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Nerd alert: Shue comedy coming to Holmen stage (2008/07/22)
Anyone who’s ever had houseguests overstay their welcome can sympathize with the plight of architect Willum Cubbert in Lary Shue’s “The Nerd.”

RIDGERUNNER REPORTS: It can be hard to tell friend from foe (2008/07/22)
Over the last few weeks, I have seen a lot of the purple to pink flowers of the crown vetch (Coronilla varia) along our roads, highways and in many fields around the Coulee Region. The plant blossoms every year from May to August and they present vast fields of pretty color.

SKOL: Serendipity can help complete unfinished business (2008/07/22)
High winds and storms kept us off the water last weekend in the Boundary Waters. But I still count the long weekend as a huge success because we recovered something old and found something new.

MOVIE MATTERS: Comic book movies are OK, but they’re making producers and writers lazy (2008/07/22)
A few weeks ago, a writer named Chris Nashawaty wrote a column for “Entertainment Weekly” entitled “Superheroes: Why I Hate ‘Em!” The title is a little self-explanatory, but his basic thesis was that superheroes have killed summer movies. And, to be fair, the guy has a point.

COULEE CONSUMER: Teens and credit cards -- risk or an opportunity? (2008/07/22)
Are teens and credit cards a risky mix leading to debt and financial woes? Or do teens with credit cards have an opportunity to gain money management experience and a good credit history?

SAFETY MATTERS: Working smoke detectors save lives (2008/07/22)
Working and properly maintained smoke alarms are the most important pieces of electronic equipment in your home. Only smoke alarms are able to save your life in the event of a fire.

Marching to the summer beat: OHS musicians learning new show (2008/07/16)
While classmates are vegging out or working summer jobs, Onalaska High School Marching Band members are charging full speed ahead into a new year of music.

OmniCenter addition paying off with more business (2008/07/16)
A year after opening, the addition to the OmniCenter has not only hit its stride, but is outpacing projections. After a long nine years of planning, fundraising and building, the second building at the OmniCenter was finally completed and has substantially increased business and added to profitability.

Red Pines Bar and Grill opens on Brice Prairie (2008/07/16)
The Red Pines Bar and Grill has the bait that reels in hungry diners, with walleye cheeks as appetizers and catfish, walleye and sunfish platters and sandwiches, or half-pound burgers, chicken, pizza or fish sandwiches and entrees.

OHS grads team up to fight breast cancer (2008/07/16)
Some of the participants in this year’s Breast Cancer 3-Day might have a lot of training to do to get ready for walking 60 miles in three days. As triathletes, though, Kati Wypyszynski and Barbie Midtlien have a head start.

Couple goes to great lengths to fight cancer (2008/07/16)
A person needs a pretty good reason to walk 60 miles, and Mary Lynn Sinclair and her husband, Rich, have got it: They want to fight breast cancer, and for them it’s personal.

RIDGERUNNER REPORTS: Critters, kids go together — for better or for worse (2008/07/16)
Often, I feel rather like a kid while chasing a frog or butterfly to get a good picture. I did much the same thing when I was 9 years old and I’ve been doing it ever since.

COULEE CONSUMER: Preparing for the fair is a year-round effort for some (2008/07/16)
On June 20, I noted that in six months, it would be Christmas. Yikes! And then I recalled that one month from that day would be the last day of the 118th La Crosse Interstate Fair.

Gretchen’s Fresh, local strawberries are still available at farmer's markets and stores and fresh raspberries will be available soon. What better way to use some of them than for a breakfast treat in this version of a Finnish pancake? The batter is similar to popovers but without the mess and fuss. The pancake puffs up and forms a bowl-like depression for the fruit. You may drizzle honey or maple syrup over the baked pancake or sprinkle it with powdered sugar. Note that the pancake will collapse almost immediately after it is removed from the oven. This is normal and makes the depression for the fruit. (2008/07/16)
I found that an 8-inch cast iron frying pan works best, but you could use an 8-inch cake pan or an oven-proof skillet if you don't have an iron skillet.

LIBRARY NOTES: Gardening books can be inspiration (2008/07/16)
I love this time of year, admiring the time and effort that people have put into their bright green lawns and colorful flower beds, germinating vegetable gardens and blooming baskets. But how depressing to drive home and sigh at my own lawn bed of clover. Nurseries and retail garden shops are beginning to look picked over and the July heat puts everyone on alert to make watering a must, but there is still time to jump into the growing season.

SKOL: A fine way to define a fine day (2008/07/16)
It was a beautiful summer morning, cool for early July. The early morning sun was warm on my back, but there was a breeze that washed across the parking lot where the farmers’ market had been set up.

Direct marketing for board games hooks area folks (2008/07/10)
Now that the children are out of school, it won’t be long — if it hasn’t happened already — before they are complaining they are bored. Just in time, SimplyFun party planners are hosting game parties for kids and their parents to try out new games together.

Tennis anyone? Country club listed as one of nation’s top 50 tennis facilities (2008/07/10)
The Tennis Industry Association, U.S. Tennis Association and the trade magazine Racquet Sports Industry have recognized the La Crosse Country Club in Onalaska as one of the top 50 tennis welcome centers in the United States.

Onalaska homes get Parade honors (2008/07/10)
Two Onalaska homes were winners in the La Crosse Area Builders Association’s 2008 Parade of Homes.

Kohl’s honors two local youths for community service activities (2008/07/10)
Two area students, Elizabeth Justice of Holmen and Mark Trautmann of the town of Onalaska, have won prizes in the Kohl’s Kids Who Care contest that recognizes youths for their volunteer efforts.

Lakeview looking for new tasks (2008/07/10)
Employees of the county’s sheltered workshop for people with disabilities at the Lakeview Health Center in West Salem are hoping they will get the chance to help out area businesses in the Coulee Region this summer — and maybe earn some spending money in the process.

RIDGERUNNER REPORTS: Miraculous changes occur around us all summer (2008/07/10)
If you have walked outdoors much lately you might have seen some frothy masses of bubbles that resemble spit attached to the stems and leaves of a number of plants. In fact, the creatures that make them are called spittlebugs. Out of curiosity, I inspected a juicy wad of the foam to see what was inside.

COULEE CONSUMER: Growing a healthy relationship takes work (2008/07/10)
Popular media creates the notion of instant and romantic relationships. Even though we all know they don’t happen that quickly, most people hope for satisfying relationships in their lives.

Gretchen’s Grub: Asparagus Guacamole (2008/07/10)
In the coming weeks, I will report about an eating experiment my husband, Dave, and I and four friends are trying. We have jointly purchased a half-time share in a CSA or community supported agriculture.

LEGAL MATTERS: Knowing your rights can make skies friendlier (2008/07/10)
Air travel is not what it used to be. In years past, airline travel was considered a luxury with thoughtful flight attendants looking after sophisticated passengers. Today, airline travel conjures images of cramped cabins, delayed flights, lost luggage and correspondingly grumpy travelers.

LIBRARY NOTES: Book offers guide to hiking in state (2008/07/10)
Wisconsin is an outdoor lover’s paradise, with rivers, lakes, forests, prairies and beaches around every corner. The book “50 Hikes in Wisconsin” by John and Ellen Morgan is just the book you need to find the trail that is suited to your needs.

SAFETY MATTERS: Snuff out juvenile firesetting (2008/07/10)
Since its discovery, fire has had a mesmerizing effect on humankind. Fire has a powerful emotional impact and meaning for most people. Any force so wonderful yet so destructive can easily be misunderstood and therefore misused.

Bank scams take new twist; consumers should be alert (2008/07/10)
Wisconsin consumers need to be prepared for a new twist on a phone scam, warned the Wisconsin Bankers Association. The current scheme involves an offer to lower interest rates rather than previous scams that warned of compromised accounts.

SKOL: Death grabs a good one (2008/07/10)
Jon Sheehy and I often talked about playing tennis together sometime. He would be making a deft adjustment to my glasses while we talked about tennis and other topics. Sometimes he would ask about something I had written in my column, a question, perhaps, about how my son was doing in Colorado or something about our mutual connection to eastern Wisconsin: Both he and his wife of 30 years, Cheri, grew up in the Reedsville area and Gretchen grew up in Brillion a few miles away.

Water skiing sessions help hook kids on Bible study (2008/07/02)
With 116 teenagers signed up, Bethany Evangelical Free Church might have the largest teen Bible study group around. How did the church get that many teenagers motivated to study the Bible over their summer break? Take them water skiing.

Come high water or whatever, club keeps skiing (2008/07/02)
The high waters on the Mississippi and Black rivers aren’t keeping water skiers from enjoying the sport. The River City Water Ski Club has been practicing for their five summer shows scheduled during Riverfest in La Crosse this year at Riverside Park.

RIDGERUNNER REPORTS: Lil’ critters learning the ropes (2008/07/02)
I have expressed disappointment at times that Pettibone Park on the Mississippi River near La Crosse hasn’t been utilized more as a wildlife observation area as it was originally intended. I should note, however, that I have noticed lately that a few areas on the western side have indeed been left uncut and more natural plant growth has been allowed to grow.

SKOL: Floods a manmade disaster (2008/07/02)
When I saw the comment by an Iowa scientist last week that the recent floods are man-made rather than natural disasters, I immediately thought of a thick report about flooding done in 1995 by Vierbicher Associates for the town of Onalaska.

LIBRARY NOTES: Library offers quick getaway (2008/07/02)
So by now you must be wondering what to do with the summer heat setting in and gas prices too high to consider jumping in the car for a cross-country trip. Of course, I’m a little biased, but I can’t think of any better answer than to visit a La Crosse County Library location in Bangor, Campbell, Holmen, Onalaska or West Salem for a change of pace.

COULEE CONSUMER: Plan to preserve garden’s summer bounty (2008/07/02)
If you put your garden in early and it was not affected by the rains earlier this month, you are fortunate. Or if you are still putting in plants, now is the time to plan for preserving your harvest.

SAFETY MATTERS: LAF your way to a safe summer (2008/07/02)
“Bad things happen to others, not me.” Have you ever had that thought? Unfortunately, bad things have the potential to happen to everyone.

Holmen Lutheran Church gears up for second annual garden tour (2008/06/24)
If you wander into the front yard of Deen and Jon Layland, there is little indication what lurks behind the house.

MOVIE MATTERS: Summer is no longer a TV wasteland (2008/06/24)
I don’t do reality television. It used to be because most of the early programs were catty, staged and over-the-top, but even I have to admit that reality TV’s been getting better: “Dirty Jobs,” “Mythbusters” and “30 Days” are all shows that have earned my respect.

RIDGERUNNER REPORTS: June blossoms promise late summer treats (2008/06/24)
Recently you might have noticed a bushy, thorny plant growing along shorelines and roadsides with one- to one-and-a-half-inch, pink five-petaled blossoms. It’s most likely a wild rose, possibly the Virginia rose, and the blossoms give promise of a nutritious treat to follow. When the blossoms fade the fruits that follow, called rose hips, will be a good source of vitamin C and other nutrients.

SKOL: Meanwhile back at the ranch, the work goes on and on (2008/06/24)
Pat Schildhauer and her husband, Marvin, battled blizzards last winter to protect their 500 head of Black Angus cattle from the elements. On horseback, they towed calves on sleds through the wind-driven snow to the protection of windbreaks.

LIBRARY NOTES: Travel book offers many insider tips (2008/06/24)
Peter Greenberg, best-selling author and “Today Show” travel editor, has traveled more than 18 million miles in his lifetime. Not only has he traveled by plane, train, and car, but also by motorcycle in Jordan, donkeys in the Grand Canyon, bicycles in China, and elephants in Botswana.

Forever altered, suicide survivors refocus their lives (2008/06/18)
When people are confounded by life, they often ask the big, sometimes unanswerable question: why? Many need to find the answer to give events meaning. For some, the question “why are we here” translates to what is the meaning of life.

Business mines picture piles for memories (2008/06/18)
Ever since cameras were invented, people have been vexed over what to do with snapshots. After those favorite ones go into a frame on a wall or a desk, what about the rest of them? And what about all those Super 8 movies of old, the VHS tapes or even the digital movies of today? What to do with all those memories?

Planting ideas: Group plans five-stop Onalaska garden tour (2008/06/18)
For Sandra Bartel, it is soft pinks, lavenders and whites that decorate her garden. She likes the soft colors and the gentle waves of repeating clumps of flowers.

RIDGERUNNER REPORTS: Great blue heron makes minor menu mistake (2008/06/18)
If you have enough patience, it’s always fun to watch a great blue heron in action, or inaction as it turns out much of the time. They can stand in one position for an amazing length of time as they wait for prey. But once they pinpoint a potential meal, they go after it. If the prey is close, they might strike quickly, but if it is some distance away they stalk more cautiously.

SKOL: Some things worth price of gasoline (2008/06/18)
“Our first $50 fill,” Gretchen said looking at the gas pump where we had stopped in Murdo, S.D. on our trip to Colorado.

County dairy recipe contest winners selected (2008/06/18)
More than 60 people from throughout La Crosse County attended the 2008 June Dairy Days recipe contest sponsored by the La Crosse County Association for Home & Community Education on Friday, May 30.

COULEE CONSUMER: It takes work to be happy as couple (2008/06/18)
Popular media creates the notion of instant romantic relationships. Though we all know they don’t happen that quickly, most people hope for satisfying relationships in their lives.

LIBRARY NOTES: Consider the source -- Notable quotes on books, libraries (2008/06/18)
Many famous people have said many memorable things about reading, libraries and books. (Of course, many NON famous people have done so too, but, when you get right down to it, no one cares much about what non-famous people say.)

Eighth-grader runs marathon, sets sights on Boston (2008/06/11)
An ancient Chinese proverb says a journey of 1,000 miles starts with one step. The same goes for a journey of 26.2 miles, and for Allison Jensen, most likely the youngest marathon runner in town, that step was deciding to go out for cross country at Onalaska Middle School last year.

Goodnight, Irene? Not yet, there’s still much to do (2008/06/11)
Irene Radcliffe has lived through World War I, the Great Depression, World War II and every war since. Irene Radcliffe has seen a lot in her lifetime, and she’s not done yet.

RIDGERUNNER REPORTS: Sunfish are late for Sunfish Days weekend (2008/06/11)
All during the week after Onalaska’s annual Sunfish Days, I heard bait dealers and anglers lament that the sunfish spawn had not actually begun yet. It seems that the chilly weather had delayed the usual start of spawning activity.

MOVIE MATTERS: ‘Sex’ movie says something about market power (2008/06/11)
Last weekend, Indiana Jones got his butt kicked by a girl. Well, four girls, really.

SKOL: Pumped up about gas prices (2008/06/11)
One of the guys in a noon tennis group I play with once a week said after a recent match that his Honda hybrid gets 55 miles to a gallon of gasoline. The topic came up when I commented on the rising cost of driving a dozen miles to play tennis at UW-La Crosse.

COULEE CONSUMER: Keep kids safe in the kitchen (2008/06/11)
Summer’s almost here, the kids will be home from school, and who is going to prepare their lunch? In some cases, young children can handle food preparation, but their abilities and experience in the kitchen greatly influence kitchen safety.

LIBRARY NOTES: Discover the beauty, benefits of berries (2008/06/11)
Chances are that you have a vegetable garden plotted out already. Why not add a berry patch as well? Most of us are aware by now what the health benefits of berries are.

Leisure activities abound close to home (2008/06/03)
Summer’s almost here and the time is right for thinking about things to do with the extra leisure time that often comes with the summer season.

Last dance: For Holmen pair, annual spring recital is a bit bittersweet (2008/06/03)
For a dance school owner, there’s probably nothing more stressful than the end-of-the-year recital. There’s a hundred little details to attend to, from costumes and music to lighting and programs. For Julie Austin, though, this year there’s a bit of sadness thrown in with the stress.

Area library branches ready to ‘Go Global’ this summer (2008/06/03)
The La Crosse County Library System’s summer reading program will have an international flavor this year, with a wide variety of special programs that go along with the theme: “Go Global: Read.”

RIDGERUNNER REPORTS: There’s a garden in them thar hills (2008/06/03)
As a kid, I avoided it and called it itchweed. When I got a little older, I learned that the proper name was stinging nettle. Botanists call it Urtica dioica. But Nicholas Gale, the Vernon County outdoor expert, calls it food.

SKOL: Talk about a small world (2008/06/03)
Former Onalaska residents Dan and Irene Hellie were among some 500 volunteers who planted pine seedlings along the Gunflint Trail earlier this month in the area affected by the Ham Lake forest fire last May. The fire raged through nearly 120 square miles in and along the Boundary Waters Canoe Area in Minnesota.

CMN Celebration features local boy (2008/06/03)
At 18 months, Carson McCormick appeared to be a happy, healthy and extremely intelligent little boy. He already knew his numbers, colors and shapes and could repeat everything his parents, Jaine and Mike, said.

LIBRARY NOTES: Tap into library’s free resources (2008/06/03)
Have you looked at those gas prices lately? Whew! And they just keep going up. The good weather is luring many people to ride bicycles to work or to the store. Walking is a great way to cut back on gas consumption. Car pooling becomes more inviting for trips to work or taking the kids to their activities.

COULEE CONSUMER: Be careful, harsh words can leave scars (2008/06/03)
Do you remember the childhood chant “sticks and stones can break my bones but words can never hurt me!” After all these years, we now have come to find out that we had it wrong. It seems that hurtful words can cause profound emotional harm — especially when parents do the name-calling.

Catch a rising starlet at Sunfish Days (2008/05/27)
It was almost 11 years ago, when Donna Mrowka looked in the rearview and saw something kind of weird. Her 6-month-old daughter Charissa was moving her tiny fingers and feet in perfect time to the music on the radio, no matter what kind of music was playing.

Zetus Deamos to kick off rocking summer with local show (2008/05/27)
Pity the band that must go head-to-head in musical battle against Zetus Deamos. The hard rocking quartet played its first live gig at the 2005 Oktoberfest Gong Show in La Crosse and won with an original song, just a month after forming. Six months later, the band won the regional Launchpad competition, and then a year ago they triumphed in a local battle of the bands to open a concert at the La Crosse Center headlined by Buckcherry.

RANDOM ERUPTIONS: Some thoughts for the graduates (2008/05/27)
Being editor of a community newspaper has a few perks. I’m never bored, for example, as there’s always something that needs to be done. Plus there’s the universal admiration and affection of the community ... what? I thought that was in the contract. Oh, never mind that last part, but I do get to write an annual column at graduation time, giving advice to the young graduates like some nutty uncle.

RIDGERUNNER REPORTS: Diminishing wildlife offer valuable lessons (2008/05/27)
A couple weeks ago when timber rattlesnake researcher Chris Hamilton found some of his subjects still hibernating in their dens, he did find one snake sunning on the rocky hillside. An adult female yellow-bellied racer (Coluber constrictor), another of Wisconsin’s protected species of reptiles, was warming up in the sun.

SKOL: Thoughts on spring spent in the woods (2008/05/27)
First rays of the sun warmed our backs as Gretchen and I sat on folding chairs, steaming coffee mugs in hand waiting for the show to begin. We were in our meadow near Lodi facing the sunlit leafy backdrop of hickory, elm, oak, maple, basswood and box elder trees that make up the woods edge.

MOVIE MATTERS: Is pandering to movie, TV fans such a terrible thing? (2008/05/27)
People love movies and television. It is a fact of the human condition that we enjoy hearing — or watching — great stories, and movies and TV are the best and most accessible way to find them. And we can get pretty obsessed with our stories, too, especially with the Internet now allowing fans all over the world to unite and discuss, say, the newest comic book installment of “Buffy the Vampire Slayer,” or the best in British sitcoms, or what’s going to happen to Jorja Fox on “CSI.”

Bangor’s annual Hootenanny set for May 25 (2008/05/27)
A Memorial Day weekend tradition of folk singing and picnicking is set to fire up at Bangor Village Park once again this Sunday. As always, there will be no charge for admission, although donations for beer and pop will be accepted.

COULEE CONSUMER: To spend or not, that’s the question (2008/05/27)
If you haven’t seen them, you will soon — the promotions and ads identifying ways for you to spend your economic stimulus rebate. A recent poll shows six out of 10 Americans plan to save their money or use it to pay bills. Retailers are doing everything they can to get you to spend.

Sing him to heaven: Poet laureate of American hymns passes on (2008/05/27)
ST. LOUIS — It wasn’t until the Rev. Jaroslav Vajda was nearly 50 that he began to pursue the craft that would leave his name etched in history. Or at least the hymnal.

LIBRARY NOTES: Your local library offers gas-free getaways (2008/05/27)
Summertime is on its way. For me summertime has always conjured thoughts of travel, and getting away from the normal everyday grind. But this year, I have heard many complaints of high travel costs, and how they are affecting summer travel plans.

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