Page 19 - BVT Fact Book 2012

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November 22, 2102
TIMES FACT BOOK
19
327766.111512 FB
327765.111512 FB
SHERWOOD FAMILY PET CLINIC
DOGS • CATS • RABBITS • POCKET PETS • HOUSE CALLS • DROP OFF APPOINTMENTS
Located in the Sherwood Market Center
503-625-5664
407602.111512 FB
Monday - Friday 7:00am-7:00pm
Saturday 8:00am-5:00pm • Sunday Closed
www.SherwoodFamilyPetClinic.com
Join us on
SERVICES
Complete well-care from pediatrics
to geriatrics
Vaccinations tailored to your pet’s
needs
Heartworm and flea preventatives
Spays & Neuters
Dental Care
TPLO Knee Surgery
Extensive diagnostic, medical
and surgical care
Certified member in Penn Hip and OFA
x-rays
Acupuncture and Chinese Herbal
Medicine
Compassionate, end-of-life services
available at home or in-clinic
$25 credit when you refer a new client
$
25Off
First Exam
For New Clients
24 Hour Phone ∙ 503-625-6515
Serving Sherwood, Tualatin, Wilsonville, Tigard & all the Greater Portland Area
Memorial Services & Gatherings ∙ Cremations ∙ Urns ∙ Memorial Markers
SOME THINGS YOU CAN DO FOR YOUR FAMILY
PREPLAN
, a memorial service or gathering, Select a final resting place and
memorial marker, Obituary remarks, favorite music
PLAN
a time for family and friends to say goodbye and remember the life lived
SET ASIDE FUNDS
, we offer free planning and guaranteed payment plans
Valley View Memorial Park and Mausoleum
“A Place for Remembering”
1/2 Mile Southwest of Newberg on Dayton Ave.
CHILDREN’S SECTION
URN GARDEN
NICHES
CRYPTS
GRAVE SPACES FROM $800
INDOOR SERVICE AREA
PERPETUAL CARE FUND
By Invitation A Member Of “THE INTERNATIONAL ORDER OF THE GOLDEN RULE”
Sherwood Funeral Chapel
First & Main Streets ∙ Sherwood
See our obituaries online at www.attrells.com
OWNED AND OPERATED BY
LEONARD & GLORIA ATTRELL FOR 48 YEARS
“Caring And Helping Is What We Are All About”
327746.111512 FB
POSTAL PATRON
Unless you’ve been living in a cave,
you already know that the Sherwood
Bowmen rallied to victory Dec. 4, clinch-
ing their first-ever state football champi-
onship.
The Bowmen battled Eugene’s Marist
High School Dec. 4 at Hillsboro Stadium,
going into overtime and racking up a final
score of 26-23.
An assembly to celebrate the victory
was planned for Friday, Dec. 17, a day
after the
Gazette
went to press. A repre-
NO. 1, OH YEAH
— Sherwood seniors Adam Godfrey (lef
f
t) and
Michael Balfour celebrate following the Bowmen
ou
’s 26-23 win o
w
ver
r
Marist in the Class 5A state c
t
hampionship game Dec. 4
.
DAN BROOD
/ Pamplin Media Group
Could an area designed to attract birds
and other wildlife soon be shared with
hunters?
That’s one possibility that could hap-
pen if enough support for such a proposal
gains widespread interest.
“That’s nothing new,” Norman Penner,
a member of Friends of the Tualatin River
National Wildlife Refuge, said of a pro-
posal that’s always on the table.
The issue has come to light recently as
the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, the
federal agency responsible for overseeing
the refuge, conducts its comprehensive
conservation plan, which guides manage-
ment for the habitat area over the next 15
years.
Penner said among those voicing opin-
ions regarding the future of the 2,154-acre
refuge during a Nov. 30 public hearing
were least two hunters.
Along with wildlife observation and
photography, hunting and fishing are
allowed uses if there is enough support
from the public, said Penner. Ridgefield
National Wildlife Refuge in southwestern
Washington allows hunting on certain
days, he noted.
“There are refuges that have huge deer
populations,” said Penner. “The thing I’m
concerned about, we don’t want hunting
on the refuge near Sherwood. It’s too
small of a space.”
Penner said during recent public testi-
mony at the Wapato National Wildlife
Refuge, which is on the edge of Gaston in
Washington County, a large number of
hunters turned up to support future hunt-
ing at the site.
“Most of the people in Sherwood
would be opposed to that, I think,” he
said.
Public access to the Wapato refuge,
which is under the direction of the
DUCKY GOOD TIME
— A male
mallard swims on a local water-
way. This photo is from a contest
sponsored last year by the
refuge, the requirement being
that the photo include wildlife
from a Washington County natu-
ral area.
PHOTO COURTESY OF JUDY RASMUSEN
it chaplain to retire
They
did
it!
Hunting at the refuge? Not
out of realm of possibility
JANUARY 2011
• ONLINE AT WWW.SHERWOODGAZETTE.COM • VOLUME 18, NO. 1 •
FREE
By RAY PITZ
Sherwood Gazette
CHEERING
I
SECTION
— Fans
s
weigh in their expectations
before the Dec. 4 victory
th D
or
.
See CHAMPIONS, page 2
Mrs. Sears goes to
Washington
A Sherwood woman helps push for
legislation to curb
child sex slavery
— See pg. 16
See REFUGE, page 3
Prsrt Std
U.S. Postage Paid
Sherwood • Oregon
Permit No. 45
THE SHERWOOD GAZETTE IS LOCALLY OWNEDAND COMMITTED
TO BEING SHERWOOD’S BEST SOURCE OF LOCAL NEWS.
If we didn’t cover
Sherwood,
who would?