Caribou Creek.
My sister Laurie has a new set of wheels, and she is beaming.
The Ford diesel has plenty of power for pulling their new horse trailer with living quarters.
So, if all goes right the white truck will pull horses and accommodations to a Moses Lake horse show this next week.
Of course, as is customary, we all inspected the new purchase and were blown away with its features, including steps AND a ladder leading into the pickup bed.
That's my brother Kevin, who helped Laurie decide on the truck.


From my friend Pat Gunter with whom I totally agree about what he has to say in this letter to the editor.
|
May 3, 2026 1:00 AM
I am 72 years old and have lived in Bonner County all my
life. I have watched a lot of politicians come and go and I know the
difference between a public servant and a self-promoter.
I have
been a Jim Woodward supporter since he first ran. When I saw the claims
in Herndon’s fundraising letter, postmarked from Virginia, I will be
honest — it gave me pause.
That is not the Jim Woodward I know. So I did
what most people apparently do not do anymore. I picked up the phone
and called Jim.
Jim picked up and we talked through the
claims in the letter. He walked me through Herndon’s claims and set the
record straight.
He was calm and direct and did not raise his voice. He
just explained the facts and let me draw my own conclusions.
That conversation told me everything I needed to know — not just
about the claims, but about the character of the man I have been
supporting.
A few days later the “Official Republican Voter Guide”
arrived in my mailbox. I read it cover to cover. Then I used it to
start a bonfire. It served its highest purpose.
I have seen four
Woodward vs. Herndon campaigns now. Herndon’s tactics do not change.
Jim
Woodward does not change — steady, honest, and willing to pick up the
phone when a 72-year-old constituent has a question.
That is the kind of senator North Idaho deserves to keep.
Vote May 19.
PAT GUNTER
Sagle

The 2026 Derby has come and gone.
Although So Happy did not win, it was neat to see history with the first woman trainer to win a Kentucky Derby.
Now, I'll be pulling for Golden Tempo to win The Preakness.
I loved seeing the museum history note (below) in today's Daily Bee. Lots of treasured memories associated with our trips to Wenatchee.
We looked forward to and loved experience. One year, we hired tour buses and stayed overnight in Salmon Arm, British Columbia, on our way to Wenatchee.
We chose Salmon Arm because Dean Fredlund, who had taught biology at Sandpoint High School, had moved to Salmon Arm.
He helped with the coordination, and after staying overnight with families, the students performed for the Salmon Arm student body.
Today's note featured the year before our son Willie was born, so I can remember confidently that we bedded down on a gym floor in one of the Wenatchee schools.
I say "bedded down" because I don't remember sleeping. When you're the adviser keeping track of students on an overnight trip, you don't get much sleep.
In this case, I think it was more the hard floor than the kids that kept me awake.
The next year, when it came time for the trip, Willie was just a month old. He went along on the bus with 40 Ponderettes who passed him from seat to seat on the bus and doted on him the entire trip.
As I recall, someone even gave him a sucker, which wasn't exactly the best for a month old child, but he survived.
Bill followed the bus in the car so we had a hotel room while some friends took overnight chaperoning duties.
By the time we arrived in Wenatchee (about a five-six hour trip), Willie had had enough. He screamed and screamed, enough so that I had to take him outside while everyone else was having dinner.
I don't think Willie remembers the experience, but I do.
Nowadays, as a coach, Willie endures similar bus trips with his teams. He gained his yellow school bus experience very early on, so he's up for the trips.
from the Bonner County Daily Bee:
BAND, DRILL TEAM TO BE IN PARADE
About 90 SHS students will travel to Wenatchee, Wash. for the annual Apple Blossom Festival.
The SHS Ponderettes Drill Team, led by captains Sue Self and Marla Spielman, will wear uniforms promoting the parade’s Bicentennial theme.
Providing the music for the Ponderettes will be the 60-member German-clad Bulldog band in their green lederhosen, white shirts, suspenders and Tyrolian hats, led by drum major Rick Franck.
Junior Miss Cheryl Wooden and princesses Karen Holm and Mindi McCormick will grace the Sandpoint Community Float, which has a showboat theme.
Above: some of the seven "Sisters" in the Selkirk Mountain Range.
Bill, the dogs and I decided that last night was a perfect occasion to take our annual evening driving up Pack River in the Caribou Creek drainage.
It was the earliest trip we've taken up that way, so no wild flowers except for some trilium.
Sadly, no sightings of the usual snowshoe hare running and hopping about on the road. Same was true with the mosquitoes, so that was a plus.
When we set off with the dogs on a walk in an area that offers views of the Selkirk Mountains, we met Cody.
A few sentences later, I was telling Cody that I had taught both his mom and dad, Chenoa and Brian, at Sandpoint High School.
Cody is a senior at Priest River High School. He appears to be a very self-directed and mature.
I told Bill he seemed like 18 going on 25.
We enjoyed our brief visit and then Cody, who seems to know the Bonner County back country very well, went on his way.
Nice young man.
And, the trillium were impressive too.
Happy Sunday.