Tuesday, January 2, 2018

DYNAMITE, THE FARMER’S FRIEND

 


by Barry McCombs

It might surprise some readers to know that dynamite used to be about as common an article on farms and ranches in the area as bailing twine is now. I remember as a young kid in the 1950s seeing boxes of it lying around in barns and sheds on both of my grandparents’ farms. While its main purpose was for assisting in the difficult work of removing stumps to clear fields, it was also put to some pretty creative uses as people became rather casual in handling it.

My mother tells how my grandfather would wake them up on the 4th of July by throwing a quarter stick of dynamite up on the tin roof above the attic where she and her siblings slept. That was sure to get them out of bed with a bang. Quarter sticks of dynamite were also employed by her extended family while hunting to drive deer out of particularly brushy areas. Fish not biting? A little dynamite could bring them to the surface.

My father got his start as a lineman by digging holes for power poles that extended electrical service to rural areas. Part of his reputation for completing more holes than anyone else on the crew was due to the fact that he carried sticks of dynamite in his back pocket to help out in rocky places.

Dynamite was also handy for those who might have more malicious intents. Recently, Lora Rose of the local genealogical society sent me a copy of a petition signed by a number of residents including my great grand uncle that was sent to the county officials in 1891. Someone had used dynamite twice to blow up a dam that was located near Addy for the purpose of operating a grist mill for local farmers. The petition was a request to fund the rebuilding of the dam and to bring the perpetrator to justice.

An event in 1892 demonstrates just how effective dynamite could be in an emergency. Nearly the entire population of Colville had gathered to watch a play put on by the Ladies Aide Society in the Meyers Opera House. At 7:30 p.m. a fire broke out at the Dominion Hotel. A bucket brigade was quickly formed but in spite of heroic efforts the fire spread quickly and as recounted below threatened to do away with a major section of the town:

“. . .All glass on the south side of the William Block cracked and fell to the ground. It now looked as though the Rickey store building, Charette’s saloon and the Hofstetter barn and a place called the “Ark” would be destroyed. It was also plain that unless immediate and effective action could be taken, the saloon of James Durkin, Habein’s stable, the post office and possibly Perras and Lenery’s store would soon burst into flames.

At this critical juncture was heard the cry of ‘dynamite and giant powder’ rising above the tumult of the crowd and the roar of devouring flames rapidly eating up the hotel. Almost simultaneously a man was observed running toward the Rickey building with a box of giant powder on his shoulder. At once an order rang out for everyone to fall back and watch for flying timbers. The crowd required no urging to act upon such a sensible suggestion and a deafening explosion immediately followed; the Rickey building could be seen in the air flying in all directions; it was plainly evident that the courageous parties who handled the powder were experts in the business. This was heroic treatment but effective, although other buildings in the vicinity did not escape damage consequent upon the face of the explosion. All of the glass in Durkin’s saloon and Habein’s stable was broken as were several windows in the post office and a large plate glass in the Hotel Colville besides several smaller ones in various parts of the building. William Hofstetter sustained quite severe bruises caused by a portion of the roof of the Rickey building falling upon him.”

Our modern fire departments would no doubt shun this method of controlling a fire although the results might be not any more destructive than current standard protocol. If you happen to have some dynamite lying around and are thinking about using it in case you have a house fire, you should probably check with your insurance agent first.

Stix & Spokes goes Stationary!


By Liv Stecker


Wes and Ali Porter are taking their movable bike, ski and snowboard repair business off the road and into a cozy storefront on Chewelah’s main drag, just at the bottom of the hill from 49 Degrees North, where Porter has previously staged his Stix & Spokes repair trailer. Running for 2 years as a mobile business, the brick and mortar store opened on November 24th.They offer a full-service shop for all repairs, tunes, adjustments, binding work, wax, base grinding, as well as ski rentals from Head and all of your retail needs.

In addition to a great selection of top brand skis, snowboards, skateboards and bicycles for sale, they have all the accessories needed for the sports. Porter is a one man equipment repair service, with his shop full of tools and equipment, he is ready to tackle long ignored maintenance issues and troubleshoot performance quirks and malfunctions. Porter has more than a decade of experience in not only repairing gear, but also as an athlete in many outdoor pursuits.

In the summer of 2017, Porter organized and ran the first and über successful Kettle Walls Skate Park Competition, consecutive with Town and Country Days. Skaters from all over showed up to show off with bikes, boards, blades and scooters at Kettle Falls skate park.

To get your skis, snowboard or bicycles tuned up, swing by their new location at 519 Park Avenue in Chewelah - they’re waiting eagerly to meet you! Or contact Wes at 509-690-2772. You can also check out their Stix and Spokes page on Facebook or their website, stixandspokes.com.

End of an era: why newspapers are a dying breed



By Liv Stecker


We live in a Brave New World where you can have everything, and I mean EVERYTHING, delivered right to your door. It’s counterintuitive with the rising cost of gas and postage, but for rural dwellers who face a 40+ mile drive for groceries, having them delivered for free by Amazon or some other service is nothing short of miraculous. From laundry detergent and coconut oil to light bulbs and dog food, it can all arrive on your doorstep two days later. Anything you want. Anything, that is, except a newspaper.

A letter from the Spokesman Review in December of 2017 announced to rural subscribers in Northport, Metaline Falls, Ione and other small towns on the fringe of nowhere, that the paper would discontinue delivery service as of January 1, 2018. The coverage area change was determined by subscription density in rural areas, where a newspaper carrier might have to go well off the beaten path to deliver a handful of papers. Ultimately, the manpower and cost involved for the distribution of a few lingering subscriptions just isn’t worth it.

“Some of our carriers have to travel a mile or two between delivery stops,” says an employee at the circulation office of the Spokesman Review. He adds that Kettle Falls and most of the areas outlying Colville will also be removed from circulation, although Colville will remain on the route.

While it’s true that with the advent of the digital age, many households have their news delivered via social media, online news sources and of course, television, many of the off-grid holdouts have only ever known the printed medium as a source for current events. Many rural retiree households don’t own a computer, much less an internet subscription or a smartphone with the Associated Press app installed. These are the ones who feel the pain of this cut the deepest. A newspaper delivery has been their only connection to the outside world. Debbie Becker owns the Mustang Grill in Northport, which is arguably the Breakfast Mecca of the “postage stamp” northeast in Washington state.

“This will seriously cut out the world for a lot of my customers who do not have satellite TV or internet,” Becker says. And it’s not just convenience, it’s culture and nostalgia that readers are losing as well. “I sat with my grandparents and read the newspaper. I have customers who come in just to read the paper,” she shares. Becker refuses to believe that this is the only answer.

The Mustang Grill has a small battalion of local regulars who spend their mornings over coffee and the news. Now Becker is torn with how to meet this need. Internet coverage is spotty at best in many rural places, and for her to provide wifi and/or devices for people to access the digital subscription that the Spokesman Review is offering in substitution, is a costly and cumbersome solution. And this is just one small representation of the piece of our communities that will be feeling the loss.

The Spokesman Review says that areas of North Idaho and Whitman County will also be cut from circulation. It’s a problem with no easy solution. Sporadic delivery routes are inefficient at best, and expensive for the paper at worst. Boosting subscriptions in rural areas could help, but is the era of printed material really drawing to an end or is there a new generation of real-paper readers that will emerge from the digital age?

In a 2016 survey by the Pew Research Center, two out of ten Americans said they still read a printed newspaper. Four of these same ten claim to get all of their news online, and more than half of them named television as their main source for news. This statistic becomes more dramatic when broken into age groups: while nearly half of readers over the age of 65 say they still read the paper, only 5% of news-seekers from the ages of 18-29 ever look at printed material - most of them get their news online. If only half of our retirees are reading the paper, and the numbers plummet from there, it’s hard to fault forward-thinking newspapers from adjusting their practice. Projecting forward, it’s easy to speculate that in another 20 years the art of printing will be more of a quaint throwback to nostalgia than a profitable enterprise.

The University of Missouri conducted a survey in 2013 that demonstrated the difference between newspaper readership in rural areas vs. urban ones, and four years later, it’s a safe bet that the disparity has grown even more since then. At that time, two-thirds of rural Americans still read their local paper.

While the Spokesman Review and other large papers that have historically served a large geographic area seem to be shrinking their physical circulation, local weekly papers seem to be holding their own. A study by Stanford University says this is due to a solid relationship of trust between the paper and local residents, and the attention to local detail. What most local weeklies lack, however, is the big picture news clips from across the county lines. National and global news are where rural subscribers are taking the hit, subscribers who often make up some of the most consistent voting base and seems to have swayed the historic presidential vote of 2016. If they’re not getting the news from large circulation newspapers, then where? It’s a quandary that has no universally happy answer.

Box To Bench: precision with a purpose


Mecomber sights in a rifle

By Liv Stecker

Joe Mecomber likes to hunt. The thing about hunting, especially for one on a serious quest, is it requires precision accuracy at long range to be effective. Mecomber’s search for success in the field led to some serious geek-out sessions at the workbench, custom loading ammunition with the exact number of powder grains to gain maximum consistency in long range shooting. It’s a hard-core science that he found himself calculating and calibrating on targets made with torn up Amazon boxes and Sharpies.

Mecomber’s real life background in law enforcement requires a certain attention to detail that the brawny Michigan native has carried over into his recreational endeavors. An avid hunter, Mecomber and his hunting partner were more interested in an efficient route to maximum accuracy with an out-of-the-box hunting rifle than they were in the parts and pieces of building a gun from scratch, which many distance shooters spend thousands of dollars to accomplish.

Box To Bench Precision was born when Mecomber realized, as a fairly new shooter, that a load developing target was something every distance shooter needed, but few had developed as a field usable tool. He set to work honing his cardboard and Sharpie model to meet the exact needs of load adjustment shooting, adding features for site measurement and scope adjustment and printing the whole thing on special weather resistant, rip-proof paper.





The Box to Bench target
Tired of patching pieces of soggy cardboard together to gather his loading calculations, Mecomber came up with a target that can be taken down and tacked back up without shredding to pieces. It’s a 100 yard long range load development target, one of the few on the market today, with details that many custom loaders overlook but can benefit from greatly.

The first batch of 5000 targets began to sell like Tickle Me Elmo in the early 90s. The novel concept captivated shooters as Mecomber found outlets for his new product and reviews and articles about the revolutionary target started to surface in the shooting world. The initial success took Mecomber by surprise.

Working full time jobs in addition to the new Box To Bench responsibilities, Mecomber and his partner could barely keep up with demand in the first few weeks that his target came out. He set up a store front of sorts in the big shop on his property where he not only did his ammunition loading, but handled the shipping and sales of his new company with some help from his wife and other friends.

As word of the innovative target spread among precision shooters across the internet, reviews started trickling back in, including a feature in Long Range Hunting Online Magazine and a shout out in one of Rex Reviews popular long range shooting Q&A videos. Box To Bench continues to grow a national following as long range shooters from around the country hear about the product and the unique niche that it fills.

According to their website, the goal behind Box To Bench is to help the long range shooter get results without the costly investment of a customized rifle.

tools of the trade, long range optics
“B2B is able to provide a reliable and accurate rifle without the high cost of a custom firearm. We have put in the time, money, and dedication to provide shooters with a realistic approach to long range hunting and shooting.” The innovative target meets the shooter at the bench with a cost effective means of gaining precision results. “This is for the development of a long range precision rifle from start to finish all on one target. the entire data collection process can all be logged on this target during its development. The target is tear resistant and waterproof. It has been designed to last.”

Box To Bench targets are available for purchase online and they recently became an authorized dealer for GRS products including rifle stocks and more. To find out more about Box To Bench visit their website www.boxtobenchprecision.com, or find them on Facebook.