies, hints and tips, visit www.sudokuwiki.org for Sudokuand www.str8ts.com for Str8ts.

If you like Str8ts and other puzzles, check out our books, iPhone/iPad Apps and much more on our store.

Very Hard

4 56 4 5 3 24 5 2 1

4 3 2 13 5 2 1 4

2 1

2 1

6 5

3

Str

8ts

- Med

ium

Sud

oku

- Ver

y Har

d92 5 9

4 5

79

6 42

3

69

54

2

7 1©

201

6 S

yndi

cate

d P

uzzl

es

3 6 2 5 74 3

3 15 8 1

9 3 1 64 9 5

7 82 1

1 8 6 2 5

© 2

016

Syn

dica

ted

Puz

zles

STR8TSMedium

How to beat Str8ts – Like Sudoku, no single number 1 to 9 can repeat in any row or column. But... rows and columns are divided by black squares into compartments. Each compartment must form a straight - a set of numbers with no gaps but it can be in any order, eg [7,6,9,8]. Clues in black cells remove that number as an option in that row and column, and are not part of any straight. Glance at the solution to see how ‘straights’ are formed.

SUDOKU

To complete Sudoku, fill the board by entering numbers 1 to 9 such that each row, column and 3x3 box contains every number uniquely.

For many strategies, hints and tips, visit www.sudokuwiki.org for Sudokuand www.str8ts.com for Str8ts.

If you like Str8ts and other puzzles, check out our books, iPhone/iPad Apps and much more on our store.

Very Hard

4 56 4 5 3 24 5 2 1

4 3 2 13 5 2 1 4

2 1

2 1

6 5

3

How to beat Str8ts - No single number, 1 to 9, can repeat in any row or column. But rows and columns are divided by black squares into compartments. Each compartment must form a straight - a set of numbers with no gaps but it can be in any order, eg: 7, 6, 8, 9. Clues in black cells remove that number as an option in that row and column, and are not part of any straight. Rules of Sudoku - To complete Sudoku, fill the board by entering numbers 1 to 9 such that each row, column and 3x3 box contains ever number uniquely. For more strategies, hints and tips, visit www.sudokuwiki.org and www.str8ts.com.

Str8ts example

Solutions on page 15

Turn Back the Clock...April 12: The first B-52 bombing on North Vietnam, this is the largest bombing since WWII.

April 13: President Lyndon B. Johnson signs the Uniform Time Act dealing with daylight savings time.

April 18: The Sound of Music wins Best Picture at the 28th Academy Awards.1966

Page 14: Senior Times - April 2016

14 Senior Times • April 2016

By Cathy MacCaul for Senior TimesIt’s a promise that’s been kept for

generations. You pay into Social Security, you get the benefits you earned. But to keep that promise for future generations, Social Security needs to be updated for the 21st cen-tury. If our leaders don’t act, future retirees could lose up $10,000 a year. Every year our leaders wait and do nothing, finding a solution grows more difficult.

The only way to make progress is for our national leaders to make Social Security a priority and put serious proposals on the table. And it starts with Presidential leadership. Anyone who thinks they’re ready to be President of the United States should be able to tell voters how

they’ll keep Social Security strong.That’s why AARP is pressing

every candidate to “Take A Stand” – and lay out their plan to update Social Security so it’s financially sound with adequate benefits.

Throughout the election, we will urge the candidates to debate their proposals so you know how they will affect you, your kids, and gen-erations to come.

Every candidate who offers a plan will be highlighted on the Take a Stand website at 2016takeastand.org. The website is a one-stop resource where voters can find out if a candidate has a plan, and read a real-time feed with their latest com-ments about Social Security. Voters can also contact the candidates and

urge them to show how they would lead by put-ting forward their plan to keep Social S e c u r i t y s t r o n g . Throughout the 2016 elec-tion, our focus will remain on demanding every presidential candi-date offer their plan to update Social Security. We remain committed to our principles for keeping Social Security strong, but the greatest ser-vice we can provide to our members

and all voters is facilitating a real national debate so the next president and congress will make updating Social Security a priority. Join us in calling on every presidential candi-date to tell American voters what their plans are to keep Social Security strong – visit 2016takeast-and.org today. But don’t stop there, share the website with your friends and family to get them involved as well and help us spread the word even farther. Also be sure to keep this issue top of mind when consid-ering congressional candidates this fall. Together, we can get the candi-dates to give us real details about how they’ll lead when it comes to this vital program.

It’s time to take a stand to retain Social Security benefits

509-783-54335505 W. Skagit Ct.

Kennewick, WA

Through season of change you have kept your promise of love, honor and respect.

Dementia has brought change, but your commitment remains strong. Let us help

you to continue to love, honor and respect during this challenging season.

Cathy MacCaul,

AARP

BRIEFS, From page 5Public meetings scheduled for EMS levy discussion

The Benton County Fire District No. 4 board will have two public meetings in April to discuss placing a renewal levy for Emergency Medical Services on the August primary elec-tion ballot. The meetings will be 10 - 11 a.m. Saturday, April 2 and 5-6 p.m. Thursday, April 7. Both public meet-ings will be at the District Headquarters, Station 420, 2604

Bombing Range Road, West Richland. Fire commissioners will vote on a resolution placing the EMS levy renewal on the ballot at the April 7 meeting. In 2015, District No. 4 responded to 1,322 calls, 63 percent of which were EMS-related. District officials said EMS calls have increased 57 percent for the fire dis-trict since votes approved funding for the EMS program in 2010.

As part of its EMS program, the District provides transport services,

basic life support with firefighter/EMTs and advanced life support with highly-trained paramedics. ALS is critical to patient survival rates, said Fire Chief William Whealan, and not all fire agencies have ALS capabili-ties.

The levy also pays for the district to staff another station, which has reduced ambulance response times by three minutes on average. In addition to emergency personnel, the funding is used for training and certification, ambulances, maintenance, medical equipment, first aid supplies and equipment replacement.

If approved by votes, the levy rate would remain the same, at 50 cents per $1,000 of assessed valuation. That means the owner of a $250,000 home would pay about $125 per year.

The current EMS levy expires at the end of 2016 and fire commission-ers are considering asking voters to remove the expiration date to stabilize funding for the District’s most wide-ly-used emergency service.

Anything Grows plans benefitAnything Grows, a gardening sup-

ply store, will have a vegetable and

herb plant sale to benefit The Chaplaincy Hospice House April 9 & 10.

The event will be from 11 a.m. – 5 p.m. Saturday and Sunday at the store at 1625 Columbia Park Trail in Richland. It will feature beautiful tomato, pepper and herb starts pro-vided by the Mid-Columbia Gardens.

Human trafficking exhibit at WSU-TC April 6-9

Washington State University Tri-Cities will present a multisensory exhibit called SOLD: The Human Trafficking Experience April 6-9.

Suited for those ages 13 and older, the free exhibit uses technology to tell the trues stories of human trafficking victims and educate visitors about human trafficking locally and global-ly.

The exhibit will be from 9 a.m. to 6 p.m. April 6-9 in the Consolidated Information Center 120/120A. The exhibit, which was developed by a nonprofit Christian organization called Mirror Ministries, travels throughout the Pacific Northwest. For more information, visit soldexp.com.

Page 15: Senior Times - April 2016

15Senior Times • April 2016

By Senior Times staffSunbonnet Sue, in dozens of ver-

sions and variations, is being cele-brated in a new exhibit at the White Bluffs Quilt Museum in Richland.

A reception to celebrate the tex-tiles, the artists and the owners, will be from 4-6 p.m., Sunday, April 10. It is open to the public.

“The Sunbonnet Sue pattern first appeared sometime after the Civil War,” said Jean Zoet, White Bluff’s board president.

It is an applique design, so small pieces of fabric are sewn onto a back-ground by painstakingly turning under the raw edges and taking tiny invisible stitches, or more obvious blanket stitches, sometimes in black. To add their own touches, the artists often personalized Sue’s wardrobe or invented brothers or boyfriends for her, like Overall Sam or Blue Jean Bill.

Probably the oldest quilt on display is a well-loved and worn example

where the Sunbonnet Sue blocks alternate with bubble gum pink blocks. The colors date it to the 1920s or 1930s. Other antique and vintage quilts are on loan from local families and collectors. Several include 12 blocks where Sue is cleverly dressed for the weather and surrounded by references to monthly holidays.

In addition to quilts, Sunbonnet Sue made her way into strictly embroidery designs.

Members and friends of White Bluffs have been creating new ver-sions of Sunbonnet Sue since the museum issued a challenge in January. Those items are on display until the end of April and those who attend the reception can vote on their favorites. Winners will be announced at the reception.

The White Bluffs Quilt Museum is at 294 Torbett in Richland.

For more information, go to white-bluffscenter.org or email [email protected].

4 3 6 8 2 9 5 7 11 5 2 6 7 4 9 8 38 7 9 5 3 1 4 2 65 8 4 9 1 6 7 3 27 9 3 2 5 8 1 6 46 2 1 3 4 7 8 9 53 4 5 7 8 2 6 1 92 6 7 1 9 5 3 4 89 1 8 4 6 3 2 5 7

2 1 5 6 9 81 2 3 6 5 9 8 7 4

3 4 9 8 55 4 8 7 3 1 26 9 8 4 2 3

8 7 6 58 9 7 3 4 5 69 8 6 3 2 5 1 4 7

5 4 2 3

3

69

54

2

7 1

Str8ts Solution Sudoku Solution

4 3 6 8 2 9 5 7 11 5 2 6 7 4 9 8 38 7 9 5 3 1 4 2 65 8 4 9 1 6 7 3 27 9 3 2 5 8 1 6 46 2 1 3 4 7 8 9 53 4 5 7 8 2 6 1 92 6 7 1 9 5 3 4 89 1 8 4 6 3 2 5 7

2 1 5 6 9 81 2 3 6 5 9 8 7 4

3 4 9 8 55 4 8 7 3 1 26 9 8 4 2 3

8 7 6 58 9 7 3 4 5 69 8 6 3 2 5 1 4 7

5 4 2 3

3

69

54

2

7 1

Str8ts Solution Sudoku Solution

Str8ts Solution

Sudoku Solution

Puzzle answers from page 13

For more strategies, hints and tips, visit www.sudokuwiki.org and www.str8ts.com.

These are some of the Sunbonnet Sue items that are part of the new Sunbonnet Sue exhibit at the White Bluffs Quilt Museum in Richland. The exhibit will be on display through April. Photo courtesy of White Bluffs Quilt Museum.

FIBERS, From page 11With a few exceptions the actual

dying process takes 15 minutes or less. The skeins can be dipped, sometimes multiple times into various dyes, or painted with liquid dye. The damp wool can also be sprinkled with gran-ules of various colored dyes to produce a confetti look.

“There are many dying techniques. We’re just using a few so far but we keep learning,” said Lyle. “But we’re having fun with what we’re doing.”

“We have to keep notes, otherwise we could never remember what turned out and what we don’t want to try again,” said Howland. “Even now we’ll try a different color combination, look at each other and say, not a keep-er.”

When they first began experiment-ing with dyes it was just for their own use.

“But our friends in our knitting group liked the yarns, the colors. When we first went on Etsy.com is was with the idea of being self-sustaining, but we actually made some money. Not a lot but enough to keep us going,” said Lyle.

Their dying business takes up a lot of time, but the women still find time to knit, crochet and, in the case of Tracy and Howland, spin fibers into yarn. They’re all stay-at-home-moms with young children.

Lyle has a daughter, Kaelynn, 6; Tracy, two daughters, Caitlynn, 5, and Jianna, 2; and Howland, Nora, 7, and Wyatt, 4.

“We’re lucky that we’re able to be at home, yet have found a business that we love,” said Lyle. “We’re all highly educated housewives.”

Tracy once worked as a cosmetolo-gist, so mixing colors was familiar for her.

Lyle worked as a teacher’s aid in Wyoming while working towards her Bachelor’s degree in early childhood education and psychology.

Howland has Bachelor’s degrees in both physics and astronomy.

“We’re just extremely lucky that when we started our families, our hus-bands had good jobs at Energy Northwest and we didn’t have to work outside the home,” said Lyle. “All of us

have had an interest in fiber arts and crafts all our lives and we feel blessed to be able to do something we love.”

S.M.A.K. does not have a website but you can find them on Etsy, www.etsy.com/shop/SMAKSuperFibers. Or find the business on Facebook.

White Bluffs Quilt Museum presents new Sunbonnet Sue exhibit

Page 16: Senior Times - April 2016

16 Senior Times • April 2016